Gabriel Nuchelmans Explained

Gabriel Nuchelmans (15 May 1922, Oud Gastel – 6 August 1996, Wassenaar) was a Dutch philosopher, who focused on the history of philosophy as well as on logic and the philosophy of language more in particular.

Biography

After completing high school at the Episcopal School of Roermond, Nuchelmans studied at the Catholic University of Nijmegen, where he also earned his PhD in 1950. During the PhD he spent a year in Freiburg/Switzerland with Olof Gigon and Joseph Maria Bocheński. In 1947/48 he attended courses by Alfred Ayer and Stuart Hampshire, at University College London. He also heard, at the London School of Economics, Karl Popper and J.O.Wisdom. After admission to the PhD Nuchelmans taught for fourteen years Latin and Greek in Velsen. From 1964 he taught Ancient Philosophy and Analytic Philosophy and its History at the Philosophical Institute of the University of Leiden until his retirement on 10 September 1987. In this occasion a volume of essays (Logos and Pragma) was dedicated to him to celebrate his scholarly achievements. Nuchelmans had since 1975 been a member of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen.[1] His great work in three volumes on the history of the theories of proposition (1973, 1980, 1983) will remain for a long time the standard work on the subject.

He also wrote several more introductory books, i.a. on David Hume (1965) and a survey of the history of analytical philosophy (1969).

Selected publications

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: G.R.F.M. Nuchelmans (1922 - 1996) . Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences . 17 July 2015.