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The '''University Philosophical Society''' (commonly known as '''The Phil.''') is a student paper-reading and [[debate|debating]] society in [[Trinity College, Dublin]]. It was founded in [[1853]] as the ''Undergraduate Philosophical Society''. The Phil. is currently situated in the [[Graduates' Memorial Building]] of Trinity College, which it shares with the [[College Historical Society (Trinity College, Dublin)|College Historical Society]]. Traditionally a paper-reading society, it now largely organises debates, though it still occasionally invites students and guests to read papers. The society has in recent years prided itself on being less formal and stuffy than the Hist.
The '''University Philosophical Society''' (commonly known as '''The Phil''') is a student paper-reading and [[debate|debating]] society in [[Trinity College, Dublin]]. It has the largest membership of any student society in Trinity College; due to its granting the longest term of membership of any student society in the College, it has over four thousand students on its books. The society meets every Thursday during term in the [[Graduates' Memorial Building]] to discuss a paper, debate a motion or hear an address.


==The Society==
[[Image:GMB.JPG|right|framed|The Graduates' Memorial Building, home of the Phil.]]The Phil is currently situated in the Graduates' Memorial Building of Trinity College, which it has shared with the [[College Historical Society (Trinity College, Dublin)|College Historical Society]] since its construction in [[1904]]. The Phil occupies three rooms in the building, the legal status of which was an area of conflict with College authorities in the past.


Like most other Irish debating societies, the University Philosophical Society is traditionally a paper-reading society, with a meeting consisting of responses to a paper rather than debate on a motion. Unlike those other societies, the Phil still keeps this tradition alive, though it now largely organises debates. In addition to debate, the Phil provides facilities for its members such as games and a conversation room, and organises traditional sporting events and blood drives.
The [[Dublin Philosophical Society]] existed intermittently from [[1683]] to [[1708]]. The Phil. is linked to that society and, as such, to be the oldest undergraduate society in the world. It should be noted that that society was somewhat different, not being an undergraduate society or connected in any substantial way with Trinity College.

The Phil has a number of traditions, like Trinity's other old societies. The lectern at which speakers stand symbolises the paper-reading tradition, toasts are made to Society, College and Country at each Session's inaugural meeting, and at the end of each session, outgoing Council members drop their keys on the table and vacate their seats for the new Council at the end of the meeting (which always happens at "midnight").


==History==
==History==
In [[1843]], the Dublin Philosophical Society was founded to cater for those Trinity College students too young to join other societies in Dublin (at the time, the College Historical Society only allowed students of Senior Sophister (fourth year) and above to join). This became the ''Dublin University Philosophical Society'' in [[1845]] when it was recognized by the college. Many of the subjects discussed were quite heavy, and the society did not appeal very strongly to its target audience. In [[1853]], the ''Undergraduate Philosophical Society'' was founded, with the Provost of the College as its Senior Patron. In [[1860]], the ''Dublin University Philosophical Society'' dissolved, and the ''Undergraduate Philosophical Society'' changed its name to the ''University Philosophical Society'' incorportating both societies. Among the notable events held in its early years was the demonstration of an early [[telephone]] by Stephen Yeates in 1865.
In [[1843]], the ''Dublin Philosophical Society'' was founded to cater for those Trinity College students too young to join other societies in Dublin (at the time, junior students were banned from many College societies and facilities). This became the ''Dublin University Philosophical Society'' in [[1845]] when it was recognized by the college. The target audience of undergraduates was deterred by the gradual take-over of the DUPS by older members of College. In [[1853]], the ''Undergraduate Philosophical Society'' was founded, with the Provost of the College as its Senior Patron. In [[1860]], the Dublin University Philosophical Society dissolved, and the Undergraduate Philosophical Society changed its name to the ''University Philosophical Society'', incorporating both societies. This makes the Phil the oldest paper-reading society in the world, and the largest in Ireland.


[[Image:Bram_Stoker.jpg|left|framed|Bram Stoker, author and early President of the Society, who presented "Sensationalism in Fiction and Society" as his first paper.]] Some of the society's notable past members include authors [[Oscar Wilde]], [[Bram Stoker]] and [[Oliver St. John Gogarty]], former Irish President [[Mary Robinson]], former [[Uganda|Ugandan]] Supreme Court Chief Justice [[Udo Udoma]] and Nobel Laureates [[Ernest Walton]] and [[Samuel Beckett]]. In terms of its original purpose, the Phil. is the oldest paper-reading society in the world, and the largest in Ireland.
[[Image:Bram_Stoker.jpg|left|framed|Bram Stoker, author and early President of the Society, who presented "Sensationalism in Fiction and Society" as his first paper.]] The society served from its beginning as a popular arena of discussion and a training-ground for future notable Irishmen. Among the notable events held in its early years was the demonstration of an early [[telephone]] by Stephen Yeates in 1865. Presidents in the early years included students who would become classicist and Provost of the College [[John Pentland Mahaffy]], poet [[Edward Dowden]] and [[Dracula]] author [[Bram Stoker]]. (In fact, the Society housed the Bram Stoker collection until the foundation of the Bram Stoker Society in the 1980s.)


The Phil suffered with the rest of Trinity College during the [[World War I|First]] and [[World War II|Second World Wars]], though one notable President of the early 1940s was lawyer, [[Uganda|Ugandan]] independence hero and Supreme Court Chief Justice [[Udo Udoma]].
===Disputes and Dating===
The society admitted women in 1968 (after the resignation of the conservative President and Secretary), becoming the first mixed-sex debating society in Trinity College. A merger with the female-only University Elizabethan Society soon followed; this was a spur towards both increased female membership and increased debating in the Phil. Recent years saw the presidency of Niall Lenihan, son of then-[[Tánaiste]] [[Brian Lenihan]], remembered as a defender of the Phil's rights of association and free speech during the visit of discredited historian [[David Irving]].
The Phil's age is a subject of controversy to this day. Some sources state that it dates from 1683 and the foundation of the [[Dublin Philosophical Society]]. However, this claim is disputed by rival society - the [[college historical society]]. However, The old Dublin Philosophical Society had links with College. Throughout the years the society has changed its objectives slights. Previously it was a forum for new research and open thinking while in the modern day it serves to question beliefs. The Phil originally served as a paper-reading society although this is less prevalent now.


===The Dublin Philosophical Society===
The Trinity College Calendar lists two dates, 1684 and 1853, as foundation dates of the society. The society's "sessions" (year-long terms in which it holds meetings) date from 1683. The Society celebrates centenaries of both the 1853 foundation of the UPS and the 1683 foundation of the DPS.
The Phil's age is a subject of controversy to this day. Some Phil members claim that the society dates from 1684 and the foundation of the [[Dublin Philosophical Society]]. However, this is unlikely, and a subject of dispute within the Phil and College. The Trinity College Calendar lists two dates, 1684 and 1853, as foundation dates of the society. The society's "sessions" (year-long terms in which it holds meetings) date from 1683. The Society celebrates jubilee anniversaries of both the 1853 foundation of the UPS and the 1683 foundation of the DPS.


==Debating==
==Debating==
The Phil. has has a strong competitive debating record of late, especially in the domestic [[Irish Times]] and international [[The Observer|Observer]] Mace and [[John Smith Memorial Mace]] competitions. The society first won the Mace (the premier British and Irish university debating competition) in 1997 when an all-Scottish team of Matthew Magee and Alex Massie won the title. A second victory was claimed three years later by Fergal Davis and Robert Cuffe. The society's internal debating competitions are the Eamon O'Coinne Memorial Maiden Speaker's Competition, for first-time speakers in college, and the satirically-titled Margaret Thatcher Memorial Debating Competition, a series of impromptu debates including the [[John Pentland Mahaffy]] Memorial Mace External competitions include an intervarsity debating competition, the Claire Stewart Trinity IV - [[Dean Swift]] Intervarsity, in association with the [[Hist]], and also a secondary schools' public speaking competition, the AIB Phil Speaks.
The Phil has has a strong competitive debating record of late, especially in the domestic [[Irish Times]] and international [[The Observer|Observer]] Mace and [[John Smith Memorial Mace]] competitions. The society first won the Mace (the premier British and Irish university debating competition) in 1997 when the all-Scottish team of Matthew Magee, Librarian, and Alex Massie, Steward, won the title. A second victory was claimed three years later by Fergal Davis and Robert Cuffe, President.


The society runs internal debating competitions: the Eamon O'Coine Memorial Maiden Speaker's Competition, for first-time speakers in college, the satirically-titled Margaret Thatcher Memorial Debating Competition (or ''Maggies''), a series of impromptu debates, and the John Pentland Mahaffy Memorial Mace. External competitions include an intervarsity debating competition, the Claire Stewart Trinity IV - [[Jonathan Swift|Dean Swift]] Intervarsity, in association with the Historical Society, and a secondary schools' public speaking competition, the AIB Phil Speaks.
==Guests==
During its long history, the Society has recorded the presence of many remarkable guests, among them [[Frederick Engels]], [[Karl Popper]], and [[Bertrand Russell]].


==Notable Speakers==
In more recent years guests have included [[John Kenneth Galbraith]], [[Salman Rushdie]] [[FW De Klerk]], [[Newt Gingrich]], [[Peter Arnett]], [[Mary Robinson]], [[The Edge]], & [[Bono]], of [[U2]], [[Peter Sutherland]], [[George Galloway]], [[Howard Marks]], [[Germaine Greer]], [[Spike Milligan]], [[Ron Jeremy]], [[Vivienne Westwood]], [[David Irving]], and [[Nancy Cartwright]], voice of [[Bart Simpson]].
[[Image:John_McCain.jpg|right|thumb|160px|US Senator John McCain, Honorary Patron of the Society.]]During its long history, the Society has recorded the presence of many notable guests, among them [[Frederick Engels]], [[Karl Popper]], and [[Bertrand Russell]].


In more recent years guests have included all Irish [[Taoiseach|Taoisigh]] since [[Charles Haughey]], [[John Kenneth Galbraith]], [[Salman Rushdie]], [[FW De Klerk]], [[Newt Gingrich]], [[Peter Arnett]], [[Mary Robinson]], [[The Edge]] & [[Bono]] of [[U2]], [[Peter Sutherland]], [[George Galloway]], [[Germaine Greer]], [[Spike Milligan]], [[Ron Jeremy]], [[Vivienne Westwood]], [[David Irving]], [[Desmond Tutu]] and Senators [[John McCain]] and [[Lindsey Graham]].
Guests of the 2004/05 session included US Senator [[John McCain]], [[Taoiseach]] [[Bertie Ahern]], former Taoiseach [[John Bruton]], pornographer [[Ron Jeremy]], "FHM High Street Honey" [[Kayleigh Pearson]], [[Formula One]] driver [[Eddie Irvine]], [[International Monetary Fund|IMF]] vice-president [[Anne O. Krueger|Anne Krueger]], Ambassador [[Bill Harrop]] and musician and political campaigner [[Bob Geldof]]. The inaugural meeting of the session featured Archbishop [[Desmond Tutu]], Northern Irish politician [[John Hume]], and former Taoisigh [[Albert Reynolds]] and [[Garret FitzGerald]].


Guests in the past few months include Sociologist [[George Ritzer]],Renouned journalistLondon Independent [[Patrick Cockburn]], former [[New York Times]] journalist and former [[RNC]] communications officer [[Clifford D. May]], Former British Ambassador to Uzbekistan [[Craig Murray]], [[RTE]] Chief Reporter [[Charlie Bird]], Former [[BBC]] Middle East Correspondent [[Tim Llewellyn]], Celebrated Author and Peer [[Jeffrey Archer]], Chef De Cabinet to [[United Nations]] Secretary General, [[Mark Malloch Brown]], Former [[White House Chief of Staff]]; [[John Podesta]], Talk Show Legend [[Michael Parkinson]], Irish Times journalist [[John Waters (columnist)|John Waters]], [[World Bank Chief Economist|Chief Economist]] & Vice President of the World Bank; [[François Bourguignon]].
Guests in the past year include conservative thinker, former [[New York Times]] journalist and former [[Republican National Committee|RNC]] communications officer [[Clifford May|Clifford D. May]], former British Ambassador to Uzbekistan [[Craig Murray]], controversial English peer [[Jeffrey Archer]], [[United Nations]] Deputy Secretary-General [[Mark Malloch Brown]], former [[White House Chief of Staff]] [[John Podesta]], talk show host [[Michael Parkinson]] and [[World Bank Chief Economist|Chief Economist]] & Vice President of the World Bank [[François Bourguignon]].


==Controversies==
==Controversies==
The Society has been involved in several controversies. In 1988, the Society invited the now discredited historian, and established holocaust denier, racist, and Nazi sympathiser, [[David Irving]] to speak. A large protest by students, staff, Jewish groups, socialists, and anti-Nazi activists resulted in the meeting being relocated to a hotel conference room and held in the small hours of the morning. More recently, the invitation to [[Austria|Austrian]] politician [[Jörg Haider]] to address the society in the Graduate Memorial Building (GMB) in late 2002 led to a protest by anti-Fascist activists, which continued through the debate, with noise being made outside the chamber and interjections in the society's proceedings within.
The Phil has been involved in several controversies relating to the balance between free speech and harm minimisation. In 1988, the Society invited then-[[Holocaust denial|Holocaust denier]] David Irving to speak. A large protest by students, staff, Jewish groups, socialists, and anti-Nazi activists resulted in the meeting being relocated to a hotel conference room and held in the small hours of the morning. More recently, the invitation to [[Austria|Austrian]] politician [[Jörg Haider]] to address the society in the Graduate Memorial Building (GMB) in late 2002 led to a protest by anti-Fascist activists, which continued through the debate, with noise being made outside the chamber and interjections in the society's proceedings within. An invitation to [[British National Party|BNP]] official Tony Wentworth was revoked by Trinity College officials after threats of physical action by leftist groups.


Another guest to generate controversy was [[Islamist]] [[Anjem Choudary]]. Over Choudary's invitation, man who hailed the 9/11 hijackers as martyrs, the former Irish Taoiseach [[John Bruton]] threatened to withdraw from a Phil. debate later that year. Mr Bruton is now an Honorary Patron of the Society and Anjem Choudary has spoken several times.
Another guest to generate controversy was [[Islamist]] [[Anjem Choudary]], who hailed the [[September 11, 2001 attacks|9/11]] terrorists as martyrs. The former Irish Taoiseach [[John Bruton]] threatened to withdraw from a Phil debate later that year over this invitation, which was not withdrawn. Mr Bruton is now an Honorary Patron of the Society, and Anjem Choudary has spoken at the Phil's lectern several times.


==Notable Former Presidents and Members==
==Notable Former Presidents and Members==
Line 39: Line 44:
*[[Mary Robinson]]
*[[Mary Robinson]]
*[[David Norris (campaigner)|Senator David Norris]]
*[[David Norris (campaigner)|Senator David Norris]]
Other notable former council members of recent years include Irish journalists [[Mary Ellen Synon]], Marc Coleman, Paul Gillespie, Alex Massie, Matthew Magee and broadcasters Ruth McAvinia, Ken Early, Ger Gilroy Colm O'Mongáin.
Other notable former council members of recent years include Irish journalists [[Mary Ellen Synon]], Marc Coleman, Paul Gillespie, Alex Massie and Matthew Magee, and broadcasters Ruth McAvinia, Ken Early, Ger Gilroy and Colm O'Mongáin.


The current President is [[Daire Hickey]], a former Secretary of the society.
The current President is [[Daire Hickey]], a former Secretary of the society.


==References==
==References==
[http://www.ilt.columbia.edu/projects/bluetelephone/html/yeates.html Stephen Yeates's telephone]
*[http://www.ilt.columbia.edu/projects/bluetelephone/html/yeates.html Stephen Yeates's telephone]
*[http://www.defenddemocracy.org//in_the_media/in_the_media_show.htm?doc_id=311413 Clifford May syndicated article on his appearance at the Phil]


==External links==
==External links==
Line 52: Line 58:
[[Category:Trinity College, Dublin]]
[[Category:Trinity College, Dublin]]
[[Category:1853 establishments]]
[[Category:1853 establishments]]

[Clifford May syndicated article on his appearance at the Phil] http://www.defenddemocracy.org//in_the_media/in_the_media_show.htm?doc_id=311413

Revision as of 20:46, 11 May 2006

The University Philosophical Society (commonly known as The Phil) is a student paper-reading and debating society in Trinity College, Dublin. It has the largest membership of any student society in Trinity College; due to its granting the longest term of membership of any student society in the College, it has over four thousand students on its books. The society meets every Thursday during term in the Graduates' Memorial Building to discuss a paper, debate a motion or hear an address.

The Society

File:GMB.JPG
The Graduates' Memorial Building, home of the Phil.

The Phil is currently situated in the Graduates' Memorial Building of Trinity College, which it has shared with the College Historical Society since its construction in 1904. The Phil occupies three rooms in the building, the legal status of which was an area of conflict with College authorities in the past.

Like most other Irish debating societies, the University Philosophical Society is traditionally a paper-reading society, with a meeting consisting of responses to a paper rather than debate on a motion. Unlike those other societies, the Phil still keeps this tradition alive, though it now largely organises debates. In addition to debate, the Phil provides facilities for its members such as games and a conversation room, and organises traditional sporting events and blood drives.

The Phil has a number of traditions, like Trinity's other old societies. The lectern at which speakers stand symbolises the paper-reading tradition, toasts are made to Society, College and Country at each Session's inaugural meeting, and at the end of each session, outgoing Council members drop their keys on the table and vacate their seats for the new Council at the end of the meeting (which always happens at "midnight").

History

In 1843, the Dublin Philosophical Society was founded to cater for those Trinity College students too young to join other societies in Dublin (at the time, junior students were banned from many College societies and facilities). This became the Dublin University Philosophical Society in 1845 when it was recognized by the college. The target audience of undergraduates was deterred by the gradual take-over of the DUPS by older members of College. In 1853, the Undergraduate Philosophical Society was founded, with the Provost of the College as its Senior Patron. In 1860, the Dublin University Philosophical Society dissolved, and the Undergraduate Philosophical Society changed its name to the University Philosophical Society, incorporating both societies. This makes the Phil the oldest paper-reading society in the world, and the largest in Ireland.

Bram Stoker, author and early President of the Society, who presented "Sensationalism in Fiction and Society" as his first paper.

The society served from its beginning as a popular arena of discussion and a training-ground for future notable Irishmen. Among the notable events held in its early years was the demonstration of an early telephone by Stephen Yeates in 1865. Presidents in the early years included students who would become classicist and Provost of the College John Pentland Mahaffy, poet Edward Dowden and Dracula author Bram Stoker. (In fact, the Society housed the Bram Stoker collection until the foundation of the Bram Stoker Society in the 1980s.)

The Phil suffered with the rest of Trinity College during the First and Second World Wars, though one notable President of the early 1940s was lawyer, Ugandan independence hero and Supreme Court Chief Justice Udo Udoma. The society admitted women in 1968 (after the resignation of the conservative President and Secretary), becoming the first mixed-sex debating society in Trinity College. A merger with the female-only University Elizabethan Society soon followed; this was a spur towards both increased female membership and increased debating in the Phil. Recent years saw the presidency of Niall Lenihan, son of then-Tánaiste Brian Lenihan, remembered as a defender of the Phil's rights of association and free speech during the visit of discredited historian David Irving.

The Dublin Philosophical Society

The Phil's age is a subject of controversy to this day. Some Phil members claim that the society dates from 1684 and the foundation of the Dublin Philosophical Society. However, this is unlikely, and a subject of dispute within the Phil and College. The Trinity College Calendar lists two dates, 1684 and 1853, as foundation dates of the society. The society's "sessions" (year-long terms in which it holds meetings) date from 1683. The Society celebrates jubilee anniversaries of both the 1853 foundation of the UPS and the 1683 foundation of the DPS.

Debating

The Phil has has a strong competitive debating record of late, especially in the domestic Irish Times and international Observer Mace and John Smith Memorial Mace competitions. The society first won the Mace (the premier British and Irish university debating competition) in 1997 when the all-Scottish team of Matthew Magee, Librarian, and Alex Massie, Steward, won the title. A second victory was claimed three years later by Fergal Davis and Robert Cuffe, President.

The society runs internal debating competitions: the Eamon O'Coine Memorial Maiden Speaker's Competition, for first-time speakers in college, the satirically-titled Margaret Thatcher Memorial Debating Competition (or Maggies), a series of impromptu debates, and the John Pentland Mahaffy Memorial Mace. External competitions include an intervarsity debating competition, the Claire Stewart Trinity IV - Dean Swift Intervarsity, in association with the Historical Society, and a secondary schools' public speaking competition, the AIB Phil Speaks.

Notable Speakers

US Senator John McCain, Honorary Patron of the Society.

During its long history, the Society has recorded the presence of many notable guests, among them Frederick Engels, Karl Popper, and Bertrand Russell.

In more recent years guests have included all Irish Taoisigh since Charles Haughey, John Kenneth Galbraith, Salman Rushdie, FW De Klerk, Newt Gingrich, Peter Arnett, Mary Robinson, The Edge & Bono of U2, Peter Sutherland, George Galloway, Germaine Greer, Spike Milligan, Ron Jeremy, Vivienne Westwood, David Irving, Desmond Tutu and Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham.

Guests in the past year include conservative thinker, former New York Times journalist and former RNC communications officer Clifford D. May, former British Ambassador to Uzbekistan Craig Murray, controversial English peer Jeffrey Archer, United Nations Deputy Secretary-General Mark Malloch Brown, former White House Chief of Staff John Podesta, talk show host Michael Parkinson and Chief Economist & Vice President of the World Bank François Bourguignon.

Controversies

The Phil has been involved in several controversies relating to the balance between free speech and harm minimisation. In 1988, the Society invited then-Holocaust denier David Irving to speak. A large protest by students, staff, Jewish groups, socialists, and anti-Nazi activists resulted in the meeting being relocated to a hotel conference room and held in the small hours of the morning. More recently, the invitation to Austrian politician Jörg Haider to address the society in the Graduate Memorial Building (GMB) in late 2002 led to a protest by anti-Fascist activists, which continued through the debate, with noise being made outside the chamber and interjections in the society's proceedings within. An invitation to BNP official Tony Wentworth was revoked by Trinity College officials after threats of physical action by leftist groups.

Another guest to generate controversy was Islamist Anjem Choudary, who hailed the 9/11 terrorists as martyrs. The former Irish Taoiseach John Bruton threatened to withdraw from a Phil debate later that year over this invitation, which was not withdrawn. Mr Bruton is now an Honorary Patron of the Society, and Anjem Choudary has spoken at the Phil's lectern several times.

Notable Former Presidents and Members

Other notable former council members of recent years include Irish journalists Mary Ellen Synon, Marc Coleman, Paul Gillespie, Alex Massie and Matthew Magee, and broadcasters Ruth McAvinia, Ken Early, Ger Gilroy and Colm O'Mongáin.

The current President is Daire Hickey, a former Secretary of the society.

References

External links