Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
1 The classic statement of this view is Hobhouse, L. T.The metaphysical theory of the state (London, 1918)Google Scholar. A similar opinion expressed by Baillic, J. B. in Studies in human nature (London, 1921), p. VIIGoogle Scholar aroused the wrath of De Ruggiero, in Filosofi del novecento, 3rd edn (Bari, 1946)Google Scholar.
2 References are to the Collingwood translation The history of European liberalism (Oxford, 1927)Google Scholar. Described by him as ‘a great book’ he believed ‘no book known to me since T. H. Green has, I think, made so fine a theoretical contribution to liberal doctrine, and this is far more complete and far more highly organized than anything of Green's’. Letter of Collingwood to De Ruggiero 18–11–26, Collingwood MSS. Bodleian Library, Oxford, Folder 27.
3 For biographical information, see Garin, E., Intellectuali italiani del XX secolo (Roma, 1974), pp. 105–36Google Scholar and Calo, G. – Salvatorelli, L., ‘Guido de Ruggiero’, Accademia Nazionale da Lincei, Quaderno 13 (Rome, 1949)Google Scholar. On the diverse political doctrines of Italian Hegelians see my ' Gentile, Croce and Hegel, and the doctrine of the ethical state, Rivista di Studi Crociani, XX (1983), 263–81Google Scholar and ‘Liberalism and historicism – Benedet to Croce and the political role of idealism in Italy c. 1890–1952’ in The promise of History, ed. Moulakis, A. (Berlin/New York, 1985), pp. 69–119Google Scholar.
4 See Sasso, G., ‘Considerazioni sulla filosofia di De Ruggiero’, De Homine, XXI (1967), 23–70Google Scholar for a comparison of Gentile and De Ruggiero's philosophy showing the substantial influence of Gentile throughout all De Ruggiero's writings. De Ruggiero's, paper ‘La scienza come esperienza assoluta’, Annuario delta Biblioteca Filosofica of Palermo, II (1912), 229–339Google Scholar essentially reproduces the themes of Gentile's, first outline of his actualism in ‘L'atto del pensare come atto puro’, Annuario, I (1912), 27–42Google Scholar.
5 Contemporary philosophy, translated by Collingwood, R. G. and Howard, A. (London, 1921), PP. 375Google Scholar, 16–18.
6 European liberalism, pp. 357–63. Idem. ‘Liberalism’ in Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, IX (London, 1933), pp. 435–41.
7 I explore this central theme of Italian political thought in my book Modern Italian social theory – ideology and politics from Pareto to Gramsci, Polity Press, forthcoming.
8 ‘La pensee italienne et la guerre’, Revue de Metaphysique et de Morale, XXIII (1916), 748–85Google Scholar.
9 Ibid. pp. 751, 756–761, 760–1, 762, 764, 769.
10 The articles are almost completely collected in de Ruggiero, Guido, Scritti politici 1912–26, ed. Felice, Renzo de (Bologna, 1969)Google Scholar. De Felice's long introduction, pp. 1–76, is the best analysis of De Ruggiero's political thought, but see too de Aloysio, Francesco, ‘Note al Guido de Ruggiero politico nel periodo della nascita e dell'avvento del fascismo’, Rivista storica del socialismo, XXIII (1960), 725–45Google Scholar, which is an important corrective to Garin, E., Intellettuali, pp. 105–36Google Scholar. The two books are L'impero brilannico dopo la guerra (Firenze, 1921)Google Scholar and ‘La formazione dell' impero britannico’ in L'Europa nel secolo XIX, I Storiapolitico, ed. Donati, D. and Carli, F., (Padua, 1925), PP. 477–513Google Scholar.
11 ‘II tramonto del liberalism’, II Resto del Carlino, 19 Feb. 1917, Scrttti, p. 174.
12 ‘II trionfo del liberalismo’, Il Tempo, 23 Jan. 1919, Scritti, pp. 196–200.
13 ‘Tendenze’, Il Resto del Carhno, 28 April 1919, Scntti, pp. 236–9.
14 See ‘Discussionisocialiste’, Il Resto del Carhno, 17 July 1919 and ‘Lostato sociahsta’, Il Paese 2 Aug. 1921, Scritti, pp. 274–8, 380–4.
15 I am here more or less paraphrasing De Ruggiero's own account of Hobhouse, in European liberalism, pp. 155–7Google Scholar, where he passes his famous judgement on the work as ‘the best formulation of the new English Liberalism of the twentieth century’ combining ‘the teaching of Mill and Green in a modernized form’ (p. 155). Justification for an idealist reading of Liberalism is provided by Collini, Stefan, Liberalism and sociology – L. T. Hobhouse and political argument in England 1880–1914 (Cambridge, 1979)Google Scholar, ch. 4.
16 Hobhouse, L. T., Liberalism (1911) (Oxford, 1964), pp. 66Google Scholar, 80–1, 69, 67–8.
17 See Collini, Stefan, ‘Hobhouse, Bosanquet and the state: philosophical idealism and political argument in England 1880–1918’, Past and Present, LXXII (1976), 86–111CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
18 The metaphysical theory of the state, pp. 71, 60–1.
19 Liberalism, pp. 70, 69.
20 Collini, Stefan, Liberalism and sociology, pp. 147–70Google Scholar, 235–40 shows how Hobhouse's argument is based on his account of progress and that after World War One this becomes more idealist in nature than otherwise.
21 See Il concetto del lavoro nella sua genesi storica, Il filo di arianna, n. 20 (Rome 1947), p. 42Google Scholar.
22 Liberalism, pp. 88–109.
23 L'impero britanmco dopo la guerra, pp. 59–62.
24 ‘I presupposti economici del liberalismo’, La Rivoluzione Liberale, I (1922), n. 2, 19 02 pp. 6–8Google Scholar, ‘La politica inglese in Italia’, Il Paese, 2, March 1922, ‘In tema di collaborazione’, Il Paese 17 June 1922, Scnth, pp. 472–6, 521–5.
26 ‘La lotta politica – liberali e laburisti’, La Rivoluzione Liberale, III (1924), n. 13–14, 25 March–1 04, p. 51Google Scholar and ‘Liberalismo sociale e liberal-socialismo’ in Il ritomo alia ragione (Bari, 1946), pp. 240–5Google Scholar.
26 L'impero britannio dopo la guerra, pp. 57–8.
27 ‘I presupposti economici del liberalismo’, ‘Orientamenti’, Il Paese, 30 July 1922, ‘II trionfo della tecnica’, Il Resto del Carlino, 19 Dec. 1922, Scritti, pp. 535—9, 595–600.
28 ‘Il concetto liberale’, La nostra scuola, 16–31 March 1921, Scritti, pp. 365–71 (preface to his book on English politics as a statement of his ideas on liberalism, it earned the book sequestration by the authorities), ‘Decalogo Spicciolo’, Il Paese, 2 April 1922, ‘Servitù o libertà’, Il Paese, 13 June 1922, ‘Krumiraggio liberale’, II Paese, 20 June 1922, ‘Liberali!’ Il Paese, 15 Oct. 1922, Scritti, pp. 482–6, 510–4, 526–30, 585–7.
29 ‘Servitù o libertà’, Il Paese, 13 June 1922, Scritti, pp. 511.
30 ‘Il concetto liberale’, p. 367. The liberal party, he argued, was the continuation of the liberalism of the nineteenth century only in the same sense that ‘a deposit of coal is the continuation of a forest’. ‘Liberali!’, p. 586.
31 ‘Il problema dell'autorità’, Il Paese, 8 Dec. 1921, Scritti, p. 423.
32 Che cosa è il fascismo? Discorsi e polemiche (Florence, 1925), pp. 29–33, 41–63, 65–94Google Scholar, and Harris, H. S., The social philosophy of G. Gentile (urbana, 1960), pp. 167–82Google Scholar.
33 ‘Intorno al Fascismo’, Il Resto del Car lino, 14 Feb. 1922, ‘L'avenire del Fascismo’, Il Paese 13 Sept. 1921, ‘Il Fascismo e la lottaagraria’, Il Paese 5 Nov. 1921, ‘Memorie inutile’, Le Battaglie del Mezzogiorno, Scritti, pp. 389–92, 402–6, 450–4, 615–9, ‘Il liberalismo e la masse’, La Rivoluzione Liberate, II (1923), n. 12, 1 05 1923, p. 49Google Scholar.
34 European liberalism, pp. 326, 327, 329, 339, 343.
35 European liberalism, pp. 343, 350–7. 355. 358. 388–9, 393–5
36 Il ritorno alia ragione (Bari, 1946), pp. 14, 29Google Scholar.
37 European liberalism was reprinted in 1941, leading to him losing his chair at Rome and his arrest in 1943 for his activities in the ‘Party of Action’. (Il ritorno alla ragione of 1946 consists of articles written during this period, developing the arguments of European liberalism (pp. vi–viii and preface to third edition (1943) of Europtan liberalism). In 1943 he became rector of Rome University and was minister of Education in the Bonomi administration (June–Dec. 1944). He died in Rome 29 Dec. 1948.