Tributes to Prof. Dudley Knowles

Published: 7 November 2014

‌Tributes have been paid to Professor Dudley Knowles, who has died aged 66. He was a former Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Glasgow.

Dudley Knowles deceased Tributes have been paid to Professor Dudley Knowles, who has died aged 66. He was a former Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Glasgow and an acclaimed political philosopher and Hegel scholar.

He was born in Penwortham on the outskirts of Preston, Lancashire. 

In a message to colleagues, Professor Fiona Macpherson, Head of Philosophy, said: "It is with very great sadness that the Department of Philosophy report the death, on 26th October 2014, of our highly esteemed colleague and friend, Professor Dudley Knowles."

Professor Alan Weir said: "As all who knew Dudley will attest, he was far from the stereotype of a conventional academic. But he was a very fine academic: his main areas of scholarship were in political philosophy, on which he published two monographs, Political Obligation (Routledge, 2009) and the much-used introductory text Political Philosophy (1st  edition 2001, 2nd edition2009) and on Hegel, on which he published  two books– Hegel and the Philosophy of Right (Routledge, 2002) and the edited volume on G.W.F Hegel (Ashgate, 2009).

Hotelier

"He was also a superb teacher, who inspired tremendous devotion amongst his students. A true Lancastrian to his toenails, Dudley headed south from Preston to take an undergraduate degree at Bedford College, London graduating in 1970 then north to Scotland, attracted particularly by the lure of the mountains: Dudley and his late twin brother Dave were serious mountaineers. Dudley also balanced postgraduate work at Glasgow with a career as a hotelier in Glencoe and stalwart of the Glencoe mountain rescue team before embarking on a 38 year teaching career, 1973-2011, at Glasgow University. This included a long stint as Head Warden at the Hall of Residence, where a generation of young academics learnt lessons as wardens which their PhD supervisors could not have taught them, schooling Gus O’ Donnell, former Cabinet Secretary, for example, in how to keep control of egomaniacs (Dudley was very good at this, Sir Gus as he became, perhaps less successful).

"His colleagues remember his  total honesty, integrity, warmth and his infectious sense of humour. When he retired in 2011, the department attempted to give him a great send-off, but, in a classic Knowlesian move, Dudley organised, and paid for himself, a superb retirement ceilidh at which his various worlds – academic colleagues, Glencoe mountaineers, very wide circle of friends and of course most importantly of all, family, wife Anne, daughters Helen and Katie and grandchildren – all mixed happily. He will be greatly missed and very fondly remembered."

 

 


First published: 7 November 2014