Coleridge and the Conservative ImaginationMercer University Press, 2003 - 286 Seiten Why should anyone bother with Coleridge either as a theologian or a political theorist? At first in desperation, but now quite deliberately, Alan Gregory convincingly suggests that one should bother because Coleridge mounted an imporant critique of reductionist explanations of human society and moral agency, and because Coleridge has much regarding that important enterprise to teach us still. While Gregory also offers a perceptive outline of early British conservatism, his main concern is with Coleridge's attack on reductionism, including his defense of the will against associationism, his criticisms of Enlightenment historiography, his discussions of the inadequacies of political economy, and the Trinitarian arguments against monism. There is, Gregory remarks, no grasping the range or inner dynamic of Coleridge's thought without appreciating his religious vision, his theology. Indeed, Coleridge himself affirmed that should we try to conceive a man without the ideas of God, eternity, freedom, will, absolute truth, of the good, the true, the beautiful, the infinite...the man will have vanished. |
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... arguments enabled otherwise uneasy bedfel- lows , Anglicans and Dissenters , as well as atheists such as Bentham and Richard Carlile , to make common cause . During the first quarter of the nineteenth century , religious argument ...
... arguments enabled otherwise uneasy bedfel- lows , Anglicans and Dissenters , as well as atheists such as Bentham and Richard Carlile , to make common cause . During the first quarter of the nineteenth century , religious argument ...
Seite 222
... argument for the priority of the will over the being of God . To put his argument in its negative form : if here , in the ground and origin of all things , being is primary and will a product , then being is primary everywhere and the ...
... argument for the priority of the will over the being of God . To put his argument in its negative form : if here , in the ground and origin of all things , being is primary and will a product , then being is primary everywhere and the ...
Seite 263
... argument , to the personeity of God . That is not the whole picture , though . Coleridge's use of transcen- dental argument for theological purposes differs from that of Kant , more , indeed , than Coleridge at times admits . For a ...
... argument , to the personeity of God . That is not the whole picture , though . Coleridge's use of transcen- dental argument for theological purposes differs from that of Kant , more , indeed , than Coleridge at times admits . For a ...
Inhalt
The Later Political Writings | 27 |
Philosophical Psychology and Conservative Politics | 39 |
Imagination and the Wisdom of History | 81 |
Urheberrecht | |
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