Sir William Hamilton, 9th Baronet (born March 8, 1788, Glasgow, Scot.—died May 6, 1856, Edinburgh) was a Scottish metaphysical philosopher and influential educator, also remembered for his contributions in the field of logic.
Hamilton took his B.A. from Balliol College, Oxford, in 1811 and became a member of the Scottish bar in 1813. He inherited a baronetcy in 1816 (after a court suit), and in 1821 he was appointed professor of civil history at the University of Edinburgh. A versatile teacher, he was also knowledgeable in anatomy, physiology, literature, and theology and was a frequent contributor to journals. His long friendship with the French philosopher Victor Cousin originated with his essay in the Edinburgh Review on “The Philosophy of the Unconditioned” (1829), a critique of Cousin’s Cours de philosophie. Hamilton’s subsequent articles on German philosophy in the Edinburgh Review established his reputation as a philosopher, and he was elected to the chair of logic and metaphysics at Edinburgh in 1836.
Critics dismissed Hamilton’s effort to combine the Scottish “philosophy of common sense” with views held by Immanuel Kant, but he successfully stimulated an interest in metaphysics and introduced Kant to the British public. His place in the history of logic rests on his doctrine of the “quantification of the predicate,” which refers to the traditional proposition of logic “All A is B.” By modifying quantitatively the predicate to produce two forms, “All A is all B” and “All A is some B,” he extended the range of classification of propositions.
Hamilton’s articles in the Edinburgh Review were collected in Discussions on Philosophy, Literature and Education (1852). In the field of education, his articles calling for changes in English universities helped bring about the royal commission of 1850 and its subsequent reforms.