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Philosophy in Italy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2009

Extract

Among the studies on the history of philosophy recently published in Italy, one that may be of some interest to the English reader is by DR. Abbagnano, a young pupil of Aliotta, and is devoted to the new English idealism.1 Truthfully speaking, the term ‘ new ’ is inappropriate, or partly so, because Abbagnano dedicates the greater part of his study to what we might call the ‘ old ’ idealism in England, represented by Stirling, the two Cairds, Wallace, Green, and Bradley. However, he does also pass in review the more recent doctrines, particularly those of J. H. Muirhead, G. H. Howison, D. G. Richtie, J. E. Creighton, J. B. Baillie, J. S. Mackenzie, H. Jones, W. E. Hocking, A. S. Pringle Pattison, and G. P. Adams. Abbagnano regards as a distinctive trait of English idealism inspired by Hegel as opposed to Hegel himself, this, that “for Hegel the absolute is essentially process, change and becoming; it is thought which differentiates itself and becomes articulate in a life of its own, in the threefold rhythm of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis, in which each moment passes into the next. For Green, Bradley, and Royce, the absolute is on the other hand immutability, completeness, static perfection, in which each process and becoming is overcome and resolved.” At any rate, Abbagnano is equally unsympathetic towards Hegel and towards his followers, against whom he opposes, not without scholastic ingenuity, his own irrationalistic views, set out in another book whose contents are sufficiently expressed in the title.1

Type
Philosophical Survey
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1928

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References

page 223 note 1 Abbagnano, N. , Il nuovo idealismo inglese e americano, Napoli, Perrelli, 1927.Google Scholar

page 223 note 2 Ibid., Le origini irranonali del pensiero, Napoli, 1927.

page 223 note 3 Renda, A. , Il Criticismo (fondamenti etico-religiosi), Palermo, Sandron, 1927.Google Scholar

page 224 note 1 Caraballese, P. , La filosofiia di Kant, Firenze, Vallecchi, 1927.Google Scholar

page 224 note 2 Olschki, L. , Giordano Bruno, Bari, Laterza, 1927.Google Scholar

page 226 note 1 CROCE, B. , Il pensiero italiano nel ‘600 (in Critica, 1926, fascicolo III e segg.).Google Scholar

page 226 note 2 Timpanaro, S. , Leonardo. Pagine di Scienza, Milano, 1926; id., Galileo, Ibid., 1928.Google Scholar