The knowledge that endures : Coleridge, German philosophy and the logic of romantic thought

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The knowledge that endures : Coleridge, German philosophy and the logic of romantic thought

Gerald McNiece

Macmillan Academic and Professional, 1992

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注記

Bibliography: p. 205-215

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book analyzes the major elements of Romanticism. It first reviews the ideas on the relation of mind and nature, of Kant and post-Kantian philosophers, addressing their dependence on the principle of the reconciliation of opposites. This principle of synthesis is also reflected in the discussion of imagination. Symbol, mythology and nature in the second part and in the analysis of Romantic irony in the third part. Romantic irony is described as a kind of deconstructive discipline for transcendental ambitions. The final part takes up the problem of literature as knowledge and suggests a sensible resolution of the conflict between autonomous and cognitive views which does not involve too rigorous a distinction of "beauty" and "truth".

目次

  • The twilight realms of consciousness. Part 1 Coleridge, German philosophy, and the quest for the logos: Kant, Schiller, and Fichte
  • Schelling, Hegel, and others. Part 2 Imagination, symbol, and nature: imagination
  • symbol and allegory
  • symbolism and mythology
  • nature, and the subordinate logos. Part 3 Irony or "Logical Beauty": philosophical influences
  • Freidrich Schlegal and romantic irony
  • Solger - the metaphysical knight of the negative
  • romantic irony in England. Part 4 The mystery of cognition: some further philosophical considerations
  • the power of words
  • building domes in the air.

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