Coleridge’s Trinity: The Defence of Immanence

  • Richard Berkeley

Abstract

Up to this point, I have dealt primarily with the pantheism controversy itself, and have shown that Coleridge was more engaged with it than has been suggested before. Even McFarland focuses on it merely as one episode in a more general tradition of pantheism, and sees it, moreover, within the ambit of his concept of the conflict between the philosophy of the ‘It is’ and the philosophy of the ‘I am’. Furthermore, I argued in Chapter 8 that the problems that arise from pantheism had a more general importance for Coleridge, and that in many ways he was concerned that his own thought and beliefs might contain some kind of hidden pantheistic tendencies, or even that his thought might collapse into pantheism, as he supposed that Schelling’s had done.1

Keywords

Notebook Entry Commutable Word Conditional Possibility Divine Idea Mere Abstraction 
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Copyright information

© Richard Berkeley 2007

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  • Richard Berkeley

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