Tyndale Faculty Publications

Repeating the Act of the Infinite in the Finite: Theological Anthropology in Coleridge’s Opus Maximum

Repeating the Act of the Infinite in the Finite: Theological Anthropology in Coleridge’s Opus Maximum

Chapter in
Coleridge's Assertion of Religion: Essays on the Opus Maximum
Author(s): Dr. Scott Masson

Alternately titled the "Assertion of Religion," "the great work," "Logosophia," «magnum opus», and the «Opus Maximum», Samuel Taylor Coleridge's philosophical assertion of religion was often regarded as the work that would determine his permanent contribution to the history of ideas. Despite endless preparatory studies, however, Coleridge's plan to develop a unified system, drawing from philosophy, literature, theology, history, and the natural sciences, remained incomplete at his death. «Coleridge's Assertion of Religion» contains the first collection of original scholarship on the newly published «Opus Maximum». While the language of the «Opus Maximum» is often complex and fragmentary, the essays in this volume open new avenues for future discussion of pivotal themes in Coleridge's writings, including careful analysis of Coleridge's conception of God and the Trinity, the human will, his relationship to Neoplatonism, and his unique defense of the human self through the connection between a mother and a child. The volume thereby contributes to the ongoing assessment of Coleridge's contribution to nineteenth-century Romanticism and his place in the history of ideas.

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Publication Information

Publisher:
Peeters Publishers
Year: 2006
ISBN/ISSN: 978-90-429-1787-3
Publication:
» Coleridge's Assertion of Religion: Essays on the Opus Maximum
Page Numbers: