Bosanquet, Positive Liberty, and Social Welfare Programs

Bradley Studies 10 (1-2):88-95 (2004)
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Abstract

This new volume is of exceptional value to scholars because of the editors’ success in placing the work in its philosophical context. The introduction provides the reader with a synopsis of British Idealism and a context for understanding this thinker. For example, since Bosanquet thought his beliefs almost identical to Green’s, it is useful to have the editors pointing out that Green pressed Bosanquet to publish them, implying that Green knew otherwise. Similarly, Bosanquet’s defense of economic individualism earns the editors’ description as “communitarian,” hardly what one would expect of a devotee of positive liberty.

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