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James Hutchison Stirling (* January 22 1820 - † March 19 1909), philosopher, born in Glasgow, & educated there and at Edinburgh, where he exposed medicine, which he practised until a demise of his father around 1851, after which he devoted himself to philosophy. His Secret of Hegel (1865) gave a great impulse to the study & understanding of the Hegelian philosophy both home & in the United States, and was besides accepted as a operate of authority within Germany and Italy. More works, whole characterized: by keen philosophic insight & consummate power of exposition come Complete Text-book to Kant (1881), Philosophy and Theology (1890), What is Thought? or the Problem of Philosophy (1900), and The Categories (1903). Less deep come Jerrold, Tennyson, and Macaulay (1868), Burns in Drama (1878), and Philosophy in the Poets (1885).

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James Hutchison Stirling
A brief article from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy detailing Stirling's intellectual career.

Stirling's "Secret of Hegel"
A selection from the Cambridge History of English and American Literature, published in the early 20th century. Briefly discusses this key work by Stirling.

The Life of Plantation Field Hands
Excerpt from Stirling's 1857 book Letters from the Slave States, a journal of his visit to the American South. Part of the Internet Modern History Sourcebook.


Society: Philosophy: History of Philosophy: 19th Century: British Idealism
Society: Philosophy: Philosophers: G: Green, Thomas Hill
Society: Philosophy: Philosophers: H: Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich




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