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초록
This paper examines the difference between Bradley’s and Hegel’s philosophy. Bradley's philosophy, representing 19th century British idealism, was regarded as a subclass of Hegelian philosophy by early analytic philosophers such as Moore and Russell. However, despite the obvious difference between the two philosophies as Bradley himself says he is not a Hegelian, the critique of Bradley's philosophy was directly understood as a critique of Hegel's philosophy. Thus, revealing the difference between the two philosophies is a starting point for a work to correct the understanding of Hegelian philosophy which has been distorted for a long time in the Anglo-Saxon philosophy. For this work, this paper first examines what was the principle of Hegelian philosophy or idealism that was generally accepted at that time, and then how Bradley unfolds his philosophy that is different from Hegelian philosophy, and lastly how such development originate from the distortion of Hegelian philosophy.