"Coleridge as Philosopher" by John H. Muirhead provides a rigorous and comprehensive exploration of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's intellectual contributions, establishing him as a significant figure in the history of philosophy beyond his renowned literary achievements. Muirhead argues that Coleridge was not merely a fragmentary thinker or a poet-critic, but a systematic philosopher who sought to synthesize the insights of German transcendentalism with the British tradition.
The work examines Coleridge's complex theories on the nature of the human mind, the distinction between the reason and the understanding, and his profound insights into the creative imagination. Muirhead meticulously traces Coleridge's thoughts on metaphysics, ethics, and political philosophy, highlighting his efforts to construct a unified world-view that bridged the gap between religion and science. This study illuminates Coleridge's influence on the development of British Idealism and his pivotal role in the nineteenth-century intellectual landscape. "Coleridge as Philosopher" remains an indispensable text for those interested in the intersections of Romantic literature and philosophical inquiry, offering a clear-eyed analysis of one of England's most complex and enduring minds.
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