William Angus Sinclair OBE TD FRSE DLitt (27 September 1905 – 21 December 1954) was a 20th-century Scottish philosopher.
Life
editHe was born in Edinburgh on 27 September 1905 the son of Elizabeth Campbell and her husband, Captain John Sinclair of the Mercantile Marine. He was educated at George Watson's College then studied philosophy at the University of Edinburgh, graduating with an MA. In 1932 he began lecturing in logic at the University.
In 1939 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Norman Kemp Smith, James Pickering Kendall, Ernest Ludlam and Francis Albert Eley Crew.[1]
In World War II he served as a gunnery officer with the Royal Artillery in Italy. In the final year he served as Assistant Adjutant General organising the supply of personnel to the airborne divisions.
Between December 1939 and May 1940 he gave a series of radio talks on the BBC Home Service called The Voice of the Nazi in which he explained the Nazi use of propaganda. These were published in book form in the UK and USA in 1940. His notes, drafts and completed scripts for these talks are available in the National Library of Scotland.
In 1945 he stood as a Conservative candidate in local elections but his politics changed and soon after he affiliated himself to the Labour Party.[2]
He died on 21 December 1954, lost in a snow blizzard in the Cairngorms,[3] while serving in his capacity as a Lt Colonel in the Officer Training Corps section of the Territorial Army whilst trying to reach shelter at the officer training camp in the Grampians.[2] His body was taken to Glenmore Lodge.
Publications
edit- The Voice of the Nazi (1940)
- Introduction to Philosophy (1944)
- The Traditional Formal Logic (1951)
- Socialism and the Individual (1955 – posthumous publishing)
Family
editIn August 1954 he married Susan Archer Cameron (d.2010). Her family donated his library to the National Library of Scotland in 2005.
Memorials
editThe Sinclair Hut or Sinclair Memorial Hall was a shelter bothy at the Chalamain Gap in the Cairngorms erected in his honour by the OTC. The bothy was demolished in 1991, because of continual graffiti.[2]
It is now replaced by a commemorative stone along the Lairig Ghru pass.
References
edit- ^ Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X.
- ^ a b c Cairngormwanderer (28 April 2014). "The Sinclair Hut – one of the Cairngorms' lost bothies". cairngormwanderer. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
- ^ Glasgow Herald 23 December 1954