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Bernard Bosanquet (1848-1923) was one of the leading figures of the idealist movement in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and in his obituary in the London Times, was described as having been 'the central figure of British philosophy for an entire generation.' Bosanquet's views fell out of favour in the decades after his death, but recently there has been a lively renewal of interest in European and British Idealism, the Idealist approach being recognized as providing valuable insights for contemporary debates in political philosophy, ethics, aesthetics, epistemology, and logic. Idealism also serves as a bridge between the dominant philosophical traditions of twentieth century Anglo-American and continental thought, and, indeed, Bosanquet was among the first British philosophers to address the work of Benedetto Croce, Giovanni Gentile, and Edmund Husserl and to introduce these thinkers to an English-language audience.In Bernard Bosanquet and the Legacy of British Idealism, William Sweet and other leading scholars examine Bosanquet's contribution to some of philosophy's central questions. They provide a solid introduction to British Idealism and the idealist movement as a whole, and bring the scholarship on Bosanquet fully up-to-date.
Bosanquet, Bernard, --- בוזנקט, ברנרד, --- PHILOSOPHY / General.
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Despotism. --- Despotism. --- Humanism. --- Humanism. --- Bosanquet, Bernard,
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Humanism --- Despotism --- Humanisme --- Despotisme --- Bosanquet, Bernard,
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Idealism, British --- History --- Green, Thomas Hill, --- Bosanquet, Bernard, --- Ritchie, David George, --- Caird, Edward,
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Can philosophy offer reasonable grounds for the existence of a God as the center of actual faith, rather than just a theoretical Absolute? Timothy Sprigge offers a fascinating exploration of the metaphysical systems of a diverse range of philosophers, from Spinoza and Hegel to T. H. Green and Josiah Royce, testing objections to what might be called "metaphysical religion" against the systems of these distinguished thinkers. In the process, Sprigge offers a compelling new defense of a highly unfashionable Idealist worldview.
Metaphysics --- Natural theology --- Hegel, Georg W.F. --- Royce, Josiah --- Bosanquet, Bernard --- Kierkegaard, Søren --- Spinoza, Baruch --- Whitehead, Alfred North --- Green, Thomas Hill --- Hartshorne, Charles --- God. --- Metaphysics. --- Philosophers --- Religion. --- God --- Scholars --- Ontology --- Philosophy --- Philosophy of mind --- Misotheism --- Monotheism --- Religion --- Theism --- Métaphysique --- Philosophers - Religion. --- Spinoza, baruch (1632-1677)
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John Locke's political theory has been the subject of many detailed treatments by philosophers and political scientists. But The Lockean Theory of Rights is the first systematic, full-length study of Locke's theory of rights and of its potential for making genuine contributions to contemporary debates about rights and their place in political philosophy. Given that the rights of persons are the central moral concept at work in Locke's and Lockean political philosophy, such a study is long overdue.
Derecho --- Filosofía. --- Locke, John --- Crítica e interpretación. --- Blustein, Jeffrey. --- Bosanquet, Bernard. --- Buchanan, Allen. --- Epstein, Richard. --- Gibbard, Allan. --- Grotius, Hugo. --- Hooker, Richard. --- Hume, David. --- Kant, Immanuel. --- Kymlicka, Will. --- Levellers. --- Mautner, Thomas. --- Seliger, M. --- absoluteness of rights. --- anarchism. --- artificial power. --- authority to punish. --- capital punishment. --- categorical imperative. --- civil society. --- claim right. --- communitarians. --- consequentialism. --- deontology. --- detachability. --- enclosure. --- equality of rights. --- fair share. --- filial duties. --- forfeiture of rights. --- full ownership. --- gratitude. --- impartialism. --- imperfect duty. --- intellectualism. --- jurisdiction. --- labor. --- libertarianism. --- majority rule. --- negative community. --- obligation. --- overdetermination. --- parental duties. --- person. --- retributivism. --- rule-consequentialism. --- toleration. --- vigilantism. --- voluntarism.
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