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1. The a Priori and The Categories 1. The a Priori and The Categories
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2. Anschauungsformen and ‘Intellectual Intuition’ 2. Anschauungsformen and ‘Intellectual Intuition’
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3. Ding an Sich 3. Ding an Sich
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4. Antinomies 4. Antinomies
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5. Regulative Ideas 5. Regulative Ideas
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6. Reason and Understanding 6. Reason and Understanding
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Works Cited Works Cited
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31 Coleridge and Philosophy
Get accessChristoph Bode is Chair of Modern English Literature at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich, Germany. His major fields are British and European Romanticism, twentieth-century English and American Literature, Critical Theory, and Travel Writing. He is President of the German Society for English Romanticism and was, for many years, European Convener for the Wordsworth Summer Conference in Grasmere. In 2006 he was elected Centenary Fellow of the English Association, and in 2007 he was awarded a Christensen Fellowship by St Catherine's, Oxford. Author of nineteen books, his most recent ones are: Historicizing/Contemporizing Shakespeare (co-ed., 2000); Re-mapping Romanticism: Gender, Texts, Contexts (coed., 2001); Romantic Voices, Romantic Poetics (co-ed., 2005); Der Roman (2005); British and European Romanticisms (co-ed., 2007). He is currently engaged in writing a two-volume monograph on discursive constructions of identity in British Romanticism.
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Published:28 December 2012
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Abstract
This article examines the works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge relevant to philosophy. It suggests that although Coleridge did not leave behind an original, coherent philosophical system or a single finished book which could be called a philosophical work, he has somehow acquired the reputation of being the most philosophical of the British Romantic poets. The article discusses doubts concerning Coleridge's qualifications as an original philosophical thinker. Renée Wellek, for example, remarked on the fundamental weakness of his thought– incoherence and indistinctness–and considered the study of Coleridge's philosophy to be futile.
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