All Thinkers

Iris Murdoch

Iris Murdoch was an Irish-British philosopher and novelist. She is one of the most important moral philosophers of the 20th century. She was also one of the most successful British novelists of her time. She published 26 novels alongside her philosophical work. She was born in 1919 in Dublin, Ireland. Her family moved to London when she was very young. She studied classics and ancient philosophy at Oxford from 1938. The Second World War interrupted her studies. She worked for the British Treasury and then for the United Nations relief agency in displaced persons camps in Europe after the war. She saw the human consequences of the war directly. The experience shaped her later thinking about moral life. In 1948 she became a philosophy fellow at St Anne's College, Oxford. She taught there for many years. In 1956 she married John Bayley, a literary critic. The marriage lasted until her death and was unconventional in many ways. She had several intense relationships with both men and women throughout her life, often while married. Her first novel, Under the Net, came out in 1954. The book was successful. She continued writing novels alongside philosophy for the rest of her career. Her novels are full of complicated relationships, moral struggles, and sudden surprising events. Some readers love them. Some find them odd. Her philosophical books include The Sovereignty of Good, one of the most loved short books in 20th-century moral philosophy. In the early 1990s, she developed Alzheimer's disease. The illness slowly destroyed her ability to think and write. She died in 1999, aged 79. Her husband John Bayley wrote a famous memoir about her decline.

Origin
Ireland / United Kingdom
Lifespan
1919 - 1999
Era
Modern / 20th Century
Subjects
Moral Philosophy 20th Century Literature Ethics British Philosophy Novels
Why They Matter

Iris Murdoch matters for three reasons. First, she helped change moral philosophy. In the mid-20th century, English-speaking philosophers had largely stopped doing serious moral philosophy. Many treated moral statements as just expressions of feeling, not real claims about how to live. Murdoch pushed back. She insisted that moral life was real, central to being human, and worth careful philosophical attention. She drew on Plato, on Christian thought, and on the great novelists. She helped reopen serious moral philosophy in the English-speaking world.

Second, she developed a particular philosophical view she called 'attention'. Real moral progress, she said, comes not from making good choices but from learning to see other people clearly. Most of our moral failures, she thought, come from looking at people through fantasies of our own making. The hard work is to look honestly at others as they really are. The view drew on her deep reading of Plato, Simone Weil, and the Buddhist tradition. It has influenced later moral philosophers including Martha Nussbaum.

Third, she was a major British novelist. Her 26 novels won many prizes, including the Booker Prize for The Sea, The Sea (1978). Her novels often dramatised the philosophical questions she wrote about elsewhere. She showed that fiction could be serious moral inquiry, not just entertainment. The combination of major philosophical work and major fiction is unusual. Few modern thinkers have managed both at her level.

Key Ideas
1
Why Pay Attention?
2
The Sovereignty of Good
3
Philosophy Through Novels
Key Quotations
"Love is the extremely difficult realisation that something other than oneself is real."
— Iris Murdoch, The Sovereignty of Good (1970)
This is one of Iris Murdoch's most famous lines. It captures her central idea about love and morality. Loving someone, she says, is hard. The hardness is not about giving things up or being kind. It is about really understanding that the other person exists, separately from us, with their own real life. Most of the time, we treat others as characters in our own story. We do not see them as fully real. Love, in her sense, is the work of seeing the other as truly real. The sentence is simple. The idea is demanding. For students, the line is one of the best entries into Murdoch's philosophy. It states a clear, useful idea in twelve words. It can be applied to family, friends, romantic partners, even strangers. The work of seeing others as fully real, separate from our own wishes, is a daily moral discipline. Murdoch thought this was the heart of being a good person.
"Man is a creature who makes pictures of himself and then comes to resemble the picture."
— Iris Murdoch, Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals (1992)
This sharp line captures another of Murdoch's core ideas. We tell stories about ourselves: who we are, what we are like, what we deserve. Then we slowly become the people in our stories. The pattern is true for individuals and for cultures. A culture that tells itself it values freedom slowly becomes a culture in which freedom matters. A person who tells himself he is generous slowly becomes more generous. The line is hopeful in some ways. We can change ourselves by changing our pictures. The line is also a warning. The pictures we tell ourselves can be flattering, untrue, or harmful. We can become the bad pictures as easily as the good ones. For students, this is a useful prompt for self-reflection. What pictures do you tell yourself about who you are? Are they accurate? Are they doing you good? Murdoch thought paying attention to our self-pictures was an important part of moral life.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When introducing students to moral philosophy
How to introduce
Read with students Iris Murdoch's claim that love is the extremely difficult realisation that something other than oneself is real. Discuss what this means. Most of us think love is about feeling good about someone, or wanting to be near them. Murdoch points to something deeper. Loving someone means really seeing them as a separate person, not as a character in our own story. Discuss with students how often we actually do this. The discussion can connect to friendships, family relationships, and how we treat strangers. Murdoch is one of the most accessible 20th-century moral philosophers. Her writing is plain. Her ideas are demanding. Students at any age can begin to think about them.
Emotional Intelligence When teaching students about paying attention to other people
How to introduce
Tell students that Iris Murdoch thought most of our moral failures come from not really seeing other people. We see them through fantasies and assumptions. The selfish boss. The annoying neighbour. The disappointing parent. We label them and stop looking. Real attention sees past the labels. Discuss with students how this works in their own lives. When you are angry with someone, try looking at them with fresh eyes. What do you actually see? Often the labels do not fit the real person. Murdoch's idea is practical. It can be tried in any relationship. The discipline of attention takes time but is something anyone can practise.
Creative Expression When teaching students about how literature carries moral content
How to introduce
Tell students that Iris Murdoch wrote both philosophy and novels. She thought serious literature did real moral work. Reading good novels helps us understand other people in ways no lecture can. We see characters from inside. We watch them struggle, choose, change. The skill carries over to understanding the real people around us. Discuss with students which books or films they have learned the most from. Many will mention works of fiction that taught them about lives different from their own. Murdoch's point matches their experience. Fiction is not just entertainment. It is moral education. Students should read widely. The reading is part of growing up.
Further Reading

For a first introduction, Murdoch's The Sovereignty of Good (1970) is short, clear, and one of the most loved short philosophy books of the 20th century. Her novel Under the Net (1954) is her first and remains accessible. The 2001 film Iris, with Judi Dench and Kate Winslet, covers her life including her decline from Alzheimer's disease. John Bayley's memoir Iris (1998) is a personal account of their marriage and her illness.

Key Ideas
1
Against the Existentialists
2
The Influence of Simone Weil
3
Loving Without Possessing
Key Quotations
"We are not free agents in the sense that we can do anything we like. We are free in the much more limited sense that we can choose what to attend to."
— Paraphrased from Iris Murdoch, The Sovereignty of Good (1970)
Murdoch was pushing back against the existentialist view that human freedom is unlimited. She thought freedom was real but smaller than the existentialists claimed. We cannot just decide to be different people. We cannot invent values from nothing. We are caught in our own characters, our own patterns, our own histories. What we can do is choose where to focus our attention. We can decide to look at this person more carefully. We can decide to think more honestly about that situation. The choices about attention add up over time. They slowly shape who we become. The view is more modest than existentialism but more demanding in some ways. Real freedom requires real attention. For students, this is a useful adjustment to popular views about freedom. We are not free to do whatever we want. We are free, in small daily ways, to choose what we look at and how carefully we look. That smaller freedom matters more than people often realise.
"The most essential and fundamental aspect of culture is the study of literature, since this is an education in how to picture and understand human situations."
— Iris Murdoch, The Sovereignty of Good (1970)
Murdoch was a philosopher who also wrote novels. She thought serious literature did real moral work. Reading good novels, plays, and poetry helps us understand other people's lives in ways no philosophical lecture can. We see characters from inside. We watch them make mistakes, suffer, choose, change. We learn to read other minds, even fictional ones. The skill of reading characters carries over to reading the real people in our lives. Literature, in her view, was not a luxury or a hobby. It was central to the moral education of human beings. For students, this is encouraging. Reading novels and stories is not a distraction from learning how to live. It is one of the main ways we learn how to live. Murdoch thought students should read widely and carefully. The work of slowly understanding fictional people prepares us for the harder work of understanding the people around us.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When teaching students about freedom
How to introduce
Discuss with students different views of human freedom. The existentialists thought we are radically free to invent ourselves. We choose our values from nothing. We are responsible for everything. Murdoch disagreed. She thought we are not so free. We are caught in our own habits, characters, and self-deceptions. What we can do is choose what to pay attention to. The choice of attention, made over and over, slowly shapes who we become. Discuss with students which view feels closer to their own experience. Most students will recognise both kinds of freedom in their lives. Murdoch's smaller version of freedom is more demanding in some ways. Real attention takes work.
Ethical Thinking When teaching students about love and possession
How to introduce
Read with students Murdoch's idea that love is the difficult realisation that something other than oneself is real. Discuss the alternative. Often what we call love is really wanting to possess. We want the loved person to stay. We want them to be the way we wish. We want their attention. Murdoch said this is not love at heart. Real love wants the other person to be free. Real love accepts that the loved person has their own life that does not belong to us. Discuss with students how this idea applies to family relationships, friendships, and romantic relationships. The idea is hard to live by. It is also one of the most useful tests of a relationship. Are you loving the person, or are you trying to possess them?
Further Reading

For deeper reading, Murdoch's longer philosophical work Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals (1992) is demanding but rewarding.

Peter Conradi's Iris Murdoch

A Life (2001) is the standard biography. Her novel The Sea, the Sea (1978), which won the Booker Prize, is one of her best.

Maria Antonaccio's Picturing the Human

The Moral Thought of Iris Murdoch (2000) is an excellent scholarly study. The Iris Murdoch Society publishes a journal and runs regular conferences.

Key Ideas
1
Her Complicated Personal Life
2
Her Alzheimer's Disease
3
Why Her Reputation Has Grown
Key Quotations
"In the moral life the enemy is the fat relentless ego."
— Iris Murdoch, The Sovereignty of Good (1970)
This blunt line captures Murdoch's view of what stops us from being good. It is not external temptation. It is not bad rules. It is our own self-importance. The 'fat relentless ego' is the part of us that constantly returns to itself. What does this mean for me? How do I look in this situation? What do I deserve? The ego is greedy. It wants more. It is hard to silence. Murdoch thought most moral failures came from this ego, not from any deeper evil. The work of becoming better is mostly the work of pushing past the ego, again and again. Sometimes we manage it. Often we do not. The phrase 'fat relentless' is striking. The ego is not just an enemy. It is a heavy, persistent enemy that keeps coming back. For advanced students, the line is useful for self-knowledge. The next time you feel a strong moral reaction to a situation, ask: how much of this is really about justice, and how much is my fat relentless ego?
"I think being a woman is like being Irish. Everyone says you're important and nice, but you take second place all the time."
— Iris Murdoch, interview, 1980s
Murdoch said this in an interview. The line is sharp and funny. She is comparing two of her own identities. As a woman, she had to navigate a male-dominated philosophical and literary world. As an Irish person living in England, she had to navigate the often patronising attitudes of the English towards the Irish. Both involved being told you were valued while being treated as secondary. Both involved a kind of polite exclusion. Murdoch was not generally a feminist activist. She was uncomfortable with much of the feminism of her time. But she had a clear view of how women were treated and was willing to name it sharply. The Irish comparison is also revealing. She had moved to England as a small child. She kept her Irish identity throughout her life. For advanced students, the line is useful for thinking about how multiple kinds of social marginalisation work. Murdoch's way of putting it is honest, funny, and short. The idea behind it is serious.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When teaching students about how reputations change
How to introduce
Discuss with advanced students how Iris Murdoch's reputation has grown since her death in 1999. During her lifetime, some philosophers thought her work too literary or too religious for serious philosophy. Her style did not fit the dominant analytical mode. Since her death, her reputation has steadily risen. Her central ideas about attention and moral seeing have proved more useful than the alternatives. Feminist philosophy has reclaimed her as foundational. Her novels have continued to find readers. Discuss with students how reputations change over time. Some major thinkers are appreciated decades after their work first appears. Patient work can outlast the fashions of its time. Murdoch is a clear recent example.
Critical Thinking When teaching students about admired figures with complicated lives
How to introduce
Discuss with advanced students Murdoch's complicated personal life. She was married for many years to John Bayley. She also had many intense relationships, with both men and women, throughout the marriage. She wrote extensively about love, fidelity, and self-deception. Her own life was a kind of laboratory for her philosophical questions. Discuss how to think about admired writers whose personal lives were unconventional. Should we judge them by the same standards they wrote about? Some readers do. Others say private lives are private. Some find the contradictions illuminating. Some find them troubling. Murdoch herself was honest about the difficulty of being good. Her work does not pretend she was a saint. The honest reading holds both the brilliant work and the messy life together.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Iris Murdoch was just a novelist who happened to write some philosophy.

What to teach instead

She was a serious philosopher first. She studied classics and ancient philosophy at Oxford. She taught philosophy at Oxford for many years. Her philosophical work, especially The Sovereignty of Good (1970), is read in philosophy departments around the world. Her novels came alongside her philosophy. The two activities supported each other. Treating her as primarily a novelist who dabbled in philosophy underestimates the seriousness and importance of her philosophical work. Many philosophers today consider her one of the most important moral philosophers of the 20th century. The novels are wonderful, but the philosophy is not a side project.

Common misconception

She was a feminist philosopher.

What to teach instead

She had a complicated relationship with feminism. She lived as a woman in male-dominated philosophical and literary worlds. She was sharp about the ways women were patronised. But she was uncomfortable with much of the organised feminism of her time. She did not think women had a special way of doing philosophy. She did not write much about women's issues directly. Modern feminist philosophers have reclaimed her as a foundational figure, finding insights in her work that fit feminist ethics. They are right that her work has feminist relevance. But calling Murdoch herself a feminist philosopher misrepresents how she saw her own work. She would have been uncomfortable with the label.

Common misconception

Her novels are easy reading.

What to teach instead

They are not. Murdoch's novels are full of complicated relationships, philosophical themes, and sometimes strange events. Some readers find them gripping. Others find them odd or even off-putting. The novels are clearly written, but they assume readers will engage seriously with the moral and emotional questions in them. They are not light entertainment. The Sea, the Sea, which won the Booker Prize, is over 500 pages and circles around themes of self-deception. The Black Prince is similarly demanding. Treating her novels as light reading underestimates what she was trying to do. They are serious works of fiction, like her philosophy, that reward careful attention.

Common misconception

Her philosophy is just personal opinion or self-help.

What to teach instead

It is not. Murdoch's philosophy works within long traditions, especially Plato and Christian ethics, and engages with the major debates of mid-20th-century moral philosophy. Her positions are arguments, not personal preferences. She was responding to philosophers like A.J. Ayer, Jean-Paul Sartre, R.M. Hare, and others. Her concepts of attention, the Good, and the fat relentless ego are technical philosophical claims, defended with careful argument. Treating her work as a kind of self-help misses how rigorous it actually is. She is read in serious philosophy departments because her arguments survive close examination. The plain prose can hide how careful the underlying philosophy is.

Intellectual Connections
Develops
Simone Weil
Weil, the French Jewish-Christian mystic and philosopher, was one of Murdoch's strongest influences. Weil had written about attention as a moral and spiritual practice. Murdoch built on this directly. Both saw paying full attention to other people and to difficult problems as the heart of moral and spiritual life. Reading them together gives students a sense of how a single deep idea can be developed across a generation. Weil set the foundations. Murdoch developed them in her own philosophical and literary work. The two are essential reading together.
Develops
Plato
Plato's vision of the Good as something we discover, not invent, is at the heart of Murdoch's moral philosophy. The title of her most famous book, The Sovereignty of Good, is essentially a Platonic claim. Murdoch read Plato carefully throughout her life. Her own philosophy is sometimes called a modern Platonism. Reading them together gives students a sense of how a 2,400-year-old philosophical vision can be brought into the modern world. Murdoch did not just repeat Plato. She updated him for the 20th century, drawing on Christianity, Buddhism, and modern psychology. The basic Platonic shape stayed.
In Dialogue With
Jean-Paul Sartre
Murdoch wrote a book about Sartre early in her career and engaged with his existentialism throughout her life. She admired him but disagreed with him deeply. Sartre thought human freedom was unlimited and that we invent our own values. Murdoch thought we are caught in selfishness and fantasy, and that the Good is something we discover, not invent. Reading them together gives students a sense of one of the major philosophical debates of the mid-20th century. Both views have something to teach. Murdoch's quieter view has aged better in many philosophers' opinion.
Complements
Martha Nussbaum
Nussbaum, the contemporary American philosopher, has written extensively about emotions, literature, and ethics in ways that build on Murdoch's foundation. Both philosophers think serious literature does real moral work. Both take ancient ethics seriously. Both pay close attention to particular human situations rather than only to abstract principles. Reading them together gives students a sense of how Murdoch's approach has shaped a major contemporary philosopher. Nussbaum has acknowledged Murdoch's influence directly. The line of thought continues to develop in new directions.
In Dialogue With
G.E.M. Anscombe
Anscombe and Murdoch were near contemporaries at Oxford. Both were major women philosophers in a male-dominated field. Both helped revive serious moral philosophy in mid-20th-century English-speaking thought. Both drew on Aristotle and the older tradition rather than the dominant analytical or existentialist views. Reading them together gives students a sense of how a small group of women philosophers, including also Philippa Foot, helped change Anglo-American moral philosophy. The 'Oxford Quartet' of Anscombe, Foot, Midgley, and Murdoch did some of the most important moral philosophy of the second half of the 20th century.
Complements
Mary Midgley
Midgley was another member of the so-called Oxford Quartet of women philosophers. Like Murdoch, she pushed back against the narrowly analytical philosophy of her time. Like Murdoch, she thought moral philosophy had to engage with real human life, not just abstract puzzles. Like Murdoch, she had a wide range of intellectual interests. Reading them together gives students a sense of how the four women philosophers (Murdoch, Midgley, Anscombe, Foot) supported each other across decades. They were friends. They read each other's work. Together they helped reshape the field.
Further Reading

For research-level engagement, Justin Broackes's edited volume Iris Murdoch, Philosopher (Oxford, 2011) is the major collection of scholarly essays. Heather Widdows's The Moral Vision of Iris Murdoch (2005) is excellent. Sabina Lovibond's Iris Murdoch, Gender and Philosophy (2011) addresses her relationship with feminism. The journal Iris Murdoch Review publishes ongoing scholarship. For her novels, the Iris Murdoch Archives at Kingston University hold significant primary sources.