Young Coleridge and the Philosophers of NatureAs a young man, Samuel Taylor Coleridge lived in an age of great social change. The political upheavals in America and France, the industrial revolution, and the explosion in humanity's knowledge of the natural order all had a profound effect on Coleridge and radical intellectuals like him. This book examines Coleridge's ideas on science and society in the critical years 1794 to 1796, setting them within the moral, political, and scientific context of the time. Wylie shows how the complex poem, Religious Musings, became a vehicle for these ideas and how they were then developed in the poetry of Coleridge's later years. |
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Page 6
... Coleridge is still criticizing , rather than rejecting , the philosophy of Locke . An unequivocal rejection of the empirical method eventually came in a letter to Poole of March 1801 : If I do not greatly delude myself , I have not only ...
... Coleridge is still criticizing , rather than rejecting , the philosophy of Locke . An unequivocal rejection of the empirical method eventually came in a letter to Poole of March 1801 : If I do not greatly delude myself , I have not only ...
Page 7
... Coleridge John Beer is almost alone in treating Coleridge's many positive references to Newton with any seriousness , though Kathleen Coburn , Lewis Patton , and Peter Mann have stressed in the editions of CN and Lectures 1795 the ...
... Coleridge John Beer is almost alone in treating Coleridge's many positive references to Newton with any seriousness , though Kathleen Coburn , Lewis Patton , and Peter Mann have stressed in the editions of CN and Lectures 1795 the ...
Page 9
... Coleridge : A Bridge between Science and Poetry ' , Kathleen Coburn restated a fundamental truth for Coleridge scholarship : " The view that Coleridge was anti - science is quite erroneous . Nor did he believe in a world of two cultures ...
... Coleridge : A Bridge between Science and Poetry ' , Kathleen Coburn restated a fundamental truth for Coleridge scholarship : " The view that Coleridge was anti - science is quite erroneous . Nor did he believe in a world of two cultures ...
Contents
The Ancient Tradition of Knowledge | 12 |
Wrestling with the Spirit of Newton | 27 |
The Elect Band of Patriot Sages | 47 |
Copyright | |
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active aether Ancient Mariner ancient tradition animal Atheism believed bodies Bristol Cambridge chemistry Christ Christian Coleridge wrote Coleridge's creation creative creatures Cudworth Damascius David Hartley deity divine earth Economy of Vegetation eighteenth century elect band electricity Eolian Erasmus Darwin fluid Franklin God's Greek Hartley Hartley's heaven ibid ideas imagination Isaac Newton Joan of Arc John John Thelwall Joseph Priestley knowledge language Lavoisier Lectures letter light living London luminescence luminous Lunar Society mankind material matter millennial mind moral Moses natural philosophy Neoplatonic o'er Observations ocean organic original passage Phil philosophers phosphorus plastic power Platonic poem poet poetry political Priestley's Protoplast published radical Ralph Cudworth religion Religious Musings revealed revolution Robert Southey Samuel Taylor Coleridge Sir Isaac Newton's slimy soul Southey spirit Thelwall theory things Thomas Beddoes thought thro Trans True Intellectual System truths universe vital principle vols writing