After receiving a B.A. degree from
Beloit College in 1915, and an MA from
Yale University in 1919, he went on to
Harvard University, where he earned another MA in 1922 and a Ph.D. in 1924. At Harvard, Northrop studied under
Alfred North Whitehead. He was appointed to the Yale faculty in 1923 as an instructor in Philosophy, and later was named professor in 1932. In 1947 he was appointed
Sterling Professor of Philosophy and Law. He chaired the Philosophy department from 1938 to 1940 and was the first Master of
Silliman College, from 1940 to 1947. He was the author of twelve books and innumerable articles on all major branches of philosophy. Chapter-length studies of seven of these books can be found in Fred Seddon’s
An Introduction to the Philosophical Works of F. S. C. Northrop. His most influential work,
The Meeting of East and West, was published in 1946 at the aftermath of
World War II. Its central thesis is that East and West both must learn something from each other to avoid future conflict and to flourish together. His jurisprudential work primarily concerned sociological jurisprudence. Northrop was a regular attendee of the
Macy Cybernetics Conferences in the 1940s and 1950s. In 1962, he gathered some of the key participants from those conferences (including
Warren Sturgis McCulloch and
Donald MacCrimmon MacKay) at a Wenner Gren Foundation Symposium on the topic of The Determination of the Philosophy of a Culture. He also attended the
International Meetings, conferences on contemporary issues and interfaith dialogue, at the
monastery of Toumliline in Morocco in the late 1950s. Northrop was personally acquainted with and close to a great number of leading figures in philosophy, politics, and science. These included
G. H. Hardy,
Bertrand Russell,
Ludwig Wittgenstein,
Erwin Schrödinger,
Hermann Weyl,
Norbert Wiener,
Mao Zedong,
John Foster Dulles and
Mohammed Iqbal, among many others. For instance, see the dedication to
Man, Nature, and God. ==Bibliography==