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The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 15: Opus Maximum
 
 
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The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 15: Opus Maximum [Hardcover]

Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Author), Thomas McFarland (Editor)

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Book Description

0691098824 978-0691098821 July 9, 2002

The Opus Maximum gathers the last major body of unpublished prose writings by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Consisting primarily of fragments dictated to Joseph Henry Green, probably between 1819 and 1823, these writings represent all that exists of what Coleridge considered to be "the principal Labour" and "the great Object" of his life, which he called variously the Logosophia and Magnum Opus.

Dedicated to "the reconcilement of the moral faith with the Reason," Coleridge's envisioned Magnum Opus was supposed to "reduce all knowledges into harmony." While such a synthesis finally eluded him, and the Magnum Opus remained unfinished, the surviving fragments nonetheless bear powerful witness to Coleridge's engagement with theology, moral philosophy, natural philosophy, and logic, among other disciplines. Among the subjects that will particularly interest readers are Coleridge's criticisms of Epicureanism, pantheism, and German Naturphilosophie; his attempt to ground reason in faith; and his reflections on personhood (especially in the relationship between mother and child), on will, on language, and on the Logos.

Previously unknown to all but a handful of scholars, the manuscripts presented here provide valuable insight into a crucial period of Coleridge's intellectual development, as he became increasingly dissatisfied with Naturphilosophie and struggled to affirm Trinitarian Christianity on a rational basis. With this volume, The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, begun forty years ago under the sponsorship of the Bollingen Foundation and the editorship of the late Kathleen Coburn, is now complete.



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About the Author

Thomas McFarland is Murray Professor Emeritus of English at Princeton University. Among his numerous books are "Romanticism and the Forms of Ruin" (Princeton) and "Coleridge and the Pantheist Tradition".

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
This, the thinnest of the three clasped vellum notebooks of S SM 29, was mistakenly identified as Vol III by C. A. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
appropriative attraction, implying revelation, verč organum, regula maxima, contractive power, parentheses inserted, tertium aliquid, evolutionary materialism, modern illumination, philosophical lectures, magna opera, divine plenitude, contractive force, double touch, absolute will, discursive faculty, single vertical line, uncertain reading, occasional corrections, verb substantive
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Philosophical Lectures, Statesman's Manual, John Watson, Paradise Lost, Christian Trinity, Des Cartes, Opus Maximum, Jacobi Werke, Glossary of Terms, Philo Judaeus, Richard Baxter, Say Vol, Divine Legation, French Revolution, Holy Ghost, Holy Spirit, Joseph Henry Green, Kathleen Coburn, New Testament, The Concept of Person, The Concept of Will, God the Father, Lehre des Spinoza, Religious Musings, The Relation of the Magnum Opus
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