Harry Girvetz Memorial Lecture Series

Dr. Harry Girvetz, Professor of Philosophy, was a major force in shaping the history of the Santa Barbara campus of the University of California. He was a leader in university affairs, a notably successful and influential teacher and an important figure in liberal causes and in Democratic party politics in the West.
After taking his A.B. and M.A. degrees at Stanford University, Professor Girvetz received his Ph.D. in Philosophy from UC Berkeley in 1937, and was appointed that same year to the faculty of the then Santa Barbara State College.

From the outset, Professor Girvetz won a reputation as one of the most eloquent and effective teachers on campus. As a scholar, Professor Girvetz was an authoritative and widely known exponent of the philosophy of liberalism. Inspired by pragmatism, his ideas were first systematically expounded in From Wealth to Welfare (1950), followed later by The Evolution of Liberalism. In 1973 he published the fruits of his matured reflections on ethical theory, Beyond Right and Wrong. He contributed major entries to the Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences and to the Encyclopedia Britannica. Many of Professor Girvetz's most deeply held views about the history and significance of philosophy were embodied in the book, Science, Folklore, and Philosophy, which he edited, and in substantial part wrote.

Harry Girvetz's horizons, however, were far broader than the field of philosophy. In his early years at Santa Barbara, Professor Girvetz taught political science, sociology, and history as well as philosophy; and in his later years he was prominent in the tutorial program, offering interdisciplinary colloquia with faculty members from other departments. This breadth of intellectual interests also found expression in three anthologies: Democracy and Elitism; Literature and the Arts: The Moral Issues; and the widely-read Contemporary Moral Issues (1963).

Harry Girvetz was a long-time leader in liberal Democratic party circles; he was a member of the California State Democratic Central Committee and a delegate to the party's 1956 National Convention. He served as a research secretary and as a major speech writer for Governor Edmund Brown during 1959-60. He was a leader in forming the local chapter of the Americans for Democratic Action, one of the largest chapters in the state, and he was a key participant in local community planning and in organizations seeking social reform.

PREVIOUS SPEAKERS in the Harry Girvetz Memorial Lectureship have been Maurice B. Mitchell, then President of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions (1978); former Watergate Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox (1981); Howard Shuman, long-time Administrative Assistant to U.S. Senators Douglas and Proxmire (1983); Harry Ashmore, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist (1985); Robert Kerrey, former governor of Nebraska, elected in 1988 to the United States Senate (1987); Bryan Magee, distinguished British scholar, commentator, critic, and former Member of Parliament (1989); the Hon. Ruggero J. Aldisert, eminent Senior U.S. Circuit Judge and noted legal scholar (1991); Sander Vanocur, prominent national television journalist and political commentator (1993); Gary K. Hart, educator and popular Democratic office holder, who represented the Santa Barbara area in the California State Senate or Assembly for twenty years (1995); Theodore J. Lowi, author of The End of Liberalism and former President of the American Political Science Association (1998); Victor Navasky, former editor of The Nation, subsequently Director of the magazine-journalism program at Columbia University (1998); Joyce Appleby, author of Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination and past president both of the American Historical Association and the Organization of American Historians (1999); Alan Brinkley, Columbia University historian and author of Liberalism and Its Discontents (2000); Lou Cannon, former Washington Post reporter and Reagan biographer (2000); Morton Horowitz, eminent Harvard University legal historian and author of The Transformation of American Law (2000); and Michael B. Katz, eminent historian of public policy and author of The Price of Citizenship: Redefining the Welfare State (2001); and Otis L. Graham, Jr., acclaimed historian of reform movements in 20th century America and the author of Toward a Planned Society: From Roosevelt to Nixon (2002).

Past Lectures

Otis L. Graham, Jr.
"What Happened to Liberalism After the Sixties?"
Monday, May 20 2002
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Michael B. Katz

"The Price of Citizenship: Redefining the Welfare State"
Monday, May 7, 2001
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Morton Horwitz
"The Warren Court and the Reimagination of American Culture"
Thursday, November 9, 2000
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Lou Cannon
"Whatever Happened to Reagan Country? The Changing Politics of California"
Monday, May 22, 2000
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