Rachael Wiseman
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Dorothy Emmet
‘For administrators whose hearts are with the anarchists, and anarchists who can have a heart for the administrators’
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Dorothy Emmet (1904–2000) came to Manchester as a lecturer in philosophy just before the outbreak of the Second World War. She wrote her methodological treatise, The Nature of Metaphysical Thinking (1945), while fire-watching on the University rooftops. Emmet’s philosophy envisages ‘the world as a theatre of activities’. Human beings are both personas (role-players) and persons (creative individuals), and their activity within an unfolding administrative and institutional process can variously ‘form, dissolve, re-form, and sometimes produce a new kind with capabilities for new kinds of activity’. This chapter explores the way in which Emmet’s own creative (and quietly anarchistic) philosophical activity found expression at Manchester among a group of brilliant social scientists and philosophers (including Max Gluckman, Michael Polanyi, W. J. M. Mackenzie and Alistair MacIntyre). Her career shows how much is gained when a creative individual with imagination and intelligence finds herself in the right institutional setting.

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