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The English idealist philosopher Francis Herbert Bradley was born in Clapham and educated at University College, Oxford; in he was elected to a fellowship at Merton College, Oxford, terminable on marriage.

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Since he never married and the terms of the fellowship did not require him to teach, he was able to devote himself entirely to philosophical writing. There followed Ethical Studies London, , Principles of Logic London, , and Appearance and Reality London, , as well as many articles in philosophical journals, some of which were published in Essays on Truth and Reality Oxford, and others in Collected Essays Oxford, Like Bernard Bosanquet , Bradley was influenced by T.

Like Bosanquet, too, he read and admired G. Hegel, but was less in sympathy with Hegelianism than Bosanquet was. Bosanquet was active in social reform, as Green had been, whereas Bradley was a Tory who hated liberalism and sometimes thought along the lines of Thomas Carlyle 's later writings. Bradley was, and intended to be, a highly polemical writer.

His Ethical Studies and Principles of Logic are a sustained attack on the utilitarianism and empiricism of John Stuart Mill and his followers and upon the positivist outlook of the times. Later in his career, Bradley crossed swords with William James who, however, greatly influenced Bradley's views on existence and reality and with Bertrand Russell.

His views were at their maximum influence during the first decade of the twentieth century, and the philosophical analysis of Russell and G. Moore arose largely in the attempt to refute them.

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Bradley's literary style has been much admired, notably by T. Eliot, who, as a graduate student at Harvard, studied Bradley in detail and wrote a thesis about him. Few if any other works on logic have been written with the verve, eloquence, and exuberant clarity of Bradley's Principles , but Appearance and Reality is less varied, and, from a stylistic point of view, much less successful.

Bradley's Ethical Studies is the most Hegelian of his writings.