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Some Aspects of the Treatment of Christianity by the British Idealists

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2008

D. M. Mackinnon
Affiliation:
Emeritus Norris-Hulse Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge

Extract

It was in December 1868, a little less than fifteen years before his death, that T. H. Green entered into correspondence with the young Henry Scott Holland and R. L. Nettleship (later to be his literary executor) on the occasion of the latter's visit to the young Gerard Manley Hopkins, then on the threshold of entering the novitiate of the Society of Jesus. Part of this correspondence is preserved in Stephen Paget's memoir of Scott Holland, and no student of the interpretation of Christianity in the writings and teachings of the British Idealists should neglect either this exchange of letters, or indeed the latter correspondence with Scott Holland in which the young Anglican, on the eve of his own ordination, sought to defend his commitment to his mentor.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1984

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References

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page 134 note 1 (Murray, John, 1901): see especially pp. 150–2.Google Scholar

page 135 note 1 Bosanquet, Bernard, The Philosophical Theory of the State, (1st edn) (London: Macmillan, 1899).Google Scholar

page 136 note 1 Caird, Edward, Lay Sermons in Balliol College Chapel (Glasgow: Maclehose, 1907).Google Scholar

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page 136 note 3 It was the late Professor H. A. Hodges who first pointed this out to me.

page 137 note 1 Bradley, F. H., Collective Essays, I (London: O.U.P. 1935).Google Scholar

page 137 note 2 I owe this example (as I owe much else) to Professor H. H. Price.

page 138 note 1 See Bradley's, essay: ‘What is the real Julius Caesar?’ in Essays on Truth and Reality (London: O.U.P. 1914), Pp. 409–27.Google Scholar

page 139 note 1 Lay Sermons in Balliol College Chapel (Glasgow: Maclehose, 1907).Google Scholar

page 139 note 2 Bosanquet mentions Themistocles' intervention in respect of the use made of the resources of the silver mines at Laureion by the Athenians.

page 140 note 1 Talbot, E. S., Memories of Early Life (London: Mowbray, 1st impression 1924), see especially pp. 42–5.Google Scholar

page 140 note 2 It may be thought that this was done in the light of Kant's philosophy by Joseph, H. W. B. in his Henrietta Herz Lecture: A comparison of the idealism of Kant with that of Berkeley, in Essays in Ancient and Modern Philosophy (London: O.U.P. 1935).Google Scholar

page 141 note 1 Caird's lectures as Professor of Moral Philosophy at Glasgow deeply moved the young Cosmo Gordon Lang in his period as a student there and it was Caird's memory that William Temple in 1934 inscribed his Lectures, GiffordNature, man and God (London: Macmillan).Google Scholar

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page 142 note 2 Some of the most important of the papers are conveniently available in his collection: In Defence of Freewill (London: Allen & Unwin, 1968)Google Scholar. Attention should also be paid to the papers on this topic of Professor A. E. Taylor, e.g. in his contribution to (Contemporary British Philosophy).

page 143 note 1 Campbell's work is certainly exempt from the sort of theological criticism brought against the idealist tradition by Forsyth, P. T. in his powerful may in theodicy, The Juttfcation of God (London: Duckworth, 1916).Google Scholar

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page 143 note 3 (London: O.U.P. 1926.) Webb was also H. W. B. Joseph's brother-in-law.

page 144 note 1 (Paris: Aubier, 1970.)

page 144 note 2 (Montreal: McGill-Queen's U.P. 1973.)

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