Three Philosophical Poets: Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe
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About This Book
A series of lectures presents critical readings of three major European poets, associating each with a philosophical tendency: one as a naturalistic materialist who celebrates nature and counsels measured pleasure; another as a supernaturalist who frames history and morality in a symbolic, theological cosmos where love and allegory order experience; and a third as a romantic-Classicist hybrid whose Faust dramatizes restless ambition, experiments in living, and reconciliation through aesthetic renewal. Close comparative commentary traces each poet's cosmology, ethical prescriptions, poetic methods, and limitations, and outlines an ideal of a comprehensive philosophic poet.
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