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    F. H. Bradley

    British philosopher (1846–1924)

    Francis Herbert Bradley was a British idealist philosopher. His most important work was Appearance and Reality. Wikipedia

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  2. plato.stanford.edu

    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    https://plato.stanford.edu › entries › bradley

    F. H. Bradley (1846-1924) was the most famous, original and philosophically influential of the British Idealists. These philosophers came to prominence in the closing decades of the nineteenth century, but their effect on British philosophy and society at large — and, through the positions of power attained by some of their pupils in the institutions of the British Empire, on much of the ...
    Author:Stewart Candlish, Pierfrancesco BasilePublished:1996
  3. en.wikipedia.org

    Bradley rejected the utilitarian and empiricist trends in British philosophy represented by John Locke, David Hume, and John Stuart Mill.Instead, Bradley was a leading member of the philosophical movement known as British idealism, which was strongly influenced by Kant and the German idealists Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling, and Hegel, although Bradley tended to ...
  4. F.H. Bradley (born January 30, 1846, Clapham, Surrey, England—died September 18, 1924, Oxford) was an influential English philosopher of the absolute Idealist school, which based its doctrines on the thought of G.W.F. Hegel and considered mind to be a more fundamental feature of the universe than matter.. Elected to a fellowship at Merton College, Oxford, in 1870, Bradley soon became ill ...
    Author:The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. plato.stanford.edu

    6. Bradley's Political Philosophy. Bradley never produced a book on political philosophy and the few published papers touching on social and political themes present views that do not diverge from the position he set out in Ethical Studies, in particular, in the fifth essay, My Station and its Duties. From that text we can see that Bradley ...
  6. newworldencyclopedia.org

    Francis Herbert Bradley (January 30, 1846 - September 18, 1924) was a leading member of the philosophical movement known as British idealism, which was strongly influenced by Immanuel Kant and the German idealists, Johann Fichte, Friedrich Shelling, and G.W.F. Hegel.Bradley argued that both pluralism and realism contained inherent contradictions and proposed instead a combination of monism ...
  7. philosophyprofessor.com

    The life and works of Francis Herbert Bradley, a name synonymous with British idealist philosophy, remain a significant chapter in the annals of modern philosophical thought.Born in 1846, Bradley's profound critiques and philosophical contributions have shaped the way we understand reality and knowledge.
  8. rep.routledge.com

    Bradley was the most famous and philosophically the most influential of the British Idealists, who had a marked impact on British philosophy in the later nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries. They looked for inspiration less to their British predecessors than to Kant and Hegel, though Bradley owed as much to lesser German philosophers ...
  9. rep.routledge.com

    Another is that self-realization can be accomplished only through the mutual dependence of self and society. But what it amounts to is meant to be revealed through consideration of representative philosophical theories, each of which, through its one-sidedness, is more or less unsatisfactory as it stands. ... Candlish, Stewart. Ethics. Bradley ...
  10. rep.routledge.com

    (A substantial critical comparison of the work of Bradley and William James, which pays more than usual attention to Bradley's views on religion, has a detailed summary of the philosophers' correspondence and gives chronologies listing their works by year of appearance. Clearly written but very long.)
  11. encyclopedia.com

    BRADLEY, FRANCIS HERBERT(1846-1924) The English idealist philosopher Francis Herbert Bradley was born in Clapham and educated at University College, Oxford; in 1870 he was elected to a fellowship at Merton College, Oxford, terminable on marriage. Since he never married and the terms of the fellowship did not require him to teach, he was able to devote himself entirely to philosophical writing.

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