William Henry Chamberlin (philosopher)

William Henry Chamberlin Jr. (February 12, 1870 – May 9, 1921) was an American Mormon philosopher, theologian, and educator. His teachings and writings worked to reconcile Mormonism with the theory of evolution. He taught philosophy and ancient languages as well as science and math at several Latter-day Saints (LDS) institutions including Brigham Young University in the early 20th century. He was one of four educators at Brigham Young University whose teaching of evolution and attempts to reconcile it with Mormon thought, although strongly popular with students, generated controversy among university officials and the LDS community. Chamberlin has been called "Mormonism's first professionally trained philosopher and theologian."[1]

William Henry Chamberlin
Chamberlin, c. 1914
Born(1870-02-12)February 12, 1870
DiedMay 9, 1921(1921-05-09) (aged 51)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Utah
University of Chicago
EraModern philosophy
SchoolPersonalism
InstitutionsBrigham Young University (1909–1916)
University of Utah (1917–1920)
Main interests
Mormonism, higher criticism
Notable ideas
Spiritual realism
Signature

Biography

Early life

William Chamberlin was born in Salt Lake City, Utah on February 12, 1870 to parents William Henry Chamberlin and Eliza Frances Brown Chamberlin. William Jr. was the oldest of 12 children. He showed early interest in botany, geology, and mathematics. His brother Ralph Vary Chamberlin would go on to become a noted biologist and would later become embroiled with William in controversy regarding the teaching of evolution. On September 28, 1892, Chamberlin married Amelia Telle Cannon, a daughter of President George Q. Cannon, First Counselor in the First Presidency (LDS Church). William and Amelia had six children: Max Cannon, Hester, Martha, Paul, Frances, and Luke.[2][3][4]

Mission and early career

Chamberlin's early career was divided between teaching, studying, and working to support his family. He taught in public schools from 1889-1891, and from 1891 to 1897 he taught math, geology, and astronomy at Latter-day Saint College. He finally completed a Bachelor of Arts in science with the University of Utah in 1896. From 1897 to 1900 he served a mission in the South Pacific Society Islands where as part of his proselytizing he translated the Book of Mormon into Tahitian, and became mission president, an ordained high priest of the Church. Around the turn of the century he donated a large collection of ferns from Utah and the South Pacific to the University of Utah's natural history museum.[5] From 1900 to 1904 he taught science and theology at Brigham Young College, where he was Chair of Geology and Mineralogy.[1][4][6][7]

Philosophy and Brigham Young years

In 1901, Chamberlin began studying philosophy at the University of Chicago. Over several years he studied philosophy with several prominent thinkers, including George Howison at U.C. Berkeley and Josiah Royce at Harvard. He earned an M.A. from the University of Chicago in 1906.

In 1909, William Chamberlin was recruited to Brigham Young University (BYU) by president George H. Brimhall, as part of an effort to increase the academic quality of his university. Two years earlier, Brimhall had recruited brothers Joseph and Henry Peterson, professors of psychology and education, as well as Chamberlin's own brother Ralph, a biologist. William Chamberlin taught philosophy and ancient languages. The Chamberlin and Peterson brothers, while devout Mormons, actively sought to increase the intellectual atmosphere of the university and community, facilitating discussion and debates on evolution and the Bible, and sought to convey that evolutionary ideas and Mormon theology were not mutually exclusive, but rather complementary. The four instructors' courses were popular among students and other faculty, but university and church officials accused the professors of promoting heretical views, and in 1911 offered the Petersons and Ralph Chamberlin a choice: alter their teachings or lose their jobs. This ignited a great deal of controversy in the school and surrounding community. The students of BYU overwhelmingly supported the professors, and a petition of support signed by at least 80% of the student body was submitted to BYU officials and reprinted in the Salt Lake Tribune, Salt Lake City's largest secular newspaper. William Chamberlin was not given the same ultimatum, but soon after the accusations he published an essay entitled "The Theory of Evolution as an Aid to Faith in God and Belief in the Resurrection" in the BYU student newspaper, whose student editors wrote "the thoughtful reading of it will well repay any student".[8] The Petersons and Ralph Chamberlin left the university in 1911, while William remained for another 5 years, resigning in 1916.[1][6][9]

Later years

In 1917 Chamberlin began a PhD with Harvard philosopher Ralph Barton Perry, but left after one year due to poor health and financial troubles. He taught philosophy at the University of Utah from 1917 to 1920, and later at Utah State Agricultural College until his death.

Chamberlin died in Logan, Utah, following a flu infection on May 9, 1921. He was fifty-one years old.[1][4][10]

Philosophy and theology

Chamberlin's philosophical views have been termed "spiritual realism", and are rooted in the philosophical tradition of personalism. Mormon scholar James M. McLaughlin consolidated Chamberlin's philosophical views into five major statements:[1]:159

  1. Persons are eternal, they are ontologically and metaphysically ultimate. This personalism is tied to a pragmatic theory of knowledge in which truth is determined in relation to its outcome and the interests and purposes of persons.
  2. Community and sociality is an essential feature of the being of persons. The moral meaning of the world grows out of the relation of eternal co-dependence of persons in community. At the head of this community is God.
  3. God is a person and is the ultimate example of personal existence. God is dependent on the other members of the community of minds.
  4. God's revelation in the world is limited to the capacity of human truth; it must be stated in human terms.
  5. Evolution is a true and explanatory principle through which we can come to understand the development of the "Kingdom of God." Evolution must be viewed as a teleology reflecting God's design and not as a string of efficient causes.

Chamberlin was the first LDS scholar to extensively apply higher criticism to the Bible.[11]:63 Religious scholar Anthony Hutchinson labeled Chamberlin's style of biblical criticism (the academic study of the Bible) as a "critical historical and philological hermeneutic" approach,[lower-alpha 1] broadly characterized by acceptance of mainstream (non-LDS) biblical criticism and fluency in ancient biblical languages. According to Hutchinson, relative strengths of this approach, as compared to other LDS approaches to biblical studies, include ease of communicating with scholars of Christianity and Judaism, while relative weaknesses include a highly intellectual approach which may preclude its application to popular religious practice, and promotion of views that may be interpreted as heretical. Other LDS scholars Hutchinson grouped into this approach include Lowell L. Bennion, Sterling McMurrin, and John L. Sorenson.[12]

In a survey of thirty-eight prominent LDS intellectuals conducted by Leonard J. Arrington in the late 1960s, Chamberlin was recognized as one of the top twelve figures in LDS intellectual history.[13] However, Philip L. Barlow notes that Chamberlin is less well-known than other prominent LDS figures.[7]:142

Students of Chamberlin's included E. E. Ericksen,[1] who later become chairman of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Utah and who is known as a leading figure in LDS intellectual history.[14]

See also

References

Notes

  1. Philology is the study of language in historic texts, while hermeneutics is the interpretation of religious texts.

Works cited

  1. McLachlan, James M. (Winter 1996). "W. H. Chamberlin and the Quest for a Mormon Theology" (PDF). Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought. 29 (4): 151–167.
  2. Utah News. The Latter-Day Saints' Millennial Star. Parley P. Pratt. 1892. p. 687.
  3. Esshom, Frank (1913). "Chamberlin, William Henry, Jr.". Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah. Utah Pioneers book publishing Company. p. 799.
  4. "Inventory of the William Henry Chamberlin papers 1915-1954 § Historical Note", Special Collections and Archives, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, retrieved 2014-07-25
  5. Chamberlin, Ralph V. (1960). The University of Utah, a History of its First Hundred Years, 1850 to 1950. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. p. 208.
  6. Arrington, Leonard J.; Bitton, Davis (1992). The Mormon Experience: A History of the Latter-Day Saints (2nd ed.). Urbana: University of Illinois Press. pp. 258–261. ISBN 9780252062360.
  7. Barlow, Philip L. (2013). "The Mormon Response to Higher Criticism". Mormons and the Bible: The Place of the Latter-day Saints in American Religion (Updated ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 112–161. ISBN 9780199739035.
  8. "Second supplement". The White and Blue. 14 (14). 1911-02-14. p. 232.
  9. Sherlock, Richard (January–February 1979). "Campus in Crisis: BYU's earliest conflict between secular knowledge and religious belief" (PDF). Sunstone (13): 10–16.
  10. "Passing Events". Improvement Era. 24 (9): 858. July 1921.
  11. Russell, William D. (Spring 1986). "Beyond Literalism" (PDF). Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought. 19 (1): 57–67.
  12. Hutchinson, Anthony A. (Spring 1982). "LDS approaches to the Holy Bible" (PDF). Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought. 15 (1): 99–124.
  13. Arrington, Leonard J. (Spring 1969). "The intellectual tradition of the Latter-day Saints" (PDF). Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought. 4 (1): 13–26.
  14. Boyd, Hal (June 10, 2011). "Top 10 LDS 'Intellectuals'". Deseret News.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.