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Knowledge Indiff Eng Romantic Prose (Cambridge Studies in Romanticism)

Knowledge Indiff Eng Romantic Prose (Cambridge Studies in Romanticism)

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Tim Milnes
Cambridge University Press, 8/21/2008
EAN 9780521035958, ISBN10: 0521035953

Paperback, 292 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English

This 2003 study sheds light on the way in which the English Romantics dealt with the basic problems of knowledge, particularly as they inherited them from the philosopher David Hume. Kant complained that the failure of philosophy in the eighteenth century to answer empirical scepticism had produced a culture of 'indifferentism'. Tim Milnes explores the way in which Romantic writers extended this epistemic indifference through their resistance to argumentation, and finds that it exists in a perpetual state of tension with a compulsion to know. This tension is most clearly evident in the prose writing of the period, in works such as Wordsworth's Preface to Lyrical Ballads, Hazlitt's Essay on the Principles of Human Action and Coleridge's Biographia Literaria. Milnes argues that it is in their oscillation between knowledge and indifference that the Romantics prefigure the ambivalent negotiations of modern post-analytic philosophy.

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Romanticism's knowing ways
1. From artistic to epistemic creation
the eighteenth century
2. The charm of logic
Wordsworth's prose
3. The dry romance
Hazlitt's immanent idealism
4. Coleridge and the new foundationalism
5. The end of knowledge
Coleridge and theosophy
Conclusion
life without knowledge
Notes
Bibliography
Index.