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Was Bosanquet a Hegelian?

Hegel Bulletin 16 (1):39-60 (1995)

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  1. 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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  • “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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  • Hegel's theory of the political organism.Bernard Bosanquet - 1898 - Mind 7 (25):1-14.
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  • Symposium: Do Finite Individuals Possess a Substantive or An Adjectival Mode of Being?Bernard Bosanquet, A. S. Pringle-Pattison, G. F. Stout & Lord Haldane - 1918 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 1 (1):75-194.
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