<br />
<b>Notice</b>:  Trying to get property 'name' of non-object in <b>/var/www/standscience/omeka/plugins/MetsExport/helpers/MetsExporter.php</b> on line <b>1202</b><br />
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<METS:mets xmlns:METS="http://www.loc.gov/METS/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.loc.gov/METS/ http://www.loc.gov/standards/mets/mets.xsd  http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3 http://www.loc.gov/standards/mods/v3/mods-3-0.xsd" ID="ITEM_264" OBJID="ITEM_264" LABEL="Bernard Bosanquet" TYPE="Organisation" >

<METS:metsHdr CREATEDATE="2026-06-03T04:39:01" ID="HDR_ITEM264" AMDID="AMD_ITEM264" >
<METS:agent ROLE="ARCHIVIST" TYPE="INDIVIDUAL" >
<METS:name>Super User</METS:name>
<METS:note></METS:note>
</METS:agent>
<METS:agent ROLE="CREATOR" TYPE="INDIVIDUAL" >
<METS:name></METS:name>
<METS:note></METS:note>
</METS:agent>
<METS:agent ROLE="OTHER" TYPE="OTHER" >
<METS:name>Omeka MetsExport Plugin</METS:name>
<METS:note>The software used to generate this document is called Omeka MetsExport, which operates as a plugin for Omeka. Documentation can be found at http://github/MetsExport/</METS:note>
</METS:agent>
</METS:metsHdr>

<METS:dmdSec ID="DMD_ITEM264" >
<METS:mdWrap ID="MDW_ITEM264_dc" LABEL="Dublin Core" MDTYPE="DC" >
<METS:xmlData>
<dc:title>Bernard Bosanquet</dc:title>
<dc:subject>Philosophy</dc:subject>
<dc:description>Profession: 
Philosopher 
Social theorist 

(Professional) Role in St Andrews: 
Professor of moral philosophy 

Years in St Andrews: 1903-1907 </dc:description>
<dc:date>1848</dc:date>
<dc:contributor>fal2@st-andrews.ac.uk</dc:contributor>
<dc:type>Organisation</dc:type>
<dc:identifier>195</dc:identifier>
<dc:alternative title>Bernard Bosanquet</dc:alternative title>
</METS:xmlData>
</METS:mdWrap>
<METS:mdWrap ID="MDW_ITEM264_item_type_metadata" LABEL="Item Type Metadata" MDTYPE="DC" >
<METS:xmlData>
<item_type_metadata:biographical text>D.O.B: 1848 
D.O.D: 1923 

Family origins: 
Father: Robert William Bosanquet, of Rock, Northumberland  
Mother: Caroline Bosanquet, daughter of Colonel 

Education: 
Preparatory Schools Sherburn, Durham, Elstree, Harrow 
Balliol College, Oxford 

Private life/family life: 
Married Helen Dendy, no children </item_type_metadata:biographical text>
<item_type_metadata:end date>1923</item_type_metadata:end date>
<item_type_metadata:wikidata id>Q822329</item_type_metadata:wikidata id>
<item_type_metadata:contribution>Involved in which fields of scholarship? (e.g. geology, philosophy and medicine) 
Philosophy 

Most famous contribution(s) to scholarship 1 (i.e. in philosophy):   

Strongly influenced by Plato and the Greek philosophers, by Nettleship, Toynbee, and, above all, Thomas Hill Green (idealist philosophy); logic inspired by Bradley  

Contributions to journal Mind 

Knowledge and Reality, criticism of Bradley, which became basis for Logic in 1888 

Aesthetics: influence by Morris; History of Aesthetic in 1892 

Fabian Society invited him to explain his political standpoint in 1890: neither individualist nor committed to laissez-faire; willing to subscribe to the ideas of 'moral socialism'; believed 'economic socialists' were on the wrong track, disapproving their disrespect for private property, disparagement of saving, attack on the strict administration of the poor law, and their aim of complete equality and abolition of classes 

Social philosophy:  

“collectivist”; individual as function of the social organism, mind and being as production of the communities to which he belonged; individual had to be loyal to his state because the collectivism provided protection and opportunity for developing talents. Everyone has “actual will” (satisfaction of immediate desires, including impulses) and “real will” (satisfaction of desires beyond immediate ends, more permanent, including harmonising the own will with that of others).  

The real will thus is identified with a social way of living—with the 'general will' of the community. Ideally, a state should be in harmony with this general will, for it is then recognized by its members as rightfully exercising legislative and physical compulsion over them; in return, the state should not attempt to go beyond the general will by force. If it did, that would lead ultimately to a repressive 'machine-made utopia', faced with the dangers of disobedience and rebellion. The crucial tests of any social measure of the state were whether it had the approval of the general will, and whether it liberated fresh resources of character, will, and intelligence in the community.  

The Philosophical Theory of the State (1899) embodying these ideas: great achievement of British idealist philosophy 

Idealism: 

Lively intervention in professional debates concerning absolute idealism 

Appearance and Reality (1893) 

The Principle of Individuality and Value (1912), The Value and Destiny of the Individual (1913): no great advance on Bradley's brilliant work. 

Established “absolute idealism”: logic and the impulsion of human thought to discover ultimate reality -&gt; absolute must exist (there, appearances of daily life only partially apprehendable) 

Christian deity merely an 'appearance' of the greater reality of the absolute: alienated Christian idealists (absolute = God), personal idealists (asked for more room for the individual); heaviest assault on idealism in general: at the turn of the century from the generation of Cambridge new realists, led by George Edward Moore and Bertrand Russell: idealism as ‘Germanic doctrine’, replaced with logical positivism and linguistic philosophy; but in the late twentieth century there were signs of a renewal of interest in idealism, especially among political philosophers. 

If you want to read one thing written by him/her, it should be: X 
The Philosophical Theory of the State (1899) </item_type_metadata:contribution>
<item_type_metadata:misc>Any political involvement? 
Radical wing of the Liberal Party according to himself  

Other societies/groups elsewhere? 
Charity Orgnisation Society (COS) 
London Ethical Society 
Aristotelian Society (member, vice-president, president) 

Associated places in St Andrews: (e.g. home, lab, favourite spot) 
School of philosophy 

Possible human interest story 1: 
Due to his interest in aesthetics, Bosanquet developed an active interest in the Home Arts and Industries Association; he furnished his house with parquet, tiles, wallpapers etc. 

Possible human interest story 2: 
His social theory arose from the political and social problems arising from the depression in 1880s and 1890s. 

Possible human interest story 3: 
The speech before the Fabian society marked the beginning of protracted disputes between the COS and Fabians and ‘new Liberals’ concerning methods of economic reform and remedies for pauperism. The disputes culminated in the great royal commission of inquiry into the poor laws (1905–9), in which Helen Bosanquet and Beatrice Webb played leading roles on opposite sides. 

Possible human interest story 4: 
Worked together with his wife on improving the COS and justifying its policy with principles of idealist philosophy; divided the poor into the categories of the “helpable” and the “unhelpable” rather than “deserving” and “undeserving”, which rather suggested that poverty was the people’s own fault; however, they rejected socialist ideas like free school meals etc. 

Connected to other people in St Andrews or elsewhere?: 
Thomas Hill Green 
Francis Herbert Bradley

Biographical sources: (e.g. OxDNB, family memoir, other...) 
OxDNB 

Available images of the person: 
Wikipedia 
Possibly National Portrait Gallery </item_type_metadata:misc>
</METS:xmlData>
</METS:mdWrap>
<METS:mdWrap ID="MDW_ITEM264_europeana" LABEL="Europeana" MDTYPE="DC" >
<METS:xmlData>
<europeana:object>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Bosanquet_(philosopher)</europeana:object>
<europeana:europeana type>TEXT</europeana:europeana type>
</METS:xmlData>
</METS:mdWrap>
</METS:dmdSec>

<METS:amdSec ID="AMD_ITEM264" >
</METS:amdSec>

<METS:fileSec ID="FILES_ITEM264" <br />
<b>Notice</b>:  Undefined variable: file in <b>/var/www/standscience/omeka/plugins/MetsExport/helpers/MetsExporter.php</b> on line <b>1122</b><br />
<br />
<b>Notice</b>:  Trying to get property 'item_id' of non-object in <b>/var/www/standscience/omeka/plugins/MetsExport/helpers/MetsExporter.php</b> on line <b>1122</b><br />
>
</METS:fileSec>

<METS:structMap >
<METS:div TYPE="ITEM" DMDID="DMD_ITEM264" AMDID="AMD_ITEM264" >
</METS:div>

</METS:structMap>
</METS:mets>
