Henryk Hià ¼ (; 8 October 1917 â 19 December 2006) was a Polish analytical philosopher specializing in linguistics, philosophy of language, logic, mathematics and ethics, active for most of his life in the United States, one of the youngest representatives of the LwówâÂÂWarsaw school.
A disciple of Tadeusz Kotarbià Âski, Hià ¼ studied at the University of Warsaw. During the German occupation of Poland in World War II, he participated in the Polish resistance movement as a cryptographer in the Home Army. In 1944 he took part in the Warsaw Uprising. In 1948, he defended his Ph.D. at Harvard University under W.V.O. Quine.
In 1950, he permanently emigrated to the United States. He kept in touch with the American logical environment, including with Alfred Tarski, and maintained lively contact with the Polish academic community. He lectured at the University of Pennsylvania between 1960 and 1988. In 1976 he was a Guggenheim Fellow and a visiting fellow at the University of Cambridge. In 1982 he received the Alfred Jurzykowski Foundation Award. He was a member of the Warsaw Scientific Society.
He published about one hundred original papers in peer-reviewed scientific journals. Strongly influenced by the LwówâÂÂWarsaw school, initially in his research he was interested in semantics, formal logic and methodology of the sciences. From the late 1950s, he dealt mainly with linguistics in relation to logic and philosophy. He described himself as a naturalist and linguistic behaviorist, assuming that the linguistic work is primarily about linguistic behavior. He called himself a âÂÂnegative utilitarianâÂÂ; and was also a pacifist and an atheist.
He was born on October 8, 1917, in Petrograd as the son of Tadeusz Hià ¼ and Emilia née Elà ¼anowska. He had an older brother, (1915âÂÂ1999). In 1920, the family came to Poland, settling in Warsaw. Henryk's mother, Emilia, was an architect, while his father Tadeusz Hià ¼ was a journalist, who kept in touch with the Warsaw's bohemian circles. Franciszek Fiszer was, among others, a frequent guest in their house. Years later, Henryk Hià ¼ said that âÂÂhe obtained a lot from his parental homeâÂÂ.
He attended the Mikoà Âaj Rej High School in Warsaw, where he passed the matriculation examination in 1937. For two years he was an actor at the School Theater of the Reduta Institute. In 1938, he performed in the play Koà Âciuszko near Racà Âawice (Koà Âciuszko pod Racà Âawicami) directed by Maria DulÃÂba, portraying historical figure Bartosz Gà Âowacki. In the theater, he also met Ewa Kunina, Juliusz Osterwa and Iwo Gall. In the late 1930s he associated with the so-called âÂÂdemocratic youthâÂÂ, becoming one of the founding members of the anti-fascist Democratic Club in Warsaw.
In 1937 he enrolled at the University of Warsaw to study philosophy. He attended lectures and seminars in logic led by Jan à Âukasiewicz, Stanisà Âaw Leà Âniewski and Alfred Tarski. He was most influenced by Tadeusz Kotarbià Âski, to which he later referred as his master. After the establishment of the ghetto benches at the university, Hià ¼ together with a group of students used to stand against the wall instead of sitting during the lectures, to manifest their opposition to the antisemitic attitude of most of the then-academic staff and co-students.
After the outbreak of World War II, during the German occupation of Poland, Hià ¼ continued his education in the underground university until 1944. At the time, he was appointed an assistant to Kotarbià Âski and à Âukasiewicz, and ran the classes in their absence. In the wartime he made friends with Jerzy Pelc, Klemens Szaniawski, Jan Strzelecki, Andrzej Grzegorczyk and Krzysztof Kamil Baczyà Âski.
Although he was a pacifist from a young age, and he was to say that he would not be able to use a gun even in self-defense, he joined the Home Army and became active in the Polish resistance movement. Later he justified that âÂÂa few roundups morally or nervously forced him toâ do that. He worked in the Home Army's General Command, in the ciphers department. Mathematician Stefan Mazurkiewicz taught him encryption. In 1943 Henryk Hià ¼ married Danuta Wicentowicz. In 1944 he took part in the Warsaw Uprising, in the rank of second lieutenant (podporucznik). After the fall of the uprising, he was taken prisoner by Nazi Germany and carried to an oflag in Lübeck, where he stayed until the liberation of the Allies. He considered the decision of Polish military command to start an uprising âÂÂunwiseâÂÂ.
After the liberation, he enrolled in philosophy at the Université libre de Bruxelles, where he and his wife studied under Chaïm Perelman and Eugène Dupréel. In 1946 they obtained master's degrees (license en philosophie). In the same year, Henryk and Danuta Hià ¼ left for the United States, along with the post-war wave of Eastern European emigrants and refugees.
In 1948, Hià ¼ defended his Ph.D. at Harvard University under Willard Van Orman Quine. In the years 1948âÂÂ1949 he was a lecturer and tutor at Harvard. There he met Clarence I. Lewis, Percy W. Bridgman and Philipp Frank.
He returned to Poland, where between 1949 and 1950 he was an adjunct at the Faculty of Mathematics of the University of Warsaw, in the Department of Philosophy of Mathematics headed by Andrzej Mostowski. In the spring of 1950 he lectured at the University of à Âódà º, rector of which was Tadeusz Kotarbià Âski. He was friends with Stanisà Âaw Ossowski and Maria Ossowska. âÂÂA short attempt to settle in the country after the war ended with disappointmentâÂÂ, also due to the âÂÂStalinist course slowly starting to dominateâ at the time. In 1950 Henryk Hià ¼ left with his wife back to the U.S.
Between 1950 and 1951 he was a lecturer at Brooklyn College at New York University and at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. In the years 1951âÂÂ1953 he was an assistant professor of philosophy of mathematics at the University of Utah. In 1953âÂÂ1954 he returned to work at the University of Pennsylvania, where he lectured in philosophy. In 1954âÂÂ1960 he was an assistant professor and associate professor of mathematics at Pennsylvania State University.
In 1962, Henryk Hià ¼ and his wife obtained American citizenship. From 1960, Hià ¼ was an associate professor, and between 1964 and 1988 he was a full professor of linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania. In the years 1958âÂÂ1981 he was the Deputy Head of the research group on transformation and text analysis, subsidized by the National Science Foundation. Occasionally, he was also a member of the Faculty of Computer Science and the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Pennsylvania. He kept in touch with Alfred Tarski, who helped Hià ¼ get employment in the U.S. In Philadelphia, Hià ¼ made a close acquaintance with philosopher Charles H. Kahn, who dedicated his book The Verb âÂÂbeâ in Ancient Greek to Henryk and Danuta Hià ¼.
In 1966, Hià ¼ was a lecturer at the Tate Institute for Advanced Study in Mumbai. In 1968âÂÂ1971 he was a visiting professor of philosophy at New York University. In 1973âÂÂ1976 he was a lecturer in philosophy at Columbia University. Between 1976 and 1977 he was a Guggenheim Fellow and visiting fellow at Clare Hall at the University of Cambridge. In 1976, he was the President of the Semiotic Society of America.
In 1988 he retired and has since worked as a retired professor of linguistics. He lectured in the fall semester of 1988 and spring of 1990.
Hià ¼ âÂÂnever lost contact with the Polish scientific community and was keenly interested in the situation in his home countryâÂÂ. In the U.S., his home was âÂÂalways welcoming guests from PolandâÂÂ. He was active in the Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America. In 1976âÂÂ1977 he was a visiting professor of philosophy at the Jagiellonian University. In 1991 he was elected a member of the Warsaw Scientific Society. In the years 1991âÂÂ1992 he was a visiting professor of philosophy at the University of Warsaw. In 1995 he took part in the 6th Polish Philosophical Congress in Toruà Â, where he gave a lecture on reasoning in the Polish language. In 2001 he presented a paper at the Tarski Centenary conference in Warsaw.
He died on December 19, 2006, at Cape May Point and was buried at the Rakowicki Cemetery in Kraków, in the family tomb (LX headquarters, southern row, place 23).
He specialized in logic and theoretical linguistics. Jan Woleà Âski called him âÂÂan outstanding representative of Polish and American analytical philosophyâÂÂ, âÂÂthe youngest disciple of the LwówâÂÂWarsaw schoolâÂÂ, whose death resulted in the âÂÂreal endâ of this school.
Hià ¼ did not publish any book, but he authored about a hundred original papers, including in The Journal of Philosophy, The Journal of Symbolic Logic, Methods, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, The Monist, Synthese, The Philosophical Forum and Studia Logica.
At the beginning of his career, he was interested in issues specific to the LwówâÂÂWarsaw school: semantics, formal logic and methodology of the sciences. During this period, he appealed mostly to the philosophy of nominalism of Stanisà Âaw Leà Âniewski and reism of Tadeusz Kotarbià Âski. Kotarbià Âski had the greatest impact on the formation of his views (in particular with his work Elements of the Theory of Knowledge, Formal Logic and Methodology of the Sciences, 1929). With time, especially under the influence of American philosophers, Hià ¼ began to abandon the absolutism of his professors in favor of pragmatism and pluralistic eclecticism.
From the late 1950s, âÂÂhe mainly dealt with linguistics and its logical and philosophical foundationsâÂÂ, focusing his research program on the grammar theory of natural language. He âÂÂaimed to give a clear form to the grammar of colloquial speechâÂÂ. In this way, he went beyond the interests of the LwówâÂÂWarsaw school, claiming that it is possible and necessary to âÂÂdevelop formal logic so that it applies to natural languageâÂÂ, although âÂÂhe did not postulate the full formalization of the language and its theoryâÂÂ.
His work was maintained in the canon of scientist naturalism. Zellig Harris, who he met in 1951 at the University of Pennsylvania, and whom he considered the main creator of formal grammar, had the greatest influence on him in linguistics. Hià ¼ did not share Noam Chomsky's mentalism and nativism, while âÂÂrecognizing the importance of the concept of linguistic competenceâÂÂ. Under the influence of Leonard Bloomfield and W.V.O. Quine he adopted the foundations of linguistic behaviorism, according to which the subject of the linguist's work is not mental processes, but language behaviors. He used the terminology introduced by Rudolf Carnap, although he consistently used the term sentence instead of proposition to designate the basic unit of logical examination (which revealed his ties with the LwówâÂÂWarsaw school). He treated language as a set of sentences on which transformations operate; while language comprehension was considered closely related to the understanding of a sentence in the context of the system of other sentences.
In ethics, he advocated negative utilitarianism, recommending âÂÂtaking care not of good for as many people as possible, but of reducing evil equally to every human beingâÂÂ. He was a pacifist and a tough critic of all forms of racism.
As a âÂÂradical atheistâÂÂ, âÂÂhe believed that religious faith was a manifestation of irrationalismâ and âÂÂsaw no way to reconcile religion with scienceâÂÂ. However, following the view of Kotarbià Âski, he believed that atheism should be distinguished as part of the worldview from âÂÂgodlessness, or mocking religion, or eliminating it by forceâÂÂ, and was âÂÂas far as possible from imposing a secular worldview on other peopleâÂÂ.
In a number of his works he referred to the works of Polish philosophers, first of all Kotarbià Âski, but also Stanisà Âaw Leà Âniewski and Leon Chwistek. In 2013, a selection of his writings made by Jan Woleà Âski and Barbara Stanosz, translated in Polish by Barbara Stanosz, was published posthumously.
In 1992, on the occasion of the seventy-fifth anniversary of his birth, disciples and friends of Henryk Hià ¼ contributed to the book Philosophical Excerpts (Fragmenty filozoficzne ofiarowane Henrykowi Hià ¼owi w siedemdziesiàtàpiàtàrocznicàurodzin), edited by Jerzy Pelc.
In 2010, the Polish Semiotics Society established the Henryk and Danuta Hià ¼ Award as âÂÂan individual cash prize awarded in a competition for the best work on language philosophy and sign theoryâÂÂ. The Prize Fund is financial resources offered by Henryk and Danuta Hià ¼ to a befriended Polish marriage, who then transferred the funds to the Polish Semiotic Society.