The Selected Writings of Maurice O’Connor Drury

On Wittgenstein, Philosophy, Religion and Psychiatry

Maurice O’Connor Drury

Edited by John Hayes

"As shown by the work of Störring, Ziehen, Jaspers, Janet, Mourgue, Morselli, Ey,Lanteri-Laura, Martin-Santos, Kimura, etc., the psychiatrist-philosopher remains acultural archetype. Con Drury’s work showed that such a figure was also present in Great Britain.
Lovingly edited by John Hayes, this facsimiled volume illustrates the usefulness to Psychiatry of conceptual analysis and of a way of thinking that, alas, is now rarely exercised by its practitioners." German E. Berrios, Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, UK

Hardback | 472 pp | September 2017 | 9781474256360 | £130.00 £84.50

Maurice O’Connor Drury was among Wittgenstein’s first students after his return to Cambridge in 1929. The subsequent course of Drury’s life and thought was to be enormously influenced by his teacher, from his decision to become a doctor to his later work in psychiatry.

The Selected Writings of Maurice O’Connor Drury brings together the best of his lectures, conversations, and letters on philosophy, religion and medicine. Central to the collection is the Danger of Words, the 1973 text described by Ray Monk as 'the most truly Wittgensteinian book published by any of Wittgenstein's students'. Through notes on conversations with Wittgenstein, letters to a student of philosophy and correspondence of almost 30 years with Rush Rhees, Drury gives shape to what he had learned from Wittgenstein. Whether discussing methods of philosophy, Simone Weil or the power of hypnosis, he makes fascinating excursions into the bearing of Wittgenstein’s thought on philosophy and the practice of medicine and psychiatry.

With an introduction presenting a new biography of Drury, analysing the relationship between him and Wittgenstein, The Selected Writings of Maurice O’Connor Drury features previously unpublished archival sources. Beautifully written and carefully selected, each piece reveals the impact of Wittgenstein’s teachings, shedding light on the friendship and thinking of one of the most important philosophers of the 20th century.

John Hayes is Professor of Philosophy and Dean of the Faculty of Arts at Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick, Ireland.

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