William Duff | |
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Born | 1732 |
Died | 1815 |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Scottish Presbyterian Minister |
Known for | Theory of genius |
William Duff (1732 - 1815) was a Scottish Presbyterian minister and one of the first writers to analyse the nature of genius as a property of human psychology.[1] His Essay on Original Genius is frequently cited as a landmark in the Western analysis of genius and creativity.
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Duff was a Scottish minister and M.A., was licensed by the presbytery 25 June 1755, called 18 September, and ordained 8 October, when he was appointed to the parish of Glenbucket, Aberdeenshire. Thence he was transferred to Peterculter in the same county, 24 October 1766, being admitted 4 March 1767. He was nominated minister of Foveran, also in Aberdeenshire, in February 1774, and took up his home a year later. There he got a new church built in 1794, and died father of the synod, 23 February 1815, in the eighty-third year of his age, and sixtieth of his ministry.[2]
Duff was primarily interested in establishing the cognitive traits that explained variance in people's accomplishments.[1] He postulated three aspects: imagination, judgement and taste.[3] Notably, he emphasised imagination as making the most important contribution to genius.[1][4]
Duff is author of:[5]
Duff also furnished an account of Foveran to Sir J. Sinclair's Statistical Account of Scotland.[6]
On 4 September 1778, he married Ann Mitchell, by whom he had two sons and four daughters.[5]