Romantic Confusions of the Good: Beauty as Truth, Truth BeautyRowman & Littlefield, 1997 - 237 Seiten With special attention to the Romantic poets from Wordsworth and Coleridge down to Pound and Eliot, distinguished scholar Marion Montgomery explores the disorientation of image and metaphor from reality. The book focuses on the virtues and limits of the intuitive intellect as they are explicated by Thomas Aquinas in relational intellect, and the 'Romantic' poet's dependence upon the intuitive and rational modes of intellectual action, two species of 'romanticism' centering in presumptuous autonomy emerge: that of the poet and that of the scientist. |
Inhalt
V | 1 |
VI | 19 |
VII | 33 |
VIII | 43 |
IX | 51 |
X | 63 |
XII | 77 |
XIII | 89 |
XVI | 123 |
XVII | 137 |
XVIII | 153 |
XIX | 173 |
XXI | 183 |
XXII | 195 |
XXIII | 207 |
XXIV | 219 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accidents action actual Alfred Prufrock analogy art's artist attempt attribution Averroist awareness beauty becomes Cartesian Idealism cause concept concern consciousness creation creature Dante Descartes desire despair discover discrete effect Eliot encounter entrapment epistemology Étienne Gilson existence experience finitudes Gilson gnostic Hopkins human illusion imagination insists intel intellect intuitive intuitive knowledge isolation John Keats Keats Keats's knowledge lect limits maker Maritain memory metaphor mind modernist mystery nature necessity particular intellect past person philosopher Platonic poem poet's poetry possible Pound present principle proper proportionality Prufrock question rational realist reality recognition recognize recovery reflection relation rescue respect response Romantic poet Romanticism seems shadow soul speak spirit Stevens's T. S. Eliot Teleology term Thomas Thomas says Thomas's Thomistic Thomistic realism thought Tintern Abbey tion transcendent truth of things turning understanding vision visionary Wallace Stevens Waste Land whereby words Wordsworth