William Douw Lighthall | |
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Born | December 27, 1857 Hamilton, Canada West |
Died | August 3, 1954 Montreal, Quebec |
(aged 96)
Pen name | Wilfrid Châteauclair |
Language | English |
Nationality | Canadian |
Citizenship | British subject |
Education | B.C.L. |
Alma mater | McGill U |
Genres | Poetry, Novels Philosophy, Ontology |
Notable award(s) | FRSC |
Spouse(s) | Cybel Charlotte Wilkes |
Children | Alice Margaret Schuyler Lighthall, Cybel Katharine Schuyler Lighthall, William Wilkes Schuyler Lighthall |
William Douw Lighthall (December 27, 1857 – August 3, 1954), K.C., LL.D., F.R.S.C. (often referred to as W.D. Lighthall), can be and has been described as a Canadian "lawyer, historian, novelist, poet, philosopher, anthologist, and editor."[1]
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Born in Hamilton, Canada West, to Margaret Wright McIntryre and William Francis Lighthall, W.D. Lighthall grew up in Montreal and attended McGill University, where he took his B.A. in 1879, Bachelor of Civil Laws in 1881, and M.A. in 1885.[2] Admitted to the Quebec Bar in 1881,[2] he practiced law in Montreal for the next 63 years, from 1881 to 1944.[1]
In 1890 he married Cybel Charlotte Wilkes, and they had three children: Alice Margaret Schuyler Lighthall (born 1891), Cybel Katharine Schuyler Lighthall, (born 1893), and William Wilkes Schuyler Lighthall, born 1896.[2]
In 1893 W.D. Lighthall did the legal work pro bono to incorporate the Montreal Women's Club.[2]
He served as mayor of Westmount from 1900 to 1903.[1] During that time he originated, and in 1901 co-founded, the Union of Canadian Municipalities (now the Federation of Canadian Municipalities). He also served as vice president of the National Municipal League of America.[2]
In 1915 he founded Canada's first veterans' group, the Canadian Association of Returned Soldiers.[2]
Lighthall was a member of the International Congress of Philosophy.[2] He published in the Philosophical Review three times in the late 1920s.[3]
He took a long-time interest in Canadian history, originating the Château Ramezay Historical Museum, and serving on the Royal Historical Monuments Commission and as chairman of the McCord Historical Museum. He wrote historical books, such as Montreal After 250 Years, and monographs, like The Manor House of Lacolle.[2]
Lighthall also wrote historical romances, initially under the pen name of Wilfrid Châteauclair, beginning with The Young Seigneur, or Nation Making in 1888.[1] He wrote poetry as well, publishing his first book, Thoughts, Moods and Ideals, in 1887.[2] He was an early supporter of the Canadian Authors Association, becoming its president in 1930.[1]
In literary circles, though, Lighthall "is remembered mainly for his anthology, Songs of the Great Dominion ... which included a large number of poets whose names are still familiar, for example, Wilfred Campbell, Carman, Crawford, Johnson, Lampman, and Charles G.D. Roberts."[4]
W.D. Lighthall was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1902,[1] and served as its president in 1918 and 1919.[4]
In 1921 he was made an honorary Doctor of Laws by McGill.[2]
Lighthall was among a number of the post-Darwinian thinkers of the nineteenth century who struggled with the concept of a Supreme Cause. Some of them not only struggled to redefine “God”; they also struggled to rename this entity. For his part Lighthall defined the cause as a “force of will” and called that force “The Outer Consciousness”, “The Outer Knowledge”, ”The Directive Power”, and “The Person of Evolution”. However unlike the philosopher Schopenhauer or the novelist Hardy, Lighthall, who considered himself to be both a philosopher and a novelist was optimistic in his view of the nature of “the will”. That optimism was based on Lighthall's unbending faith in the positive nature of evolutionary progress. His views are present in his Novels particularly in The Master of Life as well as in his hope for Canada as a nation.
A reader of Lighthall's philosophical works may encounter some difficulty with the style. The main problem lies in the fact that Lighthall seldom completely reworked the lecture notes, pamphlets, and texts that he used to create the works as he published them. Furthermore, he preferred to number his paragraphs, as he considered these paragraphs to be “capsular” ideas. Perhaps due to his training in law he preferred to protect the integrity of these modules rather than sacrifice any of their meaning for the integrated flow of ideas in a particular chapter as a whole. Because of this practice the author’s style appears jarringly disjointed at times. Ironically, the logical progression of deductive reasoning, so important to Lighthall's system, is often under stress because of this style.
The Lighthall system was an attempt to remarry science and religion in a single philosophical understanding of reality. Within the structure of that system Lighthall claimed to have avoided what he called the “metaphysical” problem. He insisted that all that was proposed in the hypothesis was derived from his observation of scientific fact. To be precise Lighthall considered the principles of his theory to be “proven” scientific facts and the proof to be founded upon deductive reasoning.
The system equated Instinct with Will. Further it viewed Will as the manifest cause of both the conscious and unconscious act. Lighthall stated: 'All living action is willing, and all is by nature purposive.’
Lighthall informed his readers that it was the phenomenon of the altruistic act that had been the initial “middle” ground that had led him to the formulation of the theory:
Professional and academic associations | ||
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Preceded by William Frederick King |
President of the Royal Society of Canada 1917-1918 |
Succeeded by Archibald Macallum |