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    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. plato.stanford.edu

    Mar 6, 2024[Editor's Note: The following entry replaces and includes material from the former entry titled Bradley' Moral and Political Philosophy.] F.H. Bradley's moral philosophy remains a source for debates among the historians of philosophy; its rich—and under-researched—material has much to offer not only to the history of philosophy but also to contemporary normative ethics and meta ...
  4. 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 ...
  5. plato.stanford.edu

    The theory has some roots in the ideas of mystical philosophers for whom the world is a unity in which there is no fundamental divide between the representing and the represented. ... Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, XCIX, pp. 233-40. ---. (1999b), 'A Prolegomenon to an Identity Theory of Truth ... Bradley, Francis Herbert ...
  6. plato.stanford.edu

    1. Historical Background 1.1 Precursors of Bradley's Regress. The most notable ancient regress argument that is associated with Bradley's is found in Plato's Parmenides 132a-b. Therein Plato presents an argument that has come to be known as the Third Man Argument (TMA), which challenges an explanation of similarity between distinct particulars that appeals to forms.
  7. plato.stanford.edu

    British idealism was the dominant philosophical movement in the closing decades of the nineteenth century. Its best-known representatives—philosophers of the like of Thomas Hill Green and Francis Herbert Bradley—held a version of Absolute idealism, the theory that reality is a single unified consciousness or cosmic experience.
  8. 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 ...
  9. plato.stanford.edu

    Other philosophers, notably those who have held the idealist view that reality is experience, have implied that facts are more like judgments. One such is F. H. Bradley, who explicitly embraced an identity theory of truth, regarding it as the only account capable of resolving the difficulties he finds with the correspondence theory.
  10. plato.stanford.edu

    Given the number of studies published during the past twenty years on Hegel, Green and, more recently, Bradley, and given the reevaluation of the significance of the work of British idealism and its place in the history of philosophy, it seems likely that there will be a reconsideration of the contribution of Bosanquet's philosophy as well.
  11. plato.stanford.edu

    Bibliography Primary Literature. The most comprehensive list to date of Bosanquet's work is found in Vol. 1 of Essays in Philosophy and Social Policy, 1883-1922, (ed. William Sweet), Bristol, UK: Thoemmes Press, 2003, pp. xxxix-lxv.. The 20 volume Collected Works of Bernard Bosanquet (edited by William Sweet) appeared in 1999 from Thoemmes Press (Bristol, U.K.).

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