A careful, accessible critique of Bradley’s metaphysics, focusing on experience, time, and the quest for reality.
In The Metaphysic of Mr. F.H. Bradley, Hastings Rashdall examines how Bradley treats reality as appearance and how this clashes with lived experience. The discussion centers on whether conscious experience can be real if it is always preliminary to a claimed absolute, and how time, knowledge, and the moral life fit into a coherent view of the Universe.
The work frames a practical alternative to pure abstraction. Rashdall defends the reality of ordinary experience and argues that knowledge, even when imperfect, remains real. He emphasizes that moral consciousness and practical reasoning have a legitimate role in understanding reality, and he challenges the idea that the Absolute can be fully grasped by thought alone.
- Reviews Bradley’s treatment of appearance and reality
- Explores the role of time, change, and temporality in metaphysical systems
- Defends the value of ordinary experience and moral insight
- Compares different approaches, including Bergson’s emphasis on experience
Ideal for readers of philosophy, metaphysics, or academic study who want a clear, critical take on early 20th‑century debates about reality, time, and knowledge.