British idealism: a history
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford [u.a.]
Oxford Univ. Press
2011
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Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XIX, 605 S. |
ISBN: | 9780199559299 |
Internformat
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804143760288776192 |
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adam_text | IMAGE 1
CONTENTS
DETAILED CORTTENTS PRIFACE
1. INTRODLLCTION 2. BEGINNINGS AND INFLLLENCES 3. THE HISTORY OF
PHILOSOPHY 4. THE METAPHYSICS OF THE ABSOLUTE
5. IDEALIST PHILOSOPHY OFRELIGION 6. THE IDEALIST ETHIC OF SOCIAL
SELF-REALIZATION 7. IDEALIST POLITICAL AND SOCIAI PHILOSOPHY 8. IDEALIST
LOGIC 9. AESTHETICS AND LITERATURE 10. DEVELOPMENTS IN IDEALIST
METAPHYSICS 11. DEVELOPMEMS IN IDEALIST PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION 12.
DEVELOPMENTS IN IDEALIST LOGIC 13. DEVELOPMENTS IN IDEALIST ETHICS
14. DEVELOPMEMS IN IDEALIST POLITICAL AND SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY 15. THE
MTER-LIFE OF IDEALISM
CHRONOLOGY BIBLIOGRAPHY LRTDEX
VLLL XVLL
1
13 38 88 137
181 228 275 328
356 398 439 463
489 526
557 568 594
IMAGE 2
DETAILED CONTENTS
PRIFAEE XVLL
1. INTRODUCTION 1
1.1 THE IMPORTANCE OFBRITISH IDEALISM 1
1.2 COMMON THEMES IN BRITISH IDEALISM 3
1.3 TERMS OF REFERENCE 9
1.4 THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY 10
2. BEGINNINGS AND INFLUENCES 13
2.1 BRITISH PHILOSOPHY IN THE MID-NINETEENTH CENTURY 14
2.2 KANT 15
2.3 HEGEL 17
2.4 A GERMAN IMPORT? 19
2.5 HERMAN LOTZE 22
2.6 LITERARY INFLUENCES ON IDEALISM 24
2.7 FORERUNNERS OFIDEALISM 27
2.7.1 JAMES FREDERICK FERNER 27
2.7.2 JOHN GROTE 28
2.7.3 BENJAMINJOWETT 30
2.7.4 JAMES MARTINEAU 32
2.8 THE SUCCESS OF IDEALISM 34
3. THE HISTORY OFPHILOSOPHY 38
3.1 HEGEL 40
3.1.1 WILLIAM WALLACE 41
3.1.2 EDWARD CAIRD 43
3.1.3 FURTHER IDEALIST SCHOLARSHIP ON HEGEL 46
3.1.4 MCTAGGART 48
3.2 KANT 51
3.2.1 T.H. GREEN 51
3.2.2 EDWARD CAIRD 53
3.2.3 FURTHER IDEALIST SCHOLARSHIP ON KANT 58
3.3 THE BRITISH EMPIRICIST TRADITION 61
3.3.1 T.H. GREEN 61
3.3.1.1 THE CLASSICALEMPIRICIST TRADITION: LOCKE, BERKELEY, HUME 61
3.3.1.2 THE CONTEMPORARY EMPIRICIST TRADITION: SPENCER AND LEWES 66
3.3.2 EDWARD CAIRD 67
IMAGE 3
DETAILED CONTENTS IX
3.4 SPINOZA 3.4.1 EDWARD CAIRD
3.4.2 JOHN CAIRD
3.4.3 H.H. JOACHIM
3.5 PLATO AND ARISTOTLE
3.5.1 PLATO S IDEALISM
3.5.2 PLATO S REPUBLIC
3.5.3 PLATO S SOCIAL CONCEPTION OF THE INDIVIDUAL 3.5.4 REJECTION OF THE
TWO WORLDS INTERPRETATION OF PLATO
3.5.5 ARISTOTLE S IDEALISM
3.5.6 ARISTOTLE S SOCIAL HOLISM
4. THE METAPHYSICS OF THE ABSOLUTE
4.1 T.H. GREEN
4.1.1 RELATIONS AS THE CRITERION OF REALITY
4.1.2 THE MENTAL NATURE OF RELATIONS
4.1.3 OBJECTIONS TO THE ETEMAL CONSCIOUSNESS
4.1.3.1 FAILURE TO CLEARLY EXPLAIN
4.1.3.2 ETEMITY
4.1.3.3 ARE RELATIONS THE WORK OF THE RNIND?
4.1.3.4 WHAT ARE THEIR TERMS?
4.1.3.5 THE EXTEMAL WORLD?
4.1.3.6 CAUSATION
4.2 F.H. BRADLEY
4.2.1 RELATIONAL EXPERIENCE
4.2.2 ASSESSMENT OFBRADLEY S CASE
4.2.3 CONSEQUENCES OF THE RELATIONAL ARGUMENT
4.2.4 PRE-RELATIONAL EXPERIENCE
4.2.5 SUPRA-RELATIONAL EXPERIENCE
4.2.6 IDEALISM
4.3 EDWARD CAIRD
4.3.1 DIALECTIC AND PROGRESS
4.3.2 THE INFINITE
4.3.3 INDIVIDUAL PSYCHOLOGY
4.4 COMPARISON
4.4.1 GREEN AND CAIRD
4.4.2 BRADLEY AND CAIRD
4.4.3 GREEN AND BRADLEY
4.5 THE SCHOOL OF ABSOLUTE IDEALISM
69
70 72 73
73
75 77 79
81 82 85
88
89 89 91 94
94 96 99 100 101
102
104
104
106
109
111 114
118
120 120
123 124
126
126
127 129 133
IMAGE 4
X
DETAILED CONTENTS
5. IDEALIST PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION 137
5.1 THE VICTORIAN CRISIS OF FAITH 137
5.2 T.H. GREEN 139
5.2.1 THE SEARCH FOR A RATIONAL FAITH 139
5.2.2 GOD AS THE ABSOLUTE 142
5.2.3 ARELIGION OF MORAL AND SOCIAL DUTY 143
5.2.4 DE-MYTHOLOGIZING RELIGION 145
5.2.5 THE INFLUENCE OF GREEN S PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION 147
5.3 JOHN CAIRD 147
5.3.1 THE VINDICATION OF REASON 148
5.3.2 THE NECESSITY OF RELIGION 149
5.3.3 THE PROPER FORM OF RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE 151
5.3.4 THE CHRISTIAN VIEW OF GOD 153
5.3.5 JESUS CHRIST 155
5.3.6 IMMORTALITY 156
5.3.7 THE PROBLEM OF EVIL 158
5.4 EDWARD CAIRD 160
5.4.1 AVOIDING THE LION S DEN 161
5.4.2 THE EVOLUTION OF RELIGION 163
5.4.3 THREE PROBLEMS IN EDWARD CAIRD S PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION 166 5.4.4
THE INFLUENCE OFEDWARD CAIRD S PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION 169 5.5 F.H.
BRADLEY 169
5.5.1 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY 170
5.5.2 RELIGION AND MORALITY 172
5.5.3 THE CONTRADICTION OF RELIGION 174
5.5.4 THE TRUTH OF RELIGIONS 176
5.5.5 CRITICAL HISTORY 177
5.5.6 CHRISTIAN MORALITY 178
5.5.7 PERSONAL IMMORTALITY 179
5.6 CONCLUDING REMARKS 179
6. THE IDEALIST ETHIC OFSOCIAL SELF-REALIZATION 181
6.1 F.H. BRADLEY 181
6.1.1 FREE WILL 183
6.1.2 SELF-REALIZATION 184
6.1.3 HEDONISM 186
6.1.4 KANTIANISM 187
6.1.5 MY STATION AND ITS DUTIES ,
187
6.1.6 IDEAL MORALITY 190
6.1. 7 THE VALUE OF THE ABSOLUTE 191
6.2 T.H. GREEN 195
6.2.1 MOTIVATION 196
IMAGE 5
DETAILED CONTENTS XI
6.2.2 SELF-SATISFACTION 6.2.3 MORAL DEVELOPMENT 6.2.4 LNTUITIONISM,
UTILITARIANISM, AND KANTIANISM 6.2.5 THE COMMON GOOD 6.3 EDWARD CAIRD
6.3.1 THE EVOLUTION OF ETHICAL UNDERSTANDING 6.3.2 THE DIALECTIC OF
FREEDOM 6.3.3 THE DIALECTIC OF EGOISM AND ALTRUISM 6.3.4 THE DIALECTIC
OF NATURALISM AND RATIONALISM 6.3.5 SOCIAL HOLISM 6.4 THE POPULARIZATION
OF IDEALIST ETHICS
6.4.1 W.R. SORLEY THE ETHICS OFNATURALISM 6.4.2 S. ALEXANDER MORAL ORDER
AND PROGRESS 6.4.3 J.H. MUIRHEAD THE ELEMENTS OF ETHICS 6.4.4 J.S.
MACKENZIE MANUAL OF ETHICS
6.4.5 J. SETH STUDY C.?F ETHICAL PRINCIPLES
7. IDEALIST POLITICAL AND SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY
7.1 T.H. GREEN 7.1.1 POLITICAL OBLIGATION 7.1.2 SOVEREIGNTY AND THE
GENERAL WILL 7.1.3 RIGHTS
7.1.4 PROPERTY, PUNISHMENT, AND FAMILY 7.1.5 FREEDOM 7.2 EDWARD CAIRD
7.3 J.S. MACKENZIE
7.4 HENRY JONES 7.5 J.M.E. MCTAGGART 7.6 D.G. RITCHIE 7.6.1 THE SOCIAL
NATURE OF THE INDIVIDUAL
7.6.2 NATURAL RIGHTS 7.6.3 STATE INTERFERENCE 7.7 LDEALISM AND EVOLUTION
7.7.1 A.S. PRINGLE-PATTISON
7.7.2 D.G. RITCHIE 7.8 JOHN MACCUNN 7.9 PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS
8. IDEALIST LOGIC
8.1. T.H. GREEN 8.2 EDWARD CAIRD 8.3 F.H. BRADLEY
197 199 201 204 208 209 211 213 215 218 219 219 220 222 225 226
228
228 228 231 233
237 239 243 248
253 255 256 256
258 260 261 261
262 267 268
275
276 280 282
IMAGE 6
XLI DETAILED CONTENTS
8.3.1 BRADLEY S CONCEPTION OFLOGIC 282
8.3.2 THE GENERAL NATURE OFJUDGEMENT 284
8.3.3 THE DIALECTIC BETWEEN CATEGORICAL AND HYPOTHETICAL JUDGEMENTS 288
8.3.4 THE DIALECTIC BETWEEN IDENTITY AND DIFFERENCE 290
8.3.5 THE CONCRETE UNIVERSAL 294
8.3.6 NEGATIVE JUDGEMENT 295
8.3.7 THE NATURE OF INFERENCE 298
8.3.8 MISTAKEN VIEWS OF INFERENCE 302
8.3.9 THE VALIDITY OF INFERENCE 304
8.3.10 TRUTH 306
8.3.11 DEGREES OF TRUTH 308
8.4 BEMARD BOSANQUET 309
8.4.1 COMPARISON BETWEEN BOSANQUET AND BRADLEY ON LOGIC 309 8.4.2 LOGIC
AND METAPHYSICS 313
8.4.3 CONCRETE UNIVERSALS 313
9. AESTHETICS AND LITERATURE
9.1 EDWARD CAIRD 9.2 BEMARD BOSANQUET 9.2.1 THE EVOLUTION OF THE
AESTHETIC CONSCIOUSNESS 9.2.2 AESTHETIC APPRECIATION AND PRODUCTION
9.3 POETRY 9.3.1 THE AFFINITY OF POETRY AND PHILOSOPHY 9.3.2 DIFFERENCES
BETWEEN HEGEL AND THE IDEALISTS 9.3.3 THE OLD QUARREL BETWEEN POETRY AND
PHILOSOPHY
9.3.4 LITERARY STYLE AND THE NEW PHILOSOPHY 9.3.5 JONES ON BROWNING AND
THE ROLE OF ARGUMENT
10. DEVELOPMENTS IN IDEALIST METAPHYSICS
10.1 PERSONAL IDEALISM 10.1.1 A.S. PRINGLE-PATTISON 10.1.2 FURTHER
PERSONAL IDEALISTS 10.1.3 MCTAGGART
10.1.3.1 FURTHER DETERMINATION OF THE ABSOLUTE 10.1.3.2 THE ARGUMENT FOR
IDEALISM 10.1.3.3 THE UNREALITY OF TIME 10.1.3.4 C SERIES AND ERROR
10.1.3.5 LOVE
10.2 THE FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF ABSOLUTISM 10.2.1 BEMARD BOSANQUET
10.2.2 FURTHER ABSOLUTE IDEALISTS 10.3 LIFE AND FINITE INDIVIDUALITY:
THE ARISTOTELIAN SOCIETY DEBATE
328
328 332 332
337 339 339 342
343 346 352
356
356 356 365 369
369 370 372 373
375 376 376 378
382
IMAGE 7
DETAILED CONTENTS XLLL
10.4 ENCOUNTER WITH THE NEW REALISM 391
10.4.1 THE CHALLENGE TO IDEALISM 391
10.4.2 IDEALIST RESPONSES 392
11. DEVELOPMENTS IN IDEALIST PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION 398
11.1 PERSONALISM 399
11.1.1 JAMES SERH 399
11.1.2 ].R. ILLINGWORTH 401
11.1.3 HASTINGS RASHDALL 404
11.1.4 W.R. SORIEY 405
11.1.5 CC] WEBB 407
11.1.6 A.S. PRINGLE-PATTISON 409
11.2 GIFFORD AND THE GIFFORD LECTURES 412
11.3 ABSOLUTISM 413
11.3.1 WILLIAM WALLACE AND A.C BRADLEY 413
11.3.2 BERNARD BOSANQUER 416
11.3.2.1 THE RELIGIOUS CONSCIOUSNESS 416
11.3.2.2 CRITIQUE OF TRADITIONAL RELIGION 417
11.3.2.3 THE METAPHYSICAL GROUNDS OF RELIGION 420
11.3.2.4 MORALITY AND THE PROBLEM OF EVIL 421
11.3.2.5 THE RATIONALITY OF RELIGIOUS BELIEF 423
11.3.3 HENRY JONES 424
11.3.3.1 RATIONALITY AND RELIGION 425
11.3.3.2 JONES AND BOSANQUET 427
11.3.3.3 JONES AND PERSONALISM 430
11.3.3.4 THE PROBLEM OFJESUS 431
11.4 MCTAGGART S ATHEISM 433
11.4.1 METHODOLOGICAL POINTS 433
11.4.2 THE COMFORT OF METAPHYSICS 434
11.4.3 ATHEISM 435
11.4.4 SURROGATES FOR RELIGION 438
12. DEVELOPMENTS IN IDEALIST LOGIC 439
12.1 THE COHERENCE THEORY OF TRUTH 439
12.1.1 H.H. JOACHIM 440
12.1.2 RUSSEL1 AND MOORE 444
12.1.3 BRADLEY AND BOSANQUET 446
12.2 THE DEBATE WITH PRAGMATISM 449
12.3 BOSANQUET IMPLICATIONAND LINEAR INFERENCE 453
12.4 BRADLEY S LOGIC REVISITED 455
12.4.1 FLOATINGIDEAS 455
12.4.2 RESTRICTED SUBJECT OF JUDGEMENT 458
IMAGE 8
XLV DETAILED CONTENTS
12.4.3 NEGATION
12.4.4 COLLECTIVE JUDGERNENT 12.4.5 INFERENCE 12.5 JOACHIRN
LOGICALSTUDIES
13. DEVELOPRNENTS IN IDEALIST ETHICS
13.1 INDIVIDUALIST VERSUS HOLISTIC ETHICS 13.1.1 MCTAGGART 13.1.2
BOSANQUET 13.1.3 BOSANQUET S RNETAPHYSICS OF VALUE 13.1.4 BOSANQUET S
ETHICS 13.1.5 MCTAGGART AND BOSANQUET ON FREEDORN 13.2 EVOLUTION AND
ETHICS
13.3 THE INFLUENCE OFNIETZSCHE 13.4 G.E. MOORE 13.5 INTUITIONISRN 13.6
TWO LATE F10WERINGS OF IDEALIST ETHICS
13.6.1 HJ. PATON 13.6.2 H.W.B. JOSEPH
14. DEVELOPRNENTS IN IDEALIST POLITICAL AND SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY
14.1 BERNARD BOSANQUET 14.1.1 POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY 14.1.2 ANCIENT GREECE
AND THE NATURE OF SOCIETY 14.1.3 THE GENERAL WILL
14.1.4 THE STATE 14.1.5 STATE AUTHORITY, FREEDORN, AND RIGHTS 14.1.6
APPLICATIONS OFBOSANQUET S POLITICAL THEORY 14.1. 7 OBJECTIONS TO
BOSANQUET S POLITICAL THEORY 14.2 HENRY JONES
14.2.1 THE STUDY OF SOCIETY 14.2.2 THE EVOLUTION OF SPIRIT 14.2.3 THE
IDEALIST CONCEPTION 14.2.4 STATE AND INDIVIDUAL 14.2.5 SOCIALISM AND
INDIVIDUALISRN 14.3 JH. MUIRHEAD
14.4 R.B. HALDANE 14.5 IDEALISRN AND EDUCATION 14.6 IDEALISRN AND
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
458 459 460 460
463
463 464 467 469
470 472 474 476
479 482 484 484
486
489
489 489 491 492
494 496 497 501
503 503 505 506
507 510 511 514
517 521
IMAGE 9
DETAILED CONTENTS XV
15. THE AFTER-LIFE OFIDEALISM
15.1 THE LONG DECLINE OFBRITISH IDEALISM 15.1.1 THE LONGEVITY OF
IDEALIST LITERATURE 15.1.2 TWENTIETH-CENTURY IDEALIST PHILOSOPHERS 15.2
IDEALIST HISTORIES OFPHILOSOPHY 15.3 REASONS FOR THE ECLIPSE OFIDEALISM
15.3.1 ANALYTIC PHILOSOPHY 15.3.2 THE DECLINE OF RELIGION 15.3.3 THE
GROWTH OFSCIENCE 15.3.4 NEW DEPARTURES IN LOGIC 15.3.5 POLITICS AND THE
WAR
CHRONOLOGY BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX
526
526 528 530 541
544 544 545 547
551 552
557 568 594
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Mander, William 1964- |
author_GND | (DE-588)1013662911 |
author_facet | Mander, William 1964- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Mander, William 1964- |
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building | Verbundindex |
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classification_rvk | CI 6310 |
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era | Geschichte 1855-1948 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 1855-1948 |
format | Book |
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geographic_facet | Großbritannien |
id | DE-604.BV037170879 |
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indexdate | 2024-07-09T22:52:47Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780199559299 |
language | English |
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publisher | Oxford Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Mander, William 1964- Verfasser (DE-588)1013662911 aut British idealism a history W. J. Mander 1. publ. Oxford [u.a.] Oxford Univ. Press 2011 XIX, 605 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Geschichte 1855-1948 gnd rswk-swf Idealismus (DE-588)4026468-3 gnd rswk-swf Großbritannien (DE-588)4022153-2 gnd rswk-swf Großbritannien (DE-588)4022153-2 g Idealismus (DE-588)4026468-3 s Geschichte 1855-1948 z b DE-604 V:DE-604 application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=021085514&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Mander, William 1964- British idealism a history Idealismus (DE-588)4026468-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4026468-3 (DE-588)4022153-2 |
title | British idealism a history |
title_auth | British idealism a history |
title_exact_search | British idealism a history |
title_full | British idealism a history W. J. Mander |
title_fullStr | British idealism a history W. J. Mander |
title_full_unstemmed | British idealism a history W. J. Mander |
title_short | British idealism |
title_sort | british idealism a history |
title_sub | a history |
topic | Idealismus (DE-588)4026468-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Idealismus Großbritannien |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=021085514&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT manderwilliam britishidealismahistory |