David Edmonds is a writer and philosopher whose many critically acclaimed books have been translated into more than two dozen languages. He is the author of The Murder of Professor Schlick and Would You Kill the Fat Man? (both Princeton) and the coauthor, with John Eidinow, of the international bestseller Wittgenstein's Poker. He and Nigel Warburton cohost the popular Philosophy Bites podcast.
"""A Seminary Co-Op Notable Book of the Year"" ""A Prospect Book of the Year: Lives"" ""A FiveBooks Best Philosophy Book of the Year"" ""Offering more than a thinker’s life and career, Parfit is a crash course in the evolution of moral philosophy, and the best account I have read of what “doing philosophy” entails. . . . Superb.""---Heller McAlpin, Wall Street Journal ""Parfit is written engagingly, ably balancing philosophy and biography. Readers outside the field will find Edmonds’s descriptions of Parfit’s philosophical contributions fascinating and clear. . . . Parfit’s philosophy was philosophy at its best and Parfit is an excellent introduction to that philosophy and the life in which it grew to occupy such a central role.""---Oliver Traldi, Washington Post ""The best intellectual biography I’ve ever read.""---Paul Bloom, author of The Sweet Spot ""Edmonds has pulled it off, and few could be better suited to the task. . . . He writes stylishly, with a light touch. The book is packed with anecdotes that leaven the discussion of Parfit’s weighty professional output. ""---Sarah Richmond, Times Literary Supplement ""Parfit made contributions to questions about identity, future generations, and freedom, but his central project was to argue for the objective nature of morality. Edmonds’s companionable biography tracks this work while assembling a portrait of how Parfit grew from a young boy with strong moral intuitions to a kind, perfectionistic man who believed that the stakes of his mission were so high that he should devote almost all of his waking hours to it."" * New Yorker * ""A lively new biography."" * The Economist * ""[Edmonds] manages to make Parfit’s cloistered, eccentric life of the mind a source of endless astonishment. . . .It is surely the best biography of a philosopher since Ray Monk’s hitherto peerless Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius. ""---Julian Baggini, Prospect ""This fascinating biography. . .combines lucid philosophical exegesis with astute psychological analysis. Edmonds clearly loves his subject. . . and he documents his life with exhaustive honesty.""---Jane O’Grady, Literary Review ""This is both a fabulous book and a necessary biography of a significant Oxford academic who a lot of people have sort of heard of but can’t quite place. . . . It will be a curiously dull reader to complete this volume and not be affected by some of the powerful ideas that are raised along the way.""---Richard Lofthouse, QUAD ""A fascinating and important person. I do highly recommend the biography.""---Diane Coyle, Enlightened Economist ""Very readable.""---Nigel Warburton, The New European ""Rich and dense. . . . Parfit is a tremendous fabric of stories, memories, references, personal testimonies, research material and original quotations, and it is an equally, tremendously, heartfelt invitation to feel and engage with the rhythm and presence of a life. It is absorbing, fascinating, replete with occasions for pause and reflection, full of echoes of lives past, lives lived, lives almost obsessively examined.""---Mika Provata-Carlone, Bookanista ""[A] gripping biography.""---Joe Humphreys, The Irish Times ""Superb, terrific. . . [Edmonds] reconstructs a whole new world.""---Cass Sunstein ""It’s hard to imagine a more sympathetic, fair-minded, and appropriately skilled biographer for Parfit than David Edmonds. . . . [An] excellent biography.""---Frank B. Farrell, Commonweal Magazine ""David Edmonds has written an exemplary biography. It is thorough, revealing, and yet sympathetic, and written by someone who admires the life of someone he nevertheless confesses to find a very puzzling subject.""---Simon Blackburn, Society ""A sharp and sympathetic biography.""---Michael Gibson, City Journal ""Dave Edmonds is an adept populariser of recondite ideas and his book about Derek Parfit, the mysterious and reclusive philosopher who spent most of his adult life at All Souls College, is essential reading.""---Jason Cowley, The Times ""David Edmonds, himself philosophically trained, is a very engaging writer on the subject of philosophers’ lives. . . . He treats his reader with respect, but knows that a spoonful of gossip, or biography, helps the philosophy go down. I recommend [Parfit] highly.""---Theodore Dalrymple, The Lamp"