Coleridge and Scepticism

ISBN13: 9780199290253ISBN10: 0199290253 Hardback, 224 pages
Nov 2007,  In Stock

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$110.00 (06)

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Description

Coleridge tended to view objects in the natural world as if they were capable of articulating truths about his own poetic psyche. He also regarded such objects as if they were capable of illustrating and concretely embodying truths about a transcendent spiritual realm. After 1805, he posited a series of analogical 'likenesses' connecting the rational principles that inform human cognition with the rational principles that he believed informed the teleological structure of the natural world. Human reason and the principle of rationality realized objectively in Nature were both regarded as finite effects of God's seminal Word. Although Coleridge intuitively felt that nature had been constructed as a 'mirror' of the human mind, and that both mind and nature were 'mirrors' of a transcendent spiritual realm, he never found an explanation of such experiences that was fully immune to his own skeptical doubts.

Coleridge and Scepticism examines the nature of these skeptical doubts, as well as offering a new explanatory account of why Coleridge was unable to affirm his religious intuitions. Ben Brice situates his work within two important intellectual traditions. The first, a tradition of epistemological 'piety' or 'modesty', informs the work of key precursors such as Kant, Hume, Locke, Boyle, and Calvin, and relates to Protestant critiques of natural reason. The second, a tradition of theological voluntarism, emphasizes the omnipotence and transcendence of God, as well as the arbitrary relationship subsisting between God and the created world. Brice argues that Coleridge's detailed familiarity with both of these interrelated intellectual traditions, ultimately served to undermine his confidence in his ability to read the symbolic language of God in nature.

Features

  • An interdisciplinary study of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his theory of poetic symbolism
  • Provides an original and detailed account of Coleridge's relationship to important intellectual precursors such as Kant, Hume, Locke, Newton, Boyle, and Calvin
  • Relates Coleridge's reflections on the symbol and the "book of nature" to important developments in natural philosophy and Protestant theology

Product Details

224 pages; ISBN13: 978-0-19-929025-3ISBN10: 0-19-929025-3

About the Author(s)

Ben Brice, Supernumerary Teaching Fellow in English, St John's College, Oxford

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