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      • The breadth of his philosophical interests is obvious from the range of topics treated in his books and essays—logic, aesthetics, epistemology, social and public policy, psychology, metaphysics, ethics and political philosophy.
      plato.stanford.edu/entries/bosanquet/
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  2. Jun 15, 1997 · What Bosanquet is ultimately interested in, then, is religion in its highest or most developed form—what Caird called “Absolute Religion”. Though Bosanquet does not develop what, specifically, this means, his Gifford lectures give some hint as to the direction of his thought.

  3. Bernard Bosanquet (born June 14, 1848, Alnwick, Northumberland, Eng.—died Feb. 8, 1923, London) was a philosopher who helped revive in England the idealism of G.W.F. Hegel and sought to apply its principles to social and political problems.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Bernard Bosanquet FBA (/ ˈboʊzənˌkɛt, - kɪt /; 14 June [1] 1848 – 8 February 1923) was an English philosopher and political theorist, and an influential figure on matters of political and social policy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

  5. Bernard Bosanquet (July 14, 1848 – February 8, 1923) was an English philosopher and an influential figure on matters of political and social policy in late nineteenth and early twentieth century Britain.

  6. Bernard Bosanquet. (1848—1923) philosopher and social theorist. Quick Reference. (1848–1923) English absolute idealist. Bosanquet was educated and taught at Oxford, left in order to involve himself in charity work in London, and finally held the chair of moral philosophy at St Andrews, Scotland.

  7. At his death on 8 February 1923, the idealist philosopher and social theorist Bernard Bosanquet was described as ʹthe central figure of British philosophy for an entire generation.ʹ¹ He had published major volumes in, and made significant contributions to, logic, aesthetics, metaphysics, and political philosophy; had authored important studies i...

  8. Bosanquet to be the objective idealist or " speculative philosopher "(as he, in his later years, often preferred to put it) since Hegel who stands nearest to Hegel. For the student who seeks to know what objective idealism means Bosanquet is, today, a better master to begin on than Hegel. He speaks our language and takes ac-

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