Austin Marsden Farrer

Warden, Keble College, Oxford

The Freedom of the Will

In his series of lectures, Farrer engages with the problem of unity between mind and body. Using The Physical Basis of Mind, a debate among Viscount Samuel, Professor Ayer, and Professor Ryle, he introduces philosophical issues dating back to Aristotle and Descartes. While it is easy to prove psychophysical unity, the struggle is correlating this reality with limited specificity. In other words, there is a difficulty in locating consciousness within the vague relationship between body and mind.

Biography

Austin Marsden Farrer was born on 1 October 1904 in London. A philosopher and theologian, Farrer was ‘the greatest mind produced by the Church of England’ in the twentieth century according to Richard Harries, Bishop of Oxford. He was made Deacon in 1928, and ordained Priest the following year, serving at All Saints, Dewsbury. In 1931, he returned to Oxford as Chaplain and Tutor of St Edmund Hall, then became Fellow and Chaplain of Trinity College until 1960. His final post was Warden of Keble College. 

Made Honorary Fellow of Trinity College and Fellow of the British Academy, he is known for his work on the synoptic problem and his notion of ‘double agency’. A close friend of C.S. Lewis, he served him the last sacraments before his death. Important works include Finite and Infinite: A Philosophical Essay (1943), The Glass of Vision (1948), Lord, I Believe: Suggestions for Turning the Creed into Prayer (1962), The Triple Victory: Christ’s Temptation According to St. Matthew (1963), Saving Belief (1964), God Is Not Dead (1966), and Faith and Speculation (1967). 

Published/Archival Resources
Published as The Freedom of the Will.