Irwin Edman (November 28, 1896 – September 4, 1954) was an
American philosopher and
professor of philosophy. He was born in
New York City to
Jewish parents. Edman spent his high-school years at
Townsend Harris Hall, a New York high school for superior pupils. He then attended
Columbia University, where he graduated
Phi Beta Kappa and earned his bachelor’s degree in 1917, and his Ph.D. in 1920. He became a professor of philosophy at Columbia, and during the course of his career he rose to serve as head of the philosophy department. He also served as a visiting lecturer at
Oxford University,
Amherst College, the
University of California, and
Harvard and
Wesleyan Universities. The
United States Department of State and the Brazilian government in 1945 sponsored a series of lectures he gave in
Rio de Janeiro.
Edman was known for the “charm and clarity” of his writing, and for being an open-minded critic. He was a popular professor and served as a mentor to undergraduate students, notably Pulitzer Prize-winning author
Herman Wouk (Columbia class of 1934), who dedicated his first novel to Edman.
In addition to writing philosophical works, Irwin Edman was a frequent contributor to literary magazines such as
The New Yorker, the
Atlantic Monthly, the
New York Times Magazine,
Harper's, and
Commentary.
In 1953, Professor Edman was elected vice president of the
National Institute of Arts and Letters.
Irwin Edman published many books on philosophy as well as poetry and some fiction. Some of his works include “Philosopher’s Holiday,” “Richard Kane Looks at Life,” “Four Ways of Philosophy,” "Philosopher's Quest," and “Arts and the Man – An Introduction to Aesthetics.”
Bibliography
Incomplete - to be updatedPoems, individual
- "Brief Introduction to the Problems of Philosophy" The New Yorker 25/50 (4 February 1950) : 32