David Boucher, Editor
The Scottish Idealists, including Edward Caird, David George Ritchie,
Andrew Seth Pringle Pattison, William Mitchell, John Watson, and the
Welshman Henry Jones who found his spiritual home in Glasgow, dominated
the philosophical professoriate in Britain, Australia and Canada from
the late nineteenth century to the years leading up to the First World
War. Its main centres were St. Andrews, Glasgow and Edinburgh in
Scotland, Cardiff in Wales, and Oxford in England. This collection of
readings, the first of its kind, displays the variety, richness and
strength of the Scottish Idealist tradition. Scottish Idealism was
immensely spiritual in character and recognized no hard and fast
distinctions between philosophy, religion, poetry and science. It was
also a formidable force in social and educational reform.
Table of Contents
Editor's Introduction
- Edward Caird, The Problem of Philosophy at the Present Time
- William Paton Ker, The Philosophy of Art
- Andrew Seth Pringle-Pattison, Hegelianism As an Absolute
System
- Henry Jones, Idealism and Epistemology
- William Mitchell, Moral Obligation
- David George Ritchie
The Political Philosophy of Thomas Hill Green
The Rights of Animals
- Richard Burden Haldane, The Higher Nationality: A Study in
Law and Ethics
David Boucher is Professorial Fellow in European Studies at Cardiff
University and Director of the Collingwood and British Idealism Centre.
· ISBN 0-907845-72-X ·
Published July 2004 by Imprint Academic · Cloth ·
201 pages · $25.90 ·
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