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| name = Read
| honorific_prefix = Prof.
| honorific_suffix = MA
| image = File:Read,_Carveth.jpg
| birth_date = 1848
| death_date = 1931
| address = University College London; and 111 Lansdowne Road, Notting Hill, W<br />Psychological Laboratory, University college, London [1911]<br />73 Kensington Gardens Square, W2 [1917]<br />The Holt, Holford, near Bridwater [1921]<br />Woodlane, Birmingham Road, Solihull, Warwickshire [1923]<br /><br />| occupation = academic<br />philosopher
| elected_ESL =
| elected_ASL =
| elected_LAS =
| membership = ordinary fellow - life compounder
| left = 1931 deceased
| clubs =
| societies =
RAI Council 1908 Member<br />RAI Council 1909 Member<br />RAI Council 1910 Member<br />RAI Council 1911 Member<br />RAI Council 1912-13 Member<br />RAI Council 1913 Member<br />RAI Council 1914 Member<br />RAI Council 1916 Member<br />RAI Council 1917 Member<br />RAI Council 1918 Member<br />RAI Council 1920 Member<br />RAI Council 1921 Member
=== House Notes ===
1903.11.10 Proposed by W.H.R. Rivers; seconded by C.S. Myers 1903<br />1915.10.26 The Treasurer read a letter from Prof. Carveth Read stating that as he had made a financial profit from the war which he did not wish to keep, he proposed to make up his compounding payment to £31 10s & paid in a cheque for ten guineas.11It was resolved that the Council’s thanks be sent to Prof.10Carveth Read<br /><br />Grote Professor of Philosophy of Mind and Logic<br />Lecturer on Comparative Psychology, University College<br />
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
Carveth Read (1848-1931) was a British philosopher and logician. Having obtained a Moral Sciences Tripos First Class B.A. and an M.A. from Christ’s College Cambridge, he spent three years between 1874-1877 as the Hilbert travelling scholar at the Universities of Leipzig and Heidelberg. He lectured at Wren’s ‘Coaching’ establishment in London from 1878, and was Grote professor of philosophy of mind and logic at University College London from 1903 to 1911, after which he became Lecturer in Comparative Psychology at UCL until 1921. His most influential work, Logic, Deductive and Inductive, was published in 1898, which followed in the tradition of Mill and Bain, and drew from the contemporary Empirical Logic of Venn and the Formal Logic of Keynes<br /><br />