Coleridge and Newman

The Centrality of Conscience

Philip C. Rule S.J.

Studies in Religion and Literature

Pages: 226

Hardback
ISBN: 9780823223152
Published: 15 July 2004
$70.00
Fordham University Press
Fordham University Press

By examining Samuel Taylor Coleridge's and John Henry Newman's parallel approaches to the central question of Christian apologetics - the existence of God - Coleridge and Newman: The Centrality of Conscience documents more fully than ever before the extent of Coleridge's influence on Newman. Both men sought to develop an argument for God's existence by understanding conscience as the moral self-awareness that makes us human.

The study provides fresh readings of three texts by Colerdige and three by Newman. The result of these comparative readings is a rhetoric that both informs and invites the reader to personal reflection.

[Rule's] methodology provides a viable model for demonstrating the interplay between religious experiences and rhetorical expression.---—Christianity and Literature

...required reading for any serious historian of Victorian voluntarism and nineteenth-century social thought.---—Victorian Studies

The rich resources [Coleridge and Newman] offers should give this book a place in any well-stocked library that touches on English Romantic or Victorian thought in religion or philosophy.---—American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly

Rule presents new analysis of some major texts, three by Coleridge and three by Newman.---—Theology Digest

Philip C. Rule, S.J. is Professor of English at the College of the Holy Cross and has published widely in nineteenth-century British studies, film studies, and religion and literature.