Alexander Broadie


Alexander Broadie, Scottish philosopher, emeritus professor of logic and rhetoric, and honorary professorial research fellow at Glasgow University. He writes on the Scottish philosophical tradition, chiefly the philosophy of the Pre-Reformation period, the 17th century, and the Enlightenment.
Broadie attended the Royal High School, Edinburgh, the University of Edinburgh, Balliol College, Oxford, and the University of Glasgow. He was Henry Duncan prize lecturer in Scottish Studies, Royal Society of Edinburgh, and has been a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh since 1991. As Gifford Lecturer in Natural Theology at Aberdeen University in 1994, he delivered a series of Lectures which were published the following year under the title The Shadow of Scotus: Philosophy and Faith in Pre-Reformation Scotland. Since demitting his professorship of Logic and Rhetoric at Glasgow University he has been honorary professorial research fellow there, mainly researching 17th-century Scottish philosophy.
In 2007 Broadie was awarded the degree of DUniv honoris causa by Blaise Pascal University at Clermont-Ferrand in recognition of his contribution to Franco-Scottish collaboration in the field of the history of philosophy.
Broadie's A History of Scottish Philosophy was named Saltire Society Scottish History Book of the Year and in July 2018 he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Eighteenth-Century Scottish Studies Society.
During the past decade Broadie has been active in several international networks. His roles have included: Principal Investigator, International Network: 'Scottish philosophy and philosophers in seventeenth-century Scotland and France', 2010-2014, funded by the ; and Co-Investigator, International Research Network: 'Existential Philosophy and Literature: The Franco-Scottish Connection - Past and Present',, funded by the . He is presently working on three books relating to Scottish philosophy of the seventeenth century, as well as co-editing the second edition of The Cambridge Companion to the Scottish Enlightenment and co-editing Thomas Reid and the University, the tenth and final volume in the Edinburgh edition of Thomas Reid, a series to which he has contributed Thomas Reid on Logic, Rhetoric and the Fine Arts.

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