Collingwood’s “Reformed Metaphysics” and the Radical Conversion Hypothesis

Journal of the History of Philosophy 52 (3):577-600 (2014)
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Abstract

when r. g. collingwood began to write his autobiography in 1938, he was only 49 years old, still very young for drawing up a final balance. Only three years earlier, he had been appointed to the prestigious Waynflete Chair of Metaphysical Philosophy in Oxford. By then, Collingwood was already severely ill and he knew that he only had a few more years to live. Therefore, he did not only present his past evolution in his autobiography; his attention rather went to those subjects for which he feared there was not enough time left to elaborate. The project that in his mind deserved the most attention was the defence of the possibility of a contemporary metaphysics. Less than one year later, Collingwood elaborated this ..

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Collingwood's New Leviathan and classical elite theory.Christopher Fear - 2019 - History of European Ideas 45 (7):1029-1044.

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