The article examines Thomas Hill Green’s and Edward Caird’s views on the nature of logic and on its relations with other philosophical and non-philosophical disciplines. Green and Caird’s opposition both to a formal conception of logic and to the empiricist-associationist tradition, together with their role in the development of British idealism, make their case a representative episode in the history of logic in the 19th century.
The nature of logic and its place in philosophy. The case of British idealism: Thomas Hill Green and Edward Caird
Guido Bonino
2025-01-01
Abstract
The article examines Thomas Hill Green’s and Edward Caird’s views on the nature of logic and on its relations with other philosophical and non-philosophical disciplines. Green and Caird’s opposition both to a formal conception of logic and to the empiricist-associationist tradition, together with their role in the development of British idealism, make their case a representative episode in the history of logic in the 19th century.File in questo prodotto:
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