'Bernard Bosanquet' (
July 14,
1848,
Alnwick,
Northumberland,
England –
February 8,
1923,
London) was an English philosopher and political theorist, and an influential figure on matters of political and social policy in late 19th and early 20th century Britain. His work influenced - but was later subject to criticism by - many thinkers, notably
Bertrand Russell,
John Dewey, and
William James. Bernard was the husband of
Charity Organisation Society leader
Helen Bosanquet.
He was educated at
Harrow School and
Balliol College, Oxford. After graduation, he was elected to a Fellowship at University College,
Oxford, but resigned it in order to devote himself to philosophical research. He moved to London in 1881. While there, he became an active member of the
London Ethical Society and the
Charity Organization Society. Both were positive demonstrations of Bosanquet's ethical philosophy. But Bosanquet published on a wide range of topics, such as
logic,
metaphysics,
aesthetics, and
politics. In his metaphysics he is regarded as a key representative (with
F.H. Bradley) of Absolute Idealism, although it is a term that he abandoned in favour of "speculative philosophy."
Bosanquet was one of the leaders of the so-called
neo-Hegelian philosophical movement in Great Britain. He was strongly influenced by the ancient Greek philosophers
Plato and
Aristotle, but also by the German philosophers
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and
Immanuel Kant. Among his best-known works are The Philosophical Theory of the State (1899; 4th ed. 1923), and his
Gifford lectures,
The Principle of Individuality and Value and
The Value and Destiny of the Individual published 1912 and
1913 respectively.
He was president of the
Aristotelian Society from 1894 to 1898.
Idealist Social Theory
In his ''Encyclopedia'', Section 95,
Hegel had written about "the ideality of the finite." This obscure phrase was interpreted as implying that "what is finite is not real"
[1] because the ideal is understood as being the opposite of the real. Bosanquet was a follower of Hegel and the "…central theme of Bosanquet's idealism was that every finite existence necessarily transcends itself and points toward other existences and finally to the whole. Thus, he advocated a system very close to that in which Hegel had argued for the ideality of the finite."
[2] The relation of the finite individual to the whole state in which he/she lives was investigated in Bosanquet's ''Philosophical Theory of the State'' (London, 1899). In this book, he "…argued that the state is the real individual and that individual persons are unreal by comparison with it."
[2] But Bosanquet did not think that the state has a right to impose socialist control over its individual citizens. "On the contrary, he believed that if society is organic and individual, then its elements can cooperate apart from a centralized organ of control, the need for which presupposes that harmony has to be imposed upon something that is naturally unharmonious."
[2]
References
1. ''The Encyclopedia of Philosophy'', vol. 3, "Idealism", New York, 1967
2. ''Ibid.''
3. ''Ibid.''
4. ''Ibid.''
External links
★
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry
★
Bernard Bosanquet page