At the turn of the century, philosophical thinking on both sides
of the Atlantic was dominated by the idealist movement, a school of
thought that influenced the rise of both pragmatism and analytic
philosophy. The essays in this edited collection introduce and
critically assess the central themes of the main Anglo-American
idealists, considering the philosophical arguments in their own
context and terms, but also connecting them to current debates. The
figures and topics covered include T. H. Green on the common good,
Edward Caird on evolution, F. H. Bradley on relations, Bosanquet's
view of the state, Royce's concept of the absolute, McTaggart's
timeless personalism, JoachiM's theory of truth, and Collingwood's
philosophy of history. The introduction provides a contextual
overview of the movement, which, as a philosophy superseded by a
more modern approach, was first subjected to much hostile
criticism, then ignored, and is now once again beginning to
interest historians of philosophy.
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