Robert C. Solomon
Robert C. Solomon was an American professor of philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin, where he taught for more than 30 years. Professor Solomon won many teaching honors, including the Standard Oil Outstanding Teaching Award in 1973; the University of Texas President's Associates Teaching Award ; a Fulbright Lecture Award; University Research and National Endowment for the Humanities Grants; and the Chad Oliver Plan II Teaching Award in 1998.
Professor Solomon authored and edited more than 45 books, including The Passions, About Love, Ethics and Excellence, A Short History of Philosophy with Professor Kathleen Higgins, A Better Way to Think about Business, The Joy of Philosophy, Spirituality for the Skeptic, Not Passion's Slave, and In Defense of Sentimentality. He also wrote about business ethics in Above the Bottom Line, It’s Good Business, Ethics and Excellence, New World of Business and A Better Way to Think about Business. He had designed and provided programs for corporations and organizations around the world and his books have been translated into more than a dozen languages.
His Ethics and Excellence renewed in business ethics - philosophers and managers alike - an interest in Aristotelian virtue ethics, which he explained so that it could be applied to management development and leadership training. This caused the misunderstanding with some authors that virtue ethics was a modern approach, unaware of the roots in Aristotle.
Career
Early life
Solomon was born in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.. His father was a lawyer, and his mother an artist. He was born with a hole in his heart and was not expected to live into adulthood. He earned his undergraduate degree in molecular biology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1963 and his master's and doctoral degrees in philosophy and psychology from the University of Michigan in 1965 and 1967 respectively.Teaching and research
He held visiting appointments at the University of Pennsylvania; the University of Auckland, New Zealand; Mount Holyoke College; Princeton University; the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of Pittsburgh. From 1972 until his death, except for two years at the University of California at Riverside in the mid-1980s, he taught at University of Texas at Austin, serving as Quincy Lee Centennial Professor of Philosophy and Business. He was a member of the University of Texas Academy of Distinguished Teachers, which is devoted to providing leadership in improving the quality and depth of undergraduate instruction. Solomon was also a member of the inaugural class of Academic Advisors at the Business Roundtable Institute for Corporate Ethics.His interests were in 19th-century German philosophy—especially Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and Friedrich Nietzsche—and 20th-century continental philosophy—especially Jean-Paul Sartre and phenomenology, as well as ethics and the philosophy of emotions. Solomon published more than 40 books on philosophy, and was also a published songwriter. He made a cameo appearance in Richard Linklater's film Waking Life, where he discussed the continuing relevance of existentialism in a postmodern world.
Solomon developed a cognitivist theory of the emotions, according to which emotions, like beliefs, were susceptible to rational appraisal and revision. Solomon was particularly interested in the idea of "love", arguing against the notion that romantic love is an inherent state of being, and maintaining that it is instead a construct of Western culture, popularized and propagated in such a way that it has achieved the status of a universal in the eyes of many. Love for Solomon is not a universal, static quality, but an emotion, subject to the same vicissitudes as other emotions like anger or sadness.
Solomon received numerous teaching awards at the University of Texas at Austin, and was a frequent lecturer in the highly regarded Plan II Honors Program. Solomon was known for his lectures on Søren Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Sartre and other existentialist philosophers. Solomon described in one lecture a very personal experience he had while a medical student at the University of Michigan. He recounted how he stumbled as if by chance into a crowded lecture hall. He was rather unhappy in his medical studies at the time, and was perhaps seeking something different that day. He got precisely that. The professor, Frithjof Bergmann, was lecturing that day on something that Solomon had not yet been acquainted with. The professor spoke of how Nietzsche's idea of the eternal return asks the fundamental question: "If given the opportunity to live your life over and over again ad infinitum, forced to go through all of the pain and the grief of existence, would you be overcome with despair? Or would you fall to your knees in gratitude?" After this lecture, Solomon quit medical school and began studies in philosophy.
Personal life
He was married to Kathleen Higgins, with whom he co-authored several of his books. She is a Professor of Philosophy at University of Texas at Austin. Solomon collapsed and died of pulmonary hypertension on January 2, 2007 while changing planes at Zurich airport.Selected publications
- Above the Bottom Line
- A Better Way to Think About Business: How Personal Integrity Leads to Corporate Success
- A Handbook for Ethics
- A Passion For Justice
- A Passion for Wisdom: A Very Brief History of Philosophy
- Introducing Philosophy: A Text with Integrated Readings
- A Short History of Philosophy with Kathleen M. Higgins
- About Love: Reinventing Romance for Our Times
- Building Trust: In Business, Politics, Relationships, and Life
- Continental Philosophy Since 175 0
- Dark Feelings, Grim Thoughts: Experience and Reflection in Camus and Sartre
- Entertaining Ideas
- Ethics and Excellence
- Ethics: A Short Introduction
- Ethics and Excellence: Cooperation and Integrity in Business
- From Africa to Zen: An Invitation to World Philosophy
- From Hegel to Existentialism
- From Rationalism to Existentialism: The Existentialists and Their Nineteenth-century Backgrounds
- Existentialism
- "Graduate Study in Continental Philosophy in American Universities," Teaching Philosophy 1:2, 1975
- The Passions: Emotions and the Meaning of Life
- "Teaching Hegel," Teaching Philosophy 2:3/4, 1977
- History and Human Nature: A Philosophical Review of European Philosophy and Culture, 1750–1850
- In Defense of Sentimentality
- In the Spirit of Hegel
- Introducing Philosophy for Canadians: A Text with Integrative Readings
- Introducing philosophy: Problems and perspectives
- Introducing the Existentialists: Imaginary Interviews with Sartre, Heidegger, and Camus
- Introducing the German Idealists Mock Interviews with Kant, Hegel and Others and a Letter from Schopenhauer
- It's Good Business: Ethics and Free Enterprise for the New Millennium
- Living with Nietzsche
- Love
- Morality and the Good Life: An Introduction to Ethics Through Classical Sources
- Not Passion's Slave: Emotions and Choice
- On Ethics and Living Well
- Phenomenology and Existentialism
- Philosophy of Religion: A Global Approach
- Reading Nietzsche
- Sexual Paradigms
- Since Socrates: A Concise Source Book of Classic Readings
- Spirituality for the Skeptic: The Thoughtful Love of Life
- The Blackwell Guide to Continental Philosophy
- The Bully Culture: Enlightenment, Romanticism, and the Transcendental Pretense, 1750–1850
- The Big Questions: A Short Introduction to Philosophy
- The Joy of Philosophy
- The Little Philosophy Book
- The New World of Business: Ethics and Free Enterprise in the Global 1990s
- The Passions
- The Philosophy of Love, with Kathleen M. Higgins
- Thinking about Feeling: Contemporary Philosophers on Emotions
- True to Our Feelings: What Our Emotions Are Really Telling Us
- Up the University: Re-Creating Higher Education in America
- What Is An Emotion?: Classic and Contemporary Readings
- What Nietzsche Really Said
- Wicked Pleasures: Meditations on the 'Seven' Deadly Sins
- World Philosophy: A Text with Readings