LONDON STATUES - PHILOSOPHERS
LONDON STATUES - PHILOSOPHERS
I know next to nothing about philosophy - making me ideally qualified to comment on it - although the pen pictures have been shamelessly copied and pasted from ChatGPT. Feel free to make your own uninformed comments, after all this is what social media is all about, the clueless leading the clueless. Any pearls of wisdom/thoughts (perish the thought) of my own in this post are in italics, they will likely be cliché-laden and should be taken with a pinch of salt.Unsurprisingly, all ten statues are of men - who (as I’ve been told many times), always have to have a good think before actually doing anything (like making a "to do" list).
Confucius c. 551–479 BC
Confucius saw philosophy as a practical guide to living well rather than abstract speculation. He emphasised moral character, respect for tradition, social harmony, and the importance of good rulers setting a virtuous example. Society, for Confucius, worked best when everyone understood their role and behaved with ren (humaneness) and li (proper conduct). His influence on East Asian thought has been deeper and longer-lasting than almost any Western philosopher’s.At one time he was a government official - and was sacked.
Plato c. 428–348 BC
Plato believed that the physical world is a poor shadow of a higher realm of perfect "Forms" - ideal versions of truth, beauty and justice. He distrusted democracy, having watched Athens put Socrates to death, and instead imagined a society ruled by philosopher-kings: intelligent, educated, and incorruptible. His dialogues shaped Western philosophy so thoroughly that almost everything since has been, as someone said, “a footnote to Plato.”
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Aristotle rejected Plato’s other-worldly perfection in favour of careful observation of the real one. He believed knowledge came from experience, that virtue was a matter of balance (the famous “golden mean”), and that humans flourish through reason and community. Unlike Plato, Aristotle was happy getting his hands dirty with biology, politics, drama and ethics — laying foundations for science as well as philosophy.
Many of his works survive only as lecture notes, not polished books.
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Thomas More 1478–1535
More is best known for Utopia, a deceptively calm description of a rational, communal society that quietly exposes the corruption and inequality of Tudor England. A devout Catholic and a humanist, he believed conscience mattered more than convenience - a belief that cost him his head when he refused to support Henry VIII’s break with Rome. Idealism, irony and martyrdom sit uneasily together in his legacy.
Thomas More Chambers, 51 and 52 Carey Street More studied law at nearby Lincoln's Inn. This statue was unveiled in 1886.Chelsea Old Church, Cheyne Walk Thomas More once lived near here and worshipped in this church. This statue, unveiled in 1969, is unusual in being coloured, despite being fashioned in bronze. Sculpted by L. Cubitt Bevis, it caused controversy at the time, with renowned art historian Sir John Rothenstein resigning from the selection committee over the design. Others felt More appeared to be sitting on a toilet.
He was Henry VIII’s Lord Chancellor, losing his head over a matter of conscience.
He wrote Utopia, meaning "nowhere" partly as satire, though people keep taking it literally.
He was later canonised as a saint, despite having no qualms about sending Lutherans to the stake.
Quotes: "A man's country is not a certain area of land, but a place where one is not a slave."
"The greatest wealth is to live content with little."
"I die the King’s good servant, but God’s first." [his last words]
Locke argued that humans are born as a tabula rasa - a blank slate - shaped by experience rather than innate ideas. Politically, he believed governments exist only by the consent of the governed and must protect life, liberty and property. If they fail, people have the right to overthrow them. His ideas directly influenced the Enlightenment, the American Revolution, and modern liberal democracy.
Burlington House, Burlington Gardens
He trained as a doctor and helped treat the Earl of Shaftesbury.He spent years in exile in the Netherlands for being politically awkward.
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"New opinions are always suspected, and usually opposed, without any other reason but because they are not already common."
Smith is often caricatured as the prophet of greed, but his thinking was subtler than that. He believed markets could organise society efficiently through self-interest, but only when tempered by moral sympathy and social norms. His “invisible hand” was not a free pass for selfishness, but an observation about how complex systems sometimes balance themselves - imperfectly and not without consequences.
He never actually used the phrase "capitalism".
He once walked into a tanning pit while deep in thought.
His "invisible hand" appears only a handful of times in his writing.
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"It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker that we expect our dinner."
"It is the highest impertinence and presumption, therefore, in kings and ministers, to pretend to watch over the economy of private people."
"Little else is requisite to carry a state to the highest degree of opulence from the lowest barbarism, but peace, easy taxes, and a tolerable administration of justice."
Jeremy Bentham 1748–1832
Bentham reduced ethics to a radical simplicity: actions are right if they increase happiness and wrong if they cause suffering. His utilitarianism aimed to make law, punishment and government rational rather than traditional or moralistic. Famously eccentric, he requested that his preserved body be displayed after death - proof that even the most calculating philosophers can be wonderfully odd.
John Stuart Mill 1806–1873
Mill refined Bentham’s utilitarianism by arguing that not all pleasures are equal - intellectual and moral pleasures matter more than mere comfort. He was a passionate defender of free speech, individual liberty, and women’s rights, believing society progresses only by tolerating dissent. If modern liberalism has a conscience, Mill helped give it one.
Temple Gardens, Victoria Embankment
Jeremy Bentham was his godfather.
He was educated so intensely he suffered a mental breakdown in his twenties.
Despite disliking public speaking, he served as an MP.
His advocacy for women’s rights was decades ahead of its time.
He credited much of his thinking to his wife, Harriet Taylor, unusually generous for the era.
Quotes:"Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing."
"It is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied; better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied."
Marx saw history as a struggle between economic classes, driven by who controls production and who does the work. He believed capitalism inevitably creates inequality and alienation, and would eventually collapse under its own contradictions. Few thinkers have had their ideas so widely adopted, distorted, weaponised and argued over - often by people who never read him properly.
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"History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce."
."Social progress can be measured by the social position of the female class."
Bertrand Russell 1872–1970
Russell combined razor-sharp logic with moral urgency. A pioneer of analytic philosophy, he also wrote for the general public, campaigning against war, nuclear weapons and dogma of all kinds. He believed clarity was a moral duty and that scepticism was healthier than certainty - especially when power is involved.He was imprisoned during WWI for pacifist activism.
He came from an aristocratic family and rebelled magnificently.
He lived to 97 and remained politically active to the end.
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i still don't get philosophy, but reckon i could have enjoyed a tsingtao with confucius - and didn't judy garland solve the trolley problem?
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