Past Member

Quentin Skinner

Affiliation

Social Science

From the American Philosophical Society:

…One of the most innovative as well as influential students of political thought in the history of the West now writing, he spent the years 1974-79 at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and is a valuable representative of the English and European scholarly communities. Dr. Skinner's historical writings have long been characterised by an interest in recovering the ideas of Renaissance republican authors. With John Pocock he is regarded as one of the two principal members of the influential "Cambridge School" of the study of the history of political thought. Dr. Skinner's particular contribution was to articulate a theory of interpretation which concentrated on recovering the author's intentions in writing classic works of political theory. Of continuing interest have been the works of Machiavelli, Thomas More and Thomas Hobbes…His publications include Foundations of Modern Political Thought (2 vol., 1978); Reason and Rhetoric in the Philosophy of Hobbes (1996); Liberty Before Liberalism (1998); and Hobbes and Republican Liberty (2008).

American Philosophical Society, "Quentin Skinner" (1997)

Dates at IAS

Member
School of Social Science
Member
School of Historical Studies

Degrees

University of Cambridge
M.A.
1965
University of Cambridge
B.A.
1962

Honors

2006
Balzan Prize
2000
Doctor of Letters, University of Oxford
1997
Doctor of Letters, University of Helsinki
1992
Doctor of Letters, University of Chicago
1992
Honorary Degrees: Chicago, East Anglia, Helsinki, Oxford, Leuven, Harvard, St Andrews, Atghens, Aberdeen, Santiago
1986
Foreign Hon. Member, American Academy of Arts & Sciences
1981
Fellow, British Academy
1979
Wolfson Prize for HIstory

Appointments

University of Cambridge
1999
Pro-Vice Chancellor
Christ's College, University of Cambridge
1997–1998
Vice Master