No one who
met Jim Sadowsky could ever forget him. I first saw him at a conference
at Claremont University in California in August 1979; his great
friend Bill Baumgarth, a political science professor at Fordham,
was also there. His distinctive style of conversation at once
attracted my attention. He spoke in a very terse way, and he had
no patience with nonsense, a category that covered much of what
he heard. If you gave him an argument and asked him whether he
understood what you meant, he usually answered, "No, I don’t".
He once said to a fellow Jesuit, "that’s false, and you know
it’s false."
Behind that
gruff exterior was a very kind and warm person, with a delight
in humor. I knew I would get along with him at that conference
when he said to a small group of people, "I may not look
like a cup of coffee, but I certainly feel like one." I was
the only one who laughed, and he said to me, "You have a
discerning sense of humor." We were friends from then on.
He delighted
in paradoxical remarks, such as, "The word philosophy comes
from the Greek word philosophia, which means philosophy."
"We wouldn’t have the concept of free will, unless we had
it." "A student of mine once objected to Ockham’s razor,
on the grounds that it’s unnecessary."
He told me
that a student in one of his philosophy classes at Fordham wore
a tee-shirt that said, "I don’t need your drugs." He
said that he asked him, "Does this mean you get enough of
your own?" The student answered, "Drugs are a very serious
subject; you shouldn’t tell jokes about them." He said to
me, "I don’t understand. If he didn’t think it was funny,
how did he know it was a joke?" After he told me that he
sometimes played contract bridge, I asked him whether he was a
good player. "Yes," he answered, "but I play with
better players". One of my favorites among his comments was,
"I like to get to the desserts first, ahead of all the greedy
and selfish people."
As one might
expect of someone with this cast of mind, his specialty was logic,
and he taught this subject at Fordham for over forty years. He
began teaching there in 1960 and continued giving courses in logic
long after his retirement; he also taught logic for several years
at Blackfriars Hall in Oxford University. He was very popular
with the Oxford dons and once brought down the house with his
instant response to the question, "What would be the appropriate
penalty for attempted suicide?" "Execution," he
said.
As many readers
of lewrockwell.com will know, he was in political philosophy and
economics a follower of Murray Rothbard, who esteemed him highly.
He had come across Rothbard’s America’s Great Depression
shortly after its publication in 1963. He soon sought out the
book’s author and became part of a group that frequently gathered
at Rothbard’s Manhattan apartment.
What attracted
him to the libertarian point of view was its individualism: libertarianism
rejects the notion of a collective interest apart from that of
individual persons. In this he found echoes of one of his favorite
thinkers among the scholastics, Francisco Suarez, who maintained
that political authority rests on consent. If this idea were followed
to its full implications, Sadowsky thought, it would lead to anarchism,
an implication he fully accepted. Once, sitting on the floor on
Rothbard’s living room, he said, "I hear that Roy [Childs]
is in danger of lapsing into archy". He would never be in
this danger.
Sadowsky’s
distinctive approach to political thought is best summed up in
the last paragraph of his most influential article among libertarians,
"Private
Property and Collective Ownership." He says, "If
there is a lesson to be learned from this paper it is that the
only enlightening way of analyzing economic and property problems
is by always returning to the individual who, alone, is real.
People are ill-served by the manufacture of spurious entities."
(A number of other papers by Sadowsky are available on this site,
maintained by Tony Flood. It was Tony who telephoned me on the
morning of September 7 with the sad news of Jim’s passing, and
he has his
own memorial notice here.)
Sadowsky’s
article first appeared in the Autumn 1966 issue of Rothbard’s
journal Left and Right, under a slightly different title
and under the pen name "Eric Dalton." Jim was somewhat
crestfallen when he showed the article to his great friend and
colleague in the Fordham Philosophy Department, Father W. Norris
("Norrie") Clarke. Clarke said, "It sounds just
like you, Jim."
He had extremely
high standards of rigor and as a result did not publish very much,
but he held distinctive opinions on a wide variety of philosophical
topics. One of the most important to him was "strict finitism",
a position he had learned from his friends Morris and Alice Ambrose
Lazerowitz. In this view, there cannot be an actually existing
infinite number of physical objects. As he often said to me, "the
world is a totality." He used this view to support
an argument for the existence of God called the "kalām
cosmological argument"; but it was the standard cosmological
argument that he deemed the strongest proof for God. He rejected
the design argument but argued in a paper he deemed one of his
most important, "Did Darwin Destroy the Design Argument?",
that the theory of evolution was irrelevant to its truth. He also
held that it was possible to know what someone will in future
freely decide to do: there is, he held, no difference in principle
between knowledge of the past and knowledge of the future. He
also rejected "middle knowledge", but I don’t think
this is the place to explain the idea to those unfamiliar with
the controversy.
In the Fall
of 2011, he had surgery to relieve the pressure of blocked arteries
in his neck. Owing in part to his advanced age – he was then 87
– he never fully recovered from this operation; but he was still
anxious to discuss philosophy in our almost daily telephone conversations.
In the last few months, I could tell that a lung complaint was
causing him severe difficulty, and he was unable to talk over
the telephone very much. In our last talk, he complained that
broadcasts of the London Olympics were interfering with "Days
of Our Lives", his favorite soap opera, but he was still
looking forward to his two scoops of chocolate ice cream after
lunch and dinner every day. Now my dear friend is gone, and I’ll
never be able to tease him about the ice cream again.