Peter Coffey Explained

Peter Coffey
Birth Date:1876 4, df=y
Birth Place:Rathrone,[1] Enfield, Ireland
Death Place:Maynooth, Ireland
Institutions:Maynooth College

Peter Coffey (9 April 1876 – 7 January 1943) was an Irish Roman Catholic priest and neo-scholastic philosopher.

Life

Coffey was educated at the Meath Diocesan Seminary in Navan, and St Patrick's College, Maynooth (Maynooth College). He studied for his doctorate at the University of Louvain,[2] and attended the University of Strasbourg. He was ordained in 1900.

He was Professor of Logic and Metaphysics at Maynooth College from 1902 until his death. In his time, Coffey was considered one of the foremost Catholic intellectuals in Ireland.[3] He authored a number of books, including manuals of Thomistic philosophy:

His manuals were widely used in the education of Roman Catholic priests and theologians in the English-speaking world,[4] up until roughly the 1960s, but have since been largely ignored. He was a contributor of articles on philosophical subjects to the Irish Ecclesiastical Record, and to the Catholic Encyclopedia.[5]

The only book review that Ludwig Wittgenstein ever published, in 1913, was a scathing review of Coffey's The Science of Logic.[6] [7] By contrast, in 1917, his Epistemology was favourably reviewed by T. S. Eliot.[8] [9] [10]

In his 1903 article The Hexahemeron and Science, Coffey sought to find a middle ground in conflict between natural sciences and the Catholic Church, seeing fault on both sides.[11]

Coffey advocated for a positive view of trade unionism.[12] Some of Coffey's ideas on labour issues, however, incurred the displeasure of his superiors at Maynooth.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Stuart Brown. Diane Collinson. Robert Wilkinson. Biographical Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Philosophers. 10 September 2012. Routledge. 978-1-134-92796-8. 150.
  2. Book: Fergus Kerr. Work on Oneself: Wittgenstein's Philosophical Psychology. 2008. CUA Press. 978-0-9773103-1-9. 48–49.
  3. Book: G. R. S. Taylor. The Guild State: Its Principles and Possibilities. 1 October 2005. IHS Press. 978-1-60570-017-5. 7. Fr. Peter Coffey, onetime Professor at Maynooth in Ireland, and one of the country's "most eminent Catholic intellectuals"....
  4. Book: Rudolf Metz. A Hundred Years of British Philosophy. 3 June 2014. Routledge. 978-1-317-85322-0. 819. 1938. The most prolific neo-scholastic writer to-day is Peter Coffey, Professor of Logic and Metaphysics in Maynooth College, Ireland (b. 1876). We owe to him a system of philosophy based on a Thomistic foundation, broadly planned and fully worked out, which is much used for instruction in Roman Catholic theological seminaries, but has hardly aroused any notice outside their walls....
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=oZQuAAAAYAAJ&q=W.H.+Grattan+Flood&pg=PA10 "Coffey, Reverend Peter", The Catholic Encyclopedia and Its Makers, New York, the Encyclopedia Press, 1917, p. 32
  6. Book: Vincent Descombes. The Institutions of Meaning. 11 March 2014. Harvard University Press. 978-0-674-41997-1. 146.
  7. Review: P. Coffey, The Science of Logic . The Cambridge Review . 6 March 1913 . Wittgenstein . Ludwig . Ludwig Wittgenstein . 34 . 853 . 351 . 18 June 2016 . 30 April 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060430185008/http://fair-use.org/the-cambridge-review/1913/03/06/reviews/the-science-of-logic . dead .
  8. Book: Barry Spurr. Anglo-Catholic in Religion: T.S. Eliot and Christianity. 30 April 2010. Lutterworth Press. 978-0-7188-4024-2. 19. By 1917, reviewing Peter Coffey's Thomistic work, Epistemology, Eliot was writing that the Catholic Church was 'the only Church which can even pretend to maintain a philosophy of its own'..
  9. Style and substance: T. S. Eliot, Jacques Maritain, and Neo-Thomism . Religion & Literature . 2010 . Wilson . James Matthew . 42 . 3 . 43–73 . 23049387 .
  10. A Contemporary Thomist . . 29 December 1917 . Eliot . T. S. . T. S. Eliot . 312–313.
  11. Book: John Privilege. Michael Logue and the Catholic Church in Ireland, 1879–1925. 12 February 2014. Oxford University Press. 978-0-7190-9132-2. 64.
  12. The Catholic Clergy and the Social Question in Ireland, 1891–1916 . Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review . 1981 . MacMahon . Joseph A. . 70 . 280 . 263–288 . 30090376 . Father Peter Coffey of Maynooth dealt positively with the powerful influence of trade unionism in bettering the conditions of the workers and in promoting harmony and prosperity among all classes. .
  13. Harris. Mary. 16 March 1996. Priestly powerhouse. dead. The Tablet. 372–373. https://web.archive.org/web/20160814040413/http://archive.thetablet.co.uk/article/16th-march-1996/20/priestly-powerhouse. 14 August 2016. Radical ideas were not welcomed. Peter Coffey, appointed to the chair of philosophy in 1902, was refused permission to publish The Financing of Industry and the Labour Question.. 18 June 2016.