Hugo Anthony Meynell

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Hugo Anthony Meynell (23 March 1936 – 1 October 2021)[1] was an English academic and author.

Academic career

Born in Meynell Langley, Derbyshire, England, half a year after the death of his father, Captain Godfrey Meynell, who was awarded the Victoria Cross for action against Afghan raiders in India's Khyber Pass,[2] Hugo grew up as a member of an English family which arrived in England with the Norman conquest of England.[3] His mother was Sophia Patricia (but known as Jill) née Lowis.

He was educated at Eton, and King's College at the University of Cambridge where he obtained his PhD. He was elected a member of the Royal Society of Canada in 1993,[4] and is listed in the Canadian Who's Who.[5]

After completing his graduate work Dr. Meynell taught at the University of Leeds before moving to the University of Calgary in 1981. He wrote thirteen academic books[6] and numerous peer reviewed articles as well as regular book reviews in the Heythrop Journal and similar publications.[7]

Christian Rationalism

Meynell described himself as a "Christian Rationalist" in the tradition of Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274) and Bernard Lonergan (1904–1984), on whose work he has written.[8] His numerous books include works on philosophy, psychology, and even music.[9] A devout Roman Catholic convert, he had an evangelical outlook and sympathy for British and American Protestantism. In his later books he expressed a strong distaste for postmodernism and what he called "academic fads".[10] Latterly, he was engaged in a study of contemporary atheism.[11]

Works

  • God and the World: the Coherence of Christian Theism (1971)
  • An Introduction to the Philosophy of Bernard Lonergan (1976)
  • Freud, Marx, and Morals (1981)
  • The Intelligible Universe: A Cosmological Argument (1982)
  • The Theology of Bernard Lonergan (1986)
  • The Nature of Aesthetic Value (1986)
  • The Art of Handel's Operas (1986)
  • Is Christianity True? (1994)
  • Redirecting Philosophy: Reflections of the Nature of Knowledge from Plato to Lonergan (1998)
  • Postmodernism and the New Enlightenment (1999)

References

  1. Meynell
  2. The Times, London, Saturday, 5 October 1935, p. 18 and The Times, London, Friday, 27 December 1935; pg. 7;
  3. Burke's Landed Gentry, London, Shaw Pub. Co., 1937
  4. [Lumley 1996, p851; Membership record for Hugo Meynell, Royal Society of Canada
  5. Elizabeth Lumley, ed.,Canadian Who's Who, Toronto, University of Toronto Press 1996, pp. 851.852
  6. Eleven of these are listed in Lumley, p. 1996, the other two are Redirecting philosophy: Reflections of the Nature of Knowledge from Plato to Lonergan, Toronto; Buffalo: University of Toronto Press, 1998; and Postmodernism and the New Enlightenment, Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 1999
  7. Cf. "Hugo Meynell" in Religious and Theological Abstracts
  8. Hugo Meynell, "The Theology of Bernard Lonergan", Atlanta, Ga. : Scholars Press, 1986
  9. See his books: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Bernard Lonergan, New York : Barnes & Noble Books, 1976, Freud, Marx, and Morals, Totowa, N.J. : Barnes & Noble Books, 1981, and The Art of Handel's Operas, Lewiston, N.Y. : E. Mellen Press, 1986
  10. Cf. Redirecting philosophy: Reflections of the Nature of Knowledge from Plato to Lonergan, Toronto; Buffalo: University of Toronto Press, 1998, pp. x-xii
  11. Cf. The Heythrop Journal, Volume 37 Issue 3, Pages 336 - 347

External links