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Alfred Jules Ayer

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He was undoubtedly one of the liveliest figures on the British philosophical scene in his time and, when he appeared on it, it was in need of enlivening. He was not a highly original thinker. His impact was due to the brilliance with which he arranged and expressed the ideas he had acquired from others. Perhaps his greatest intellectual virtue was his unremitting adherence to clarity and to rational argument. His work is without allusions, undeveloped suggestions, obscurity, and mannerism. Through his books and his teaching he sets a fine example of intellectual discipline.
--
Anthony Quinton, in "Alfred Jules Ayer, 1910-1989" the obituary in the Proceedings of the British Academy, p. 282

 
Alfred Jules Ayer

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