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Emile Brehier : ウィキペディア英語版
Émile Bréhier
Émile Bréhier (; 12 April 1876, Bar-le-Duc – 3 February 1952, Paris) was a French philosopher. His interest was in classical philosophy, and the history of philosophy. He wrote a ''Histoire de la Philosophie'', translated into English in seven volumes.
Bréhier was Henri Bergson's successor at the Sorbonne, in 1945. The historian Louis Bréhier was his brother.
==Views==
He was an early follower of Bergson; in the 1930s there was an influential view that Bergsonism and Neoplatonism were linked.〔Paul Andrew Passavant, Jodi Dean, ''Empire's New Clothes: Reading Hardt and Negri'' (2004), p. 218.〕
He has been called "the sole figure in the French history who adopts an Hegelian interpretation of Neoplatonism",〔http://classics.dal.ca/Faculty%20and%20Staff/Neoplatonism_and_Con.php; Hankey p. 120 in Jean-Marc Narbonne, W. J. Hankey, ''Levinas and the Greek Heritage & One Hundred Years of Neoplatonism in France'' (2006).〕 but also a Neo-Kantian opponent of Hegel.〔Bruce Baugh, ''French Hegel: From Surrealism to Postmodernism'' (2003), note p. 183.〕

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