1. More Images

    F. H. Bradley

    British philosopher (1846–1924)

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

    Was this helpful?
  2. 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 ...
  3. 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
  4. britannica.com

    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. thefamouspeople.com

    His works, centered mainly on metaphysics, ethics, philosophy of history and logic, greatly impacted the thoughts of later-day philosophers and poets like Bernard Bosanquet, C. A. Campbell, James Ward, ... F. H. Bradley is possibly best known for his 1893 work, Appearance and Reality: A Metaphysical Essay. In this work, he claims that most ...
  6. encyclopedia.whiteheadresearch.org

    The second volume of John Muirhead's prestigious Contemporary British Philosophy: Personal Statements (1925) opens with the following dedication: "To F. H. Bradley, Order of Merit: To whom British Philosophy owed the impulse that gave it new life in our time." Not everyone will recognise the relevance of Bradley's thought for today's ...
  7. Was this helpful?
  8. informationphilosopher.com

    Home > Solutions > Philosophers > F.H.Bradley F.H.Bradley (1846-1924) Bradley rejected the utilitarian movement in ethics, as well as the positivist and empiricist schools that questioned metaphysics. He was a follower of Kant and the German Idealists Fichte, Schelling and Hegel. His idea of free will is greatly influenced by their enthusiastic ...
  9. encyclopedia.com

    Francis Herbert Bradley. The English philosopher Francis Herbert Bradley (1846-1924) based his thought on the principles of absolute idealism. He rigorously criticized all philosophies based on the "school of experience." Born in Clapham on Jan. 30, 1846, F. H. Bradley was educated at University College, Oxford.
  10. plato.stanford.edu

    Mar 6, 2024F.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-ethics (especially moral psychology). Luckily, after a period of neglect, there is a revival of ...
  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.
  12. philosophypages.com

    Bradley, Francis Herbert () . English philosopher and absolute idealist.His Ethical Studies (1876) criticized Mill's utilitarianism and defended an ethics of self-realization, understood as the conquest of the bad self by the good. Bradley's metaphysical views, akin to those of Hegel, with a special emphasis on the internal relations of the Absolute are developed at length in Appearance and ...

    Can’t find what you’re looking for?

    Help us improve DuckDuckGo searches with your feedback

Custom date rangeX