G. A. Cohen Explained

G. A. Cohen
Birth Name:Gerald Allan Cohen
Birth Date:1941 4, df=yes
Birth Place:Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Death Place:Oxford, England
Other Names:Jerry Cohen
Academic Advisors:Gilbert Ryle[1]
Discipline:Philosophy
Notable Works:Karl Marx's Theory of History (1978)[2]

Gerald Allan Cohen (; 14 April 1941 – 5 August 2009) was a Canadian political philosopher who held the positions of Quain Professor of Jurisprudence, University College London and Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory, All Souls College, Oxford. He was known for his work on Marxism, and later, egalitarianism and distributive justice in normative political philosophy.

Life and career

Born into a communist Jewish family in Montreal, Quebec, on 14 April 1941,[3] Cohen was educated at McGill University (BA, philosophy and political science) in his hometown and the University of Oxford (BPhil, philosophy), where he studied under Gilbert Ryle (and was also taught by Isaiah Berlin).

Cohen was assistant lecturer (1963–1964), lecturer (1964–1979), then reader (1979–1984) in the Department of Philosophy at University College London, before being appointed to the Chichele chair at Oxford in 1985. Several of his students, such as Christopher Bertram, Simon Caney, Alan Carter, Cécile Fabre, Will Kymlicka, John McMurtry, David Leopold, Michael Otsuka, Seana Shiffrin, and Jonathan Wolff went on to be important moral and political philosophers, while another, Ricky Gervais, has a successful career in comedy.

Cohen was a proponent of analytical Marxism[4] and a founding member of the September Group. His 1978 work [5] defends an interpretation of Karl Marx's historical materialism its critics often call technological determinism.[6] In Self-Ownership, Freedom, and Equality, Cohen offers an extensive moral argument in favour of socialism, contrasting his views with those of John Rawls and Robert Nozick by articulating an extensive critique of the Lockean principle of self-ownership as well as the use of that principle to defend right as well as left-libertarianism. In If You're an Egalitarian, How Come You're So Rich? (which covers the topic of his Gifford Lectures), Cohen addresses the question of what egalitarian political principles imply for the personal behaviour of those who hold them.

Cohen was known for his flamboyant style during philosophical debates. According to his best friend, the philosopher Gerald Dworkin, "Nothing was too inappropriate, private, bizarre, or embarrassing to be suddenly brought into the conversation".[7] Cohen also abjured technology, a stance he called "technological conservatism". His wife, Michelle, answered all his email.

Cohen was close friends with Marxist political philosopher Marshall Berman.

Cohen died on 5 August 2009.

Works

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rosen . Michael . Michael E. Rosen . 2010 . Jerry Cohen: An Appreciation . Cambridge, Massachusetts . Harvard University . 2 . 9 January 2019.
  2. Web site: Rosen . Michael . Michael E. Rosen . 2010 . Jerry Cohen: An Appreciation . Cambridge, Massachusetts . Harvard University . 5 . 9 January 2019.
  3. News: GA Cohen. Jane. O'Grady. 10 August 2009. The Guardian.
  4. Web site: The Labour Theory of Value and the Concept of Exploitation.
  5. Book: Cohen, Gerald Allan . Karl Marx's theory of history : a defence . 1978 . Oxford : Clarendon Press; New York : Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-827196-3 . registration . Internet Archive.
  6. Book: Singer, Peter . Marx: A Very Short Introduction . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 2000 . 105 . 978-0-19-285405-6 . registration .
  7. Web site: How universities killed the academic . March 2024 .