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Full Description
This book re-evaluates the philosophical status of Samuel Taylor Coleridge by providing an extended comparison between his work and the phenomenological theory of Edmund Husserl. Examining Coleridge's accounts of the imagination, perception, poetic creativity and literary criticism, it draws a systematic and coherent structure out of a range of Coleridge's philosophical writing. In addition, it also applies the principles of Coleridge's philosophy to an interpretation of his own poetic output.
Contents
1. Introduction.- 2. Anti-psychologism and Ideal Laws in Biographia I.-3. Coleridge's phenomenological engagements with idealism.- 4. Imagination and Intentionality.- 5. Coleridge's Epoché.- 6.'The acts of the mind itself': Eidetic Intuition and the 'Conversation Poems'.