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<div>From the Harvard Gazette:</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>http://www.hno.harvard.edu/gazette/2002/0<span
></span>1.17/99-nozick.html</div>
<div><br></div>
<div>Philosopher Nozick dies at 63</div>
<div>University professor was major intellectual figure of 20th
century<br>
By Ken Gewertz, Gazette Staff</div>
<div><font color="#000000"><br>
University Professor Robert Nozick, one of the late 20th century's
most influential thinkers, died on the morning of Jan. 23 at the age
of 63. He had been diagnosed with stomach cancer in 1994.<br>
<br>
Nozick, known for his wide-ranging intellect and engaging style as
both writer and teacher, had taught a course on the Russian
Revolution during the fall semester and was planning to teach again
in the spring. His last major book, "Invariances: The Structure
of the Objective World," was published by Harvard University
Press in October 2001.<br>
<br>
According to Alan Dershowitz, the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law
and a longtime friend, Nozick had been talking with colleagues and
critiquing their work until a week before his death.<br>
<br>
"His mind remained brilliant and sharp to the very end,"
Dershowitz said.<br>
<br>
He added that Nozick was "constantly probing, always learning
new subjects. He was a University Professor in the best sense of the
term. He taught everybody in every discipline. He was a wonderful
teacher, constantly rethinking his own views and sharing his new
ideas with students and colleagues. His unique philosophy has
influenced generations of readers and will continue to influence
people for generations to come."<br>
<br>
Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers said of Nozick's passing,
"I was deeply saddened to learn of the death of Robert Nozick.
Harvard and the entire world of ideas have lost a brilliant and
provocative scholar, profoundly influential within his own field of
philosophy and well beyond. All of us will greatly miss his lively
mind and spirited presence, but his ideas and example will continue
to enrich us for years to come."<br>
<br>
Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Jeremy R. Knowles said,
"Bob Nozick was a luminous and wide-ranging philosopher who
engaged students and colleagues from across the University and
beyond. The loss to philosophy and to Harvard is grievous."<br>
<br>
Philosophy Department Chair Christine Korsgaard described Nozick as
"a brilliant and fearless thinker, very fast on his feet in
discussion, and apparently interested in everything. Both in his
teaching and in his writing, he did not stay within the confines of
any traditional field, but rather followed his interests into many
areas of philosophy. His works throw light on a broad range of
philosophical issues, and on their connection with other disciplines.
The courage with which he faced the last years of illness, and the
irrepressible energy with which he continued to work, made a very
deep impression on all of us."<br>
<br>
Nozick's controversial and challenging views gained him considerable
attention and influence in the world beyond the academy.<br>
<br>
His first book, "Anarchy, State, and Utopia" (1974),
transformed him from a young philosophy professor known only within
his profession to the reluctant theoretician of a national political
movement.<br>
<br>
He wrote the book as a critique of "Theory of Justice"
(1971), by his Harvard colleague John Rawls, the James Bryant Conant
University Professor<i> Emeritus</i>. Rawls' book provided a
philosophical underpinning for the bureaucratic welfare state, a
methodically reasoned argument for why it was right for the state to
redistribute wealth in order to help the poor and disadvantaged.<br>
<br>
Nozick's book argued that the rights of the individual are primary
and that nothing more than a minimal state - sufficient to protect
against violence and theft, and to ensure the enforcement of
contracts - is justified. "Anarchy, State, and Utopia" won
the National Book Award and was named by The Times Literary
Supplement as one of "The Hundred Most Influential Books Since
the War."<br>
<br>
A former member of the radical left who was converted to a
libertarian perspective as a graduate student, largely through his
reading of conservative economists Friedrich Hayek and Milton
Friedman, Nozick was never comfortable with his putative status as an
ideologue of the right.</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000"><br>
In a 1978 article in The New York Times Magazine he said that
"right-wing people like the pro-free-market argument, but don't
like the arguments for individual liberty in cases like gay rights -
although I view them as an interconnecting whole. ..."<br>
<br>
Whether they agreed or disagreed with the political implication of
the book, critics were nearly unanimous in their appreciation for
Nozick's lively, accessible writing style. In a discipline known for
arduous writing, Nozick's approach was hailed as a breath of fresh
air.<br>
<br>
He explained his approach in the article cited above: "It is as
though what philosophers want is a way of saying something that will
leave the person they're talking to no escape. Well, why should they
be bludgeoning people like that? It's not a nice way to
behave."<br>
<br>
Despite the notoriety and influence that his first book brought him,
Nozick moved on to explore very different territory in his second
book, "Philosophical Explanations" (1981). This need to be
intellectually on the move at all times characterized his career. He
once told an interviewer, "I didn't want to spend my life
writing 'The Son of Anarchy, State, and Utopia.'"<br>
<br>
In "Philosophical Explanations," Nozick took on subjects
that many academic philosophers had dismissed as irrelevant or
meaningless, such as free will versus determinism and the nature of
subjective experience, and why there is something rather than
nothing. In dealing with these questions, he rejected the idea of
strict philosophical proof, adopting instead a notion of
philosophical pluralism.<br>
<br>
"There are various philosophical views, mutually incompatible,
which cannot be dismissed or simply rejected," he wrote in
"Philosophical Explanations." "Philosophy's output is
the basketful of these admissible views, all together." Nozick
suggested that this basketful of views could be ordered according to
criteria of coherence and adequacy and that even second- and
third-ranked views might offer valuable truths and insights.<br>
<br>
Nozick continued to develop his theory of philosophical pluralism in
his next book, "The Examined Life" (1989), an exploration
of the individual's relation to reality that, once again, emphasized
explanation rather than proof.<br>
<br>
In his book, "The Nature of Rationality" (1995), Nozick
asked what function principles serve in our daily life and why we
don't simply act on whim or out of self-interest. "Socratic
Puzzles" (1997) was a collection of essays, articles, and
reviews, plus several examples of Nozick's philosophical short
fiction.<br>
<br>
His next work, "Invariances: The Structure of the Objective
World," (2001) looks at the nature of truth and objectivity and
examines the function of subjective consciousness in an objective
world. It also scrutinizes truth in ethics and discusses whether
truth in general is relative to culture and social factors.<br>
<br>
Nozick's teaching followed the same lively, unorthodox, heterogeneous
pattern as his writing. With one exception, he never taught the same
course twice. The exception was "The Best Things in Life,"
which he presented in 1982 and '83, attempting to derive from the
class discussion a general theory of values. The course description
called it an exploration of "the nature and value of those
things deemed best, such as friendship, love, intellectual
understanding, sexual pleasure, achievement, adventure, play, luxury,
fame, power, enlightenment, and ice cream."<br>
<br>
Speaking without notes, Nozick would pace restlessly back and forth,
an ever-present can of Tab in his hand, drawing his students into a
free-ranging discussion of the topic at hand.<br>
<br>
He once defended his "thinking out loud" approach by
comparing it with the more traditional method of giving students
finished views of the great philosophical ideas.<br>
<br>
"Presenting a completely polished and worked-out view doesn't
give students a feel for what it's like to do original work in
philosophy and to see it happen, to catch on to doing it."<br>
<br>
He also used his teaching as a way of working out his ideas, often
leading to views that he would later present in book form. "If
somebody wants to know what I'm going to do next, what they ought to
do is keep an eye on the Harvard course catalogue," he once told
an interviewer.</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000"><br>
Nozick, who grew up in Brooklyn and attended public school there,
came to philosophy via a paperback version of Plato's
"Republic," which he found intellectually thrilling. Nozick
described the experience in his 1989 book, "The Examined
Life" - "When I was 15 years old, or 16, I carried around
on the streets of Brooklyn a paperback copy of Plato's 'Republic';
front cover facing outward. I had read only some of it and understood
less, but I was excited by it and knew it was something
wonderful."<br>
<br>
Nozick obtained an A.B. degree from Columbia College in 1959, and
M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Princeton in 1961 and 1963, respectively.
After stints at Princeton and the Rockefeller University, Nozick came
to Harvard as a full professor in 1969, at the age of 30. He became
Arthur Kingsley Porter Professor of Philosophy in 1985 and in 1998
was named the Joseph Pellegrino University Professor.<br>
<br>
Nozick was the recipient of many awards and honors, among them the
Presidential Citation from the American Psychological Association in
1998, which described him as "one of the most brilliant and
original living philosophers."</font><br>
<font color="#000000"></font></div>
<div><font color="#000000">Nozick was also a fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences, a member of the Council of Scholars of
the Library of Congress, a corresponding fellow of the British
Academy, and a senior fellow of the Society of Fellows at Harvard. He
served as the president of the American Philosophical Association's
Eastern Division from 1997 to 1998, was a Christensen visiting fellow
at St. Catherine's College, Oxford University, 1997, and a cultural
adviser to the U.S. Delegation to the UNESCO Conference on World
Cultural Policy in 1982.</font><br>
<font color="#000000"></font></div>
<div><font color="#000000">In the spring of 1997, he delivered the
six John Locke Lectures at Oxford University. He held fellowships
from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, the
National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Center for Advanced
Study in the Behavioral Sciences.<br>
<br>
He is survived by his wife, Gjertrud Schnackenberg, and his two
children, Emily Sarah Nozick and David Joshua Nozick.<br>
<br>
Nozick will be buried in a private ceremony. A memorial service is
being planned for sometime in February.</font><br>
<font color="#000000"></font></div>
<div>-- <br>
<br>
Phone: +44 (0) 1865-286793<br>
Email: <chris.brooke@magd.ox.ac.uk><br>
Web: http://users.ox.ac.uk/~magd1368<br>
</div>
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