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Findlay's periods abroad enabled him to meet not only Carnap, Quine, and Heidegger, but also Wittgenstein. In Graz he became a member of a group which met with Wittgenstein each Tuesday. His responses to Meinong, to Meinong's teacher, Brentano, and to
Wittgenstein 'each played a crucial part in enabling Findlay to develop his own distinctive point of view',
Findlay left South Africa for the United Kindom in 1948, where he was professor of philosophy at King's College, Newcastle upon Tyne (1948-51) and at King's College, London (1951-66).<ref>Alastair MacIntyre, 'John Niermeyer Findlay',''Proceedings of the British Academy'', III, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001, pp.504.</ref>
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