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Bernard Bosanquet

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2008; 2016)

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  1. British idealism: a history.W. J. Mander - 2011 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Through clear explanation of its characteristic concepts and doctrines, and paying close attention to the published works of its philosophers, the volume ...
  • Bosanquet on teleology as a metaphysical category.G. Watts Cunningham - 1923 - Philosophical Review 32 (6):612-624.
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  • Bosanquet on philosophic method.G. Watts Cunningham - 1926 - Philosophical Review 35 (4):315-327.
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  • The Unified Theory of Punishment of Green and Bosanquet.David Crossley - 2004 - Bradley Studies 10 (1-2):1-14.
    One way out to avoid this tension is to adopt what legal theorists call a “mixed theory,” which presents the different penal elements as answering to different concerns. For example, one could hold that the justification of the institution of punishment requires a consequentialist answer focussed on various types of deterrence aimed at promoting social well-being, but that the distribution of actual punishments is decided in terms of desert and the degree of moral culpability of the criminal. This is the (...)
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  • Studies in Hegelian Cosmology.Mary Whiton Calkins, John McTaggart & Ellis McTaggart - 1903 - Philosophical Review 12 (2):187.
  • The notion of a general will.C. D. Broad - 1919 - Mind 28 (112):502-504.
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  • Hegel in Britain: A Brief History of British Commentary and Attitudes (2).James Bradley - 1979 - Heythrop Journal 20 (2):163-188.
  • Bernard Bosanquet: A Short Account of His Life.Helen Bosanquet - 1925 - International Journal of Ethics 35 (2):196-198.
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  • Retribution and the theory of punishment.Hugo Adam Bedau - 1978 - Journal of Philosophy 75 (11):601-620.
    This paper examines hart's model (1967) of the retributive theory. section i criticizes the model for not answering all the main questions to which a theory of punishment should be addressed, as hart alleges it does. section ii criticizes the model for its omission of the concept of desert. section iii criticizes attempts by card (1973) and by von hirsch (1976) to provide new ways of proportioning punitive severity to criminal injury. section iv discusses the idea of retribution in justifying (...)
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  • Aesthetics from classical Greece to the present.Monroe C. Beardsley - 1966 - New York,: Macmillan.
    "For those of us who want to know what philosophers have said about beauty and the arts, this book will be especially useful.”—The Philosophical Review At once a treatise for professionals and a guide for newcomers to the subject, ...
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  • 3. Bosanquet and the Problem of Inference.James W. Allard - 2005 - In William Sweet (ed.), Bernard Bosanquet and the Legacy of British Idealism. University of Toronto Press. pp. 73-89.
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  • The theory of concrete universals (I.).H. B. Acton - 1936 - Mind 45 (180):1-13.
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  • Introduction to new realism.Maurizio Ferraris - 2015 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Introduction to New Realism provides an overview of the movement of contemporary thought named New Realism, by its creator and most celebrated practitioner, Maurizio Ferraris. Sharing significant concerns and features with Speculative Realism and Object Oriented Ontology, New Realism can be said to be one of the most prescient philosophical positions today. Its desire to overcome the postmodern antirealism of Kantian origin, and to reassert the importance of truth and objectivity in the name of a new Enlightenment, has had an (...)
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  • Bernard BOSANQUET.[author unknown] - 1923 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 95:475-475.
     
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  • Die staatsphilosophie des englischen idealismus.Klaus Dockhorn - 1937 - Bochum-Langendreer,: H. Pöppinghaus O.H.-G..
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  • Neo-Hegelianism.Hiralal Haldar - 1927 - New York: Garland.
    Origin of the movement: J. H. Stirling. --T. H. Green. --Edward Caird. --John Caird. --William Wallace. --D. G. Ritchie. --F. H. Bradley. --Bernard Bosanquet. --John Watson. --Henry Jones. --J. H. Muirhead. --J. S. Mackenzie. --Lord Haldane. --J. E. McTaggart as an interpreter of Hegel. --Appendix: Hegelianism and human personality.
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  • The neo-idealist political theory.Frederick Philip Harris - 1944 - New York,: King's Crown Press.
    Investigates the Neo-idealists or Neo-Hegelians who became important in British thought around 1870 and were influential for about a half century. Focuses on how their social philosophy exhibited a fundamental continuity with British liberal thought from the time of Locke.
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  • States and morals.T. D. Weldon - 1946 - New York,: Whittlesey House.
  • The Problem of Political Obligation.Noel O'Sullivan - 1987 - Routledge.
    First published in 1987. This study is an attempt to distinguish the problem of political obligation as it was formulated in the ancient world from the problem as it has presented itself in the modern world, and assesses the idealist achievement in the philosophical treatment of the problem of political obligation. This title will be of interest to students of philosophy and politics.
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  • The Modern Liberal Theory of Man.Gerald F. Gaus - 1983 - Routledge.
    First published in 1983. The primary argument of this book is that there is a coherent tradition of liberal thinking that extends from L. S. Mill, through liberals like T. H. Green, Bernard Bosanquet, L. T. Hobhouse and John Dewey to John Rawls. The author places Rawls within a longstanding tradition of liberal thinking, while also arguing that Green and Hobhouse are not simply of historical interest but represent genuine and interesting attempts to develop a modern liberal theory. It is (...)
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  • The social philosophy of English idealism.A. J. M. Milne - 1962 - London,: Allen & Unwin.
    At the turn of the century Idealism was perhaps the leading school of philosophy in the English-speaking world. By the 1960s the situation was very different. There had occurred during the previous two generations what has been described as 'a revolution in philosophy', one consequence of which had been the almost total eclipse of Idealism. Originally published in 1962, this book is a critical study of certain aspects of the work of four Idealist philosophers: F. H. Bradley, T. H. Green, (...)
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  • The British Hegelians, 1875-1925.Peter Robbins - 1982 - New York: Garland.
  • Reason and Revolution: Hegel and the Rise of Social Theory.Herbert Marcuse - 1999 - Humanities Press.
    It is of the very definition of any "classic" work that it not only introduce a new depth and direction of thought, but that its original insights endure. Such is the case with Herbert Marcuse's Reason and Revolution. When this study first appeared in 1940, it was acclaimed for its profound and undistorted reading of Hegel's social and political theory. As its many editions bear witness, especially this one hundredth anniversary edition commemorating the author's birth, the appreciation of Marcuse's work (...)
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  • Life and Finite Individuality: The Bosanquet/Pringle-Pattison Debate.W. J. Mander - 2005 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 13 (1):111-130.
  • 12. Bosanquet on the Ontology of Logic and the Method of Scientific Inquiry.Fred Wilson - 2005 - In William Sweet (ed.), Bernard Bosanquet and the Legacy of British Idealism. University of Toronto Press. pp. 267-296.
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  • Revealment: A meeting of extremes in aesthetics.David A. White - 1970 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 28 (4):515-520.
  • Bosanquet on mind and the absolute.John Watson - 1925 - Philosophical Review 34 (5):427-442.
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  • The Individual In Hegelian Thought.Andrew Vincent - 1982 - Idealistic Studies 12 (2):156-168.
    This paper is concerned with the conception of the individual in Hegelian thought. The discussion will focus on some of the textual uses that Hegel and some Hegelians make of the term individual. The ultimate aim of the paper, however, is to focus on the concrete individual and to argue that there are two fundamentally important yet distinct uses to which Hegel and some Hegelians put the term. These two uses are not compatible, dialectically or otherwise. The plan of this (...)
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  • Was Bosanquet a Hegelian?William Sweet - 1995 - Hegel Bulletin 16 (1):39-60.
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  • R.F.A. Hoernlé and Idealist Liberalism in South Africa1.W. Sweet - 2010 - South African Journal of Philosophy 29 (2):178-194.
    This paper describes the ‘idealist liberalism’ of R.F.A. Hoernlé (1880-1843), who taught in Britain, the United States, but also at the South African College and at the University of the Witwatersrand. I argue that this liberalism was strongly influenced by the British idealism of Bernard Bosanquet and T.H. Green, but also by key features of Hoernlé's South African experience. Hoernlé's idealist liberalism, I maintain, not only offered a response to the challenges of living in a multi-ethnic and multi-racial state such (...)
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  • Nature in the philosophy of Bosanquet.R. E. Stedman - 1934 - Mind 43 (171):321-334.
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  • “Bradley and Bosanquet”.Jonathan Robinson - 1980 - Idealistic Studies 10 (1):1-23.
    Most accounts of British philosophy devote some space to what is variously called “British Idealism,” or “Neo-Hegelianism,” or “Absolute Idealism” of which Bradley and Bosanquet are taken as typical representatives. Muirhead, who was sympathetic to the idealist cause, wrote that having “the work of both before us in all the fullness of its content, we may perhaps see in it the best illustration of their own central doctrine of the self-differentiating, self-enriching power of any single valid principle—the unity of sameness (...)
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  • On Difficulty, Elitism, and Friendship in Art.Christopher Perricone - 2018 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 52 (1):106.
    In order to judge artworks, that is, to understand and to appreciate artworks, David Hume states in his essay Of the Standard of Taste that a good critic needs a particular kind of art education, one summarized in his five criteria for establishing a standard of taste: 1. "delicacy of imagination"; 2. "practice in a particular art and the frequent survey or contemplation of a particular species of beauty"; 3. "form comparisons between several species and degrees of excellence, and estimating (...)
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  • Bernard Bosanquet, Historical Knowledge, and the History of Ideas.Christopher Parker - 1988 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 18 (2):213-230.
  • Bernard Bosanquet and his friends.J. H. Muirhead & B. Bosanquet - 1936 - Mind 45 (177):125-127.
  • Bosanquet, Temple and Collingwood.Silvio Morigi - 2001 - Bradley Studies 7 (2):214-230.
    I propose to show in this paper how Bosanquet’s aesthetics, in certain of its aspects, conditions William Temple’s reflection on art — a reflection which occupies a central position in Temple’s “Christo-centric metaphysics,” and which finds expression particularly in Mens Creatrix. Bosanquet’s influence becomes still more evident if we compare Temple’s position with the philosophy of art which R.G. Collingwood delineated in the initial phase of his thought, above all in Speculum Mentis and Outlines of a Philosophy of Art.
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  • The refutation of idealism.G. E. Moore - 1903 - Mind 12 (48):433-453.
  • Community: A Sociological Study.R. M. Mciver - 1918 - Philosophical Review 27 (2):199-202.
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  • What Rousseau meant by the General Will.James McAdam - 1967 - Dialogue 5 (4):498-515.
  • New conceptions of transcendence in the thought of the British idealists.William J. Mander - 2017 - History of European Ideas 43 (3):241-250.
    ABSTRACTBritish Idealism was the philosophical school which dominated during the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Using the ideas of Bernard Bosanquet, John Caird and Andrew Seth Pringle-Pattison as an illustration, this paper looks at some of the ways in which the British Idealists sought to develop new and more subtle conceptions of the transcendent, able to resist the corrosive effects of late nineteenth-century critical and naturalistic thinking. The paper concludes by looking at three fields – philosophy, theology and literature (...)
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  • Bosanquet and the Concrete Universal.W. J. Mander - 2000 - Modern Schoolman 77 (4):293-308.
  • Does Morality Depend on Religion?Philip MacEwen - 1999 - Idealistic Studies 29 (1-2):53-74.
    "Religion," Bernard Bosanquet observed in one of his last books, "is the only thing that makes life worth living at all." While some might attribute this remark to latter day angst and senility, Bosanquet's entire career testifies to its sincerity and reality. Helen Bosanquet recollects Dr. Gow speaking in the following manner at the memorial service for her husband in 1923.
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  • From the bankruptcy of relations to the reality of connections: language and semantics in Bradley and Bosanquet.Guillaume Lejeune - 2018 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 26 (4):700-718.
    . From the bankruptcy of relations to the reality of connections: language and semantics in Bradley and Bosanquet. British Journal for the History of Philosophy: Vol. 26, Special Issue: British Idealism: Language, Aesthetics and Emotions. Guest Editors: Colin Tyler and James Connelly, pp. 700-718.
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  • Idealistic social philosophy and Bernard Bosanquet.John Herman Randall - 1966 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 26 (4):473-502.
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  • The general will and the speech community: British Idealism and the foundations of politics.Janusz Grygieńć - 2018 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 26 (4):660-680.
    ABSTRACTAlthough the British Idealists did not provide a systematic account of language as a distinct philosophical phenomenon, language is nonetheless a fundamental element of Idealist social and political philosophy. This is seen mostly in the Idealist treatment of the concept of general will, which resulted in a Hegelian theory of community, constituted by shared understandings and a shared account of the common good and common interest. This article contains analysis of the relations between language and socio-political institutions in British Idealist (...)
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  • Liberalism, nationalism and the English idealists.John R. Gibbins - 1992 - History of European Ideas 15 (4-6):491-497.
  • The Ease and Difficulty of Theory.John Fisher - 1976 - Dialectics and Humanism 3 (2):117-123.
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  • The Political Philosophy of the British Idealists: Selected Studies.Peter P. Nicholson - 1990 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book offers a reassessment of the political philosophy of the British Idealists, a group of once influential and now neglected nineteenth-century Hegelian philosophers, whose work has been much misunderstood. Peter Nicholson focuses on F. H. Bradley's idea of morality and moral philosophy; T. H. Green's theory of the Common Good, of the social nature of rights, of freedom, and of state interference; and Bernard Bosanquet's notorious theory of the General Will. By examining the arguments offered by the Idealists and (...)
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  • Wittgenstein, a Life: Young Ludwig, 1889-1921.Brian McGuinness - 1988 - Berkeley: University of California Press.
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  • Absolute Idealism.Anthony Quinton - 1972 - Oxford University Press.