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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 February 2009
The foundation of the (now Royal) Institute of Philosophy coincided with my own entry into the ranks of academic philosophers. It may therefore on this special occasion be of some interest if I cast some retrospective glances at philosophy's daily life in and after the middle 1920s. I shall not steal from the proper hands the task of sketching the history of the Royal Institute itself; but I have some now fairly rare qualifications for describing the philosophical world into which it was born.
1 This paper is the text of a lecture given at King's College, London, on 14 May 1976, to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the foundation of the Royal Institute of Philosophy.