William James 1842–1910

Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 19:43-68 (1985)
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Abstract

He was about five feet eight inches tall, rather thin, and for the last thirty or so years of his life sported a bushy beard and moustache, fashionable for the time. His pleasing low-pitched voice, ideal for conversation, did not carry well to large audiences, and although he was much in demand as a public speaker he rarely spoke from the floor at faculty or professional meetings. As a young man, within the family or with close friends, he was frequently the source and centre of fun, vying with his father in devising practical jokes or in generating lively argument. Like his father he was the victim of his moods, and his own wife and children had much to contend with; typically, he assigned the hour of his evening meal to student consultation, and would refuse to see invited guests if he suddenly felt antisocial. He hated what he called ‘loutish’ informality in dress, and the American way of eating boiled eggs; he loved bright neckties, animals and hill walking. He had no exotic tastes in food, avoided tea and coffee, and drank no alcohol—one of his brothers became an alcoholic, like their father in his younger days. From his early twenties until the end of his life he experienced, and perhaps savoured, a series of physical and mental depressions; remarkably, so did his father, his four brothers, and even more dramatically, his sister.

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References found in this work

Autobiography.Henry James & Frederick W. Dupee - 1957 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 15 (4):493-494.
The Philosophy of Henry James, Sr.Frederic Harold Young - 1952 - Philosophy 27 (103):369-370.
The Philosophy of Henry James, Sr.Paul Welsh - 1953 - Philosophical Review 62 (2):302.

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