Edmund Morris Miller (1881–1964) was a scholar who served at the University of Tasmania from 1913 until his retirement in 1951. Born in Pietermaritzburg, Natal, he moved with his family to Melbourne in 1883. He earned a B.A. from the University of Melbourne in 1905 and an M.A. with first-class honours in philosophy in 1907. In 1913 he joined the University of Tasmania as lecturer in philosophy and economics and took a leading role in the university library. He later focused on psychology, drafting the Mental Deficiency Act of 1920 and serving as the first director of the State Psychological Clinic. Appointed professor of psychology and philosophy in 1928, he also held the position of vice-chancellor from 1933 to 1945. Miller contributed to the establishment of the Workers' Educational Association in Tasmania and served as president of the Tasmanian Institution for the Blind and Deaf from 1924 and chairman of the Mental Deficiency Board from 1925. He was a founder of the Library Association of Australia in 1928 and chaired the State Library of Tasmania from 1923.
Miller's major scholarly work was the two-volume bibliography Australian Literature from its Beginnings, published in 1940. He also authored Pressmen and Governors: Australian Editors and Writers in Early Tasmania in 1952 and wrote on Kantian philosophy. He received a Litt.D. from the University of Melbourne in 1919 and was elected a fellow of the British Psychological Society in 1943 and of the International Institute of Arts and Letters. In 1962 he was appointed C.B.E. for his contributions to tertiary education. The social sciences and humanities library at the University of Tasmania's Sandy Bay campus is named after him. Miller died in Hobart on 21 October 1964.