Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Bradley, Francis Herbert (1846–1924)

View through CrossRef
Bradley was the most famous and philosophically the most influential of the British Idealists, who had a marked impact on British philosophy in the later nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries. They looked for inspiration less to their British predecessors than to Kant and Hegel, though Bradley owed as much to lesser German philosophers such as R.H. Lotze, J.F. Herbart and C. Sigwart. Bradley is most famous for his metaphysics. He argued that our ordinary conceptions of the world conceal contradictions. His radical alternative can be summarized as a combination of monism (that is, reality is one, there are no real separate things) and absolute idealism (that is, reality is idea, or consists of experience – but not the experience of any one individual, for this is forbidden by the monism). This metaphysics is said to have influenced the poetry of T.S. Eliot. But he also made notable contributions to philosophy of history, to ethics and to the philosophy of logic, especially of a critical kind. His critique of hedonism – the view that the goal of morality is the maximization of pleasure – is still one of the best available. Some of his views on logic, for instance, that the grammatical subject of a sentence may not be what the sentence is really about, became standard through their acceptance by Bertrand Russell, an acceptance which survived Russell’s repudiation of idealist logic and metaphysics around the turn of the century. Russell’s and G.E. Moore’s subsequent disparaging attacks on Bradley’s views signalled the return to dominance in England of pluralist (that is, non-monist) doctrines in the tradition of Hume and J.S. Mill, and, perhaps even more significantly, the replacement in philosophy of Bradley’s richly metaphorical literary style and of his confidence in the metaphysician’s right to adjudicate on the ultimate truth with something more like plain speaking and a renewed deference to science and mathematics. Bradley’s contemporary reputation was that of the greatest English philosopher of his generation. This status did not long survive his death, and the relative dearth of serious discussion of his work until more general interest revived in the 1970s has meant that the incidental textbook references to some of his most characteristic and significant views, for example, on relations and on truth, are often based on hostile and misleading caricatures.
Title: Bradley, Francis Herbert (1846–1924)
Description:
Bradley was the most famous and philosophically the most influential of the British Idealists, who had a marked impact on British philosophy in the later nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries.
They looked for inspiration less to their British predecessors than to Kant and Hegel, though Bradley owed as much to lesser German philosophers such as R.
H.
Lotze, J.
F.
Herbart and C.
Sigwart.
Bradley is most famous for his metaphysics.
He argued that our ordinary conceptions of the world conceal contradictions.
His radical alternative can be summarized as a combination of monism (that is, reality is one, there are no real separate things) and absolute idealism (that is, reality is idea, or consists of experience – but not the experience of any one individual, for this is forbidden by the monism).
This metaphysics is said to have influenced the poetry of T.
S.
Eliot.
But he also made notable contributions to philosophy of history, to ethics and to the philosophy of logic, especially of a critical kind.
His critique of hedonism – the view that the goal of morality is the maximization of pleasure – is still one of the best available.
Some of his views on logic, for instance, that the grammatical subject of a sentence may not be what the sentence is really about, became standard through their acceptance by Bertrand Russell, an acceptance which survived Russell’s repudiation of idealist logic and metaphysics around the turn of the century.
Russell’s and G.
E.
Moore’s subsequent disparaging attacks on Bradley’s views signalled the return to dominance in England of pluralist (that is, non-monist) doctrines in the tradition of Hume and J.
S.
Mill, and, perhaps even more significantly, the replacement in philosophy of Bradley’s richly metaphorical literary style and of his confidence in the metaphysician’s right to adjudicate on the ultimate truth with something more like plain speaking and a renewed deference to science and mathematics.
Bradley’s contemporary reputation was that of the greatest English philosopher of his generation.
This status did not long survive his death, and the relative dearth of serious discussion of his work until more general interest revived in the 1970s has meant that the incidental textbook references to some of his most characteristic and significant views, for example, on relations and on truth, are often based on hostile and misleading caricatures.

Related Results

Captain George W. Bradley, A.Q.M., and the Bradley Base Ball Clubs
Captain George W. Bradley, A.Q.M., and the Bradley Base Ball Clubs
George W. Bradley served as a quartermaster for the New York Volunteers during the US Civil War. After the war, he became an assistant quartermaster (A.Q.M.) in the regular army wi...
BOOK REVIEWS
BOOK REVIEWS
Books reviewed in this article The Traditions of Islam. An introduction to the study of the Hadith Literature. By Alfred Guillaume, M.A. Oxford Press, 1924 pp. 184. Price $3.50. An...
Frank Herbert’s Dune and the Dune Series
Frank Herbert’s Dune and the Dune Series
Frank Herbert was born on 8 October 1920 in Tacoma, Washington, to Frank Patrick Herbert Sr. and Eileen (McCarthy) Herbert. In 1938 he graduated from high school and moved to South...
The Paradox of the Christian Poet: George Herbert's Problematics
The Paradox of the Christian Poet: George Herbert's Problematics
The thesis examines the paradoxes in Herbert's poetry and attributes the many contradictions and vacillations within The Temple to Herbert's own "spiritual conflicts" as a Christia...
Bradley and Moore on Common Sense
Bradley and Moore on Common Sense
It is well appreciated that Moore, in the final years of the nineteenth century, emphatically rejected the monistic idealism of F. H. Bradley. It has, however, been less widely not...
BOOK REVIEWS
BOOK REVIEWS
Books reviewed in this article Whither Bound in Missions. By Daniel Johnson Fleming, Ph.D, Association Press. N. Y. pp. 222. Price $2.00. Islam and Africa; An introduction to the s...
Idee divine secondo Francesco di Appignano
Idee divine secondo Francesco di Appignano
Christopher D. Schabel ha editato e studiato la distinzione 39 del primo libro sentenziario di Francesco di Appignano, sia nella forma dell’ Ordinatio , che presenta una mutilazion...

Back to Top