John Michael RistFRSC[1] (born 1936) is a British scholar of ancient philosophy, classics, and early Christian philosophy and theology, known mainly for his contributions to the history of metaphysics and ethics. He is the author of monographs on Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, Epicurus, Plotinus, the dating of the Gospels, and Augustine. Rist is Professor of Classics Emeritus at the
University of Toronto[2] and part-time Visiting Professor at the
Institutum Patristicum Augustinianum in Rome,[3] held the Father Kurt Pritzl, O.P., Chair in Philosophy at the
Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. (from 2011 to 2017),[4][5] and is a life member of
Clare Hall, Cambridge University. During his lengthy academic career he has been
Regius Professor of Classics at the
University of Aberdeen (1980-1983), Professor of Classics and Philosophy at the
University of Toronto (1983–1996), and the Lady Davis Visiting Professor in Philosophy at the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1995).
His work focuses in the fields of ancient philosophy and historical theology.
Major works
Books:
Eros and Psyche: Studies in Plato, Plotinus and Origen. (Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 1964); Italian edition (Milan: Vita e Pensiero, 1995).
Plotinus: The Road to Reality (Cambridge University Press, 1967); Italian edition with new introduction (Genoa: Melangolo, 1995).
Stoic Philosophy (Cambridge University Press, 1969); Spanish translation with new introduction (Barcelona: Critica, 1995) 1995.
Epicurus: An Introduction (Cambridge University Press, 1972) pp. xiv, 185; Italian edition (Mursia, 1978); Catalan translation (Santa Coloma de Queralt, 2008).
The Stoics (ed.) (University of California Press, 1978).
Human Value: A Study of Ancient Philosophical Ethics (Philosophia Antiqua 40) (Brill: Leiden, 1982).
Platonism and Its Christian Heritage (Ashgate Variorum: London, 1985).
The Mind of Aristotle (University of Toronto Press, 1989).
Augustine: Ancient Thought Baptized (Cambridge University Press, 1994). Italian edition (Milan: Vita e Pensiero, 1997); Spanish (Ediciones Destino) edition planned.
Rist has argued that the most coherent and sound form of ethical realism is what he calls 'transcendental realism,' that is, realism grounded in transcendent standards for morality, and thus in a metaphysics of morals that is in some sense 'Platonic.' Unlike
Iris Murdoch's slightly earlier work proposing Platonic metaphysics as a guide to morals,[6] with which it shares some sympathies, Rist's project has been to show that in order for an ethics to be realist, it must be theistic, that is, grounded in a divine principle that is metaphysically real.[7]
Rist is a convert to Catholicism from agnosticism. As he explained in a 1997 article, after studying Plato and Plotinus he became convinced that the notion of an intrinsically evil act requires an unchanging standard for morality (cf. the Platonic Form of Justice), and that this transcendent standard must exist in a divine mind (cf. Plotinus' second divine hypostasis, νοῦς).[8] Subsequently, he became convinced that a divine mind that was absolutely good would intervene in human history out of concern for individual human beings; he thus began to move beyond neo-Platonism and become interested in Christianity.[9] A study of the Gospels of Matthew and Mark convinced him that the compilation of Matthew was to be dated before 70 A.D./C.E., and so he became convinced that "the full range of Christian beliefs must go back to the very earliest followers of Jesus, and in all probability to Jesus himself. The solution that either Jesus was a lunatic or his earliest followers were all blatant liars again seemed the only alternative possibility if their claims were false.... I had to decide only whether the totality of Jesus' recorded behavior looked like that of a madman; it was not difficult to see that it did not."[10] By further research into Patristics, and through reading
John Henry Newman, he became convinced that the present-day Catholic Church is in continuity with that of the apostles.[11]
Like other Catholic intellectuals of the same generation—e.g.
Alasdair MacIntyre,
Charles Taylor, and
Rémi Brague—Rist has turned in his later career increasingly to the relationship of Catholic thought and culture to history and public policy.[12][13][14]
In April 2019, Rist was among 19 signatories of a letter to the bishops of the world, accusing Pope Francis of heresy.[15]
^See J. Rist, Real Ethics: Rethinking the Foundations of Morality (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001) p. 188 note 10; J. Rist, Plato's Moral Realism: The Discovery of the Presuppositions of Ethics (Washington D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 2012) pp. 267-268; J. Dougherty, Review of Real Ethics: Rethinking the Foundations of Morality by John Rist, The Review of Metaphysics 56.4 (June 2003): 897-899, p. 898.