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No matter what your status is – single, married, with children, all of you can spent your holiday and vacation into famous romantic location in the world. For single, indulge and pamper yourself in the beautiful romantic cities in the world.
For the married couple, enjoy your honeymoon, whether it’s the 1st honeymoon or the repeated honeymoon, romantic cities sure will give more sparks for your love! And for those with children, do not be frustrated that you will not enjoy the beautiful cities, bring your kids with you as there are a lot of the romantic cities in the world offer good entertainment for children too.
There a lot of hotels in many famous romantic cities in the world. When you are travelling on budget, be sure to choose the good cheap hotel deals and do use good phone card and calling card. In addition to that do your own travel website with using good web hosting supplier and tell the world about your experience in the romantic location below:
Paris – France
The well-known cities for Monalisa, Eiffel Tower, Notre dame, Arc de Trimphe, versailler, Le Lourve etc, also famous for the food, delicious desert, tasty wine, good bread, the high fashion, the history,Paris has it all. In fact, Paris has been the classic romantic city of all-time. The perfect time to enjoy the beauty of Paris is the spring time. Spring and Paris is all about going out on a walk, enjoy the romantic atmosphere that you get in Paris or even just sitting in a sidewalk cafe on Paris’ street by yourself or with partner will be a nice way of spending your time in the most romantic city in the world. For you who were on honeymoon or romantic getaways with your partner, you ought to enjoy the candlelight dinner in front of Eiffel tower. You will fall in love with the charm and romantic feeling that this city gives. From romantic atmosphere, cultural historical site to culinary famous, Paris is not only well known for travellers who seek for romantic atmosphere, but also a good destination for Hollywood film maker, fashion,food and art lover.
Venice – Italy
The city of canal is what people heard about Venice. Venice is surrounded by good architectural historical building, exceptional striking environment, the narrow little street, bridges, and the city itself surrounded by many little canals and gondolas which make the city to maintain its romantic affair and capture the heart of its visitors. When you are in Venice, visit Ponte di Rialto, Ponte dei Sospiri, Canale Grande, have a cup of coffee or hot tea or hot chocolate at Piazza San Marco together with pigions, and have a good experience in romantic serenades gondola ride. Enhance your romantic feels by also visiting Bridge of Sighs and Rialto Bridge. Enjoy Venice like Venetian inspired artists, poets, travellers , musicians such as Byron, Dickens,Rubinsteins and many more. Feel the love in irresistible Venice.
Niagara Falls – Ontario- Canada or New York-US
As world well-known waterfall, Niagara Falls has received many holiday lovers from around the world; including one of the best spot for spending romantic vacation. Imagine yourself be in a place where before going to sleep and waking up watching the beautiful waterfall. Choose a good hotel spot in Niagara and go during late spring to get the best view!
Tahiti
Tahiti is all about romance and water. If you are into romance and you love water, the best chosen romantic location is Tahiti. In your holiday in Tahiti, stay in a nice, romantic beach bungalows which located in the ocean, swim in the early morning and explore gorgeous waterfalls, deep valley, and clear streams in the island for the rest of the day. After you have enough of exploring the island, enjoy the adventurous water sport and activities in the water or even just lay in the beach surrounded by palm and coconut tree. Lastly, before leaving Tahiti, be sure to experience the relaxing, romantic Polynesian spa which uses fresh ingredient found in Tahiti. Tahiti is a little paradise island. And just remember to get a view of the remarkable sunset scenery in Tahiti.
Vienna – Austria
Vienna is a musical city which full of tradition, wealthy in architectural and also a home for many well known artists. In Vienna, you can still enjoy the local wines in the taverns and take a romantic 2 horse carriage drive. There are also a lot of attraction in Vienna such as St Stephen Cathedral, Sigmund Freud Musrum, Belvedere Palace, the Hofburg Imperial Palace, the Prater and many more. You can take local tour in Vienna, or even design your own outing tour yourself , with your loves one or with your family during your holiday in Vienna.
Costa Rica T
he romantic vacation in Costa Rica might be a bit different from usual recommended romantic vacation destination. However Costa Rica, with its surrounding rainforest, volcanoes, waterfalls, butterfly gardens, national park, Costa Rica creates a perfect getaway that is full of romance, eco friendly and adventure.
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imagination- Traditionally, the mental capacity for experiencing, constructing or manipulating ‘mental imagery’ (quasi-perceptual experience). Imagination is also regarded as responsible for fantasy, inventiveness, idiosyncrasy, and creative, original and insightful thought in general, and, sometimes, for a much wider range of mental activities dealing with the non-actual, such as supposing, pretending, ‘seeing as’, thinking of possibilities, and even being mistaken. See representation.
Dictionary of Philosophy of Mind
The definition of Imagination, as seen above, seems to represent elements of concept, as well as existing as a term. The word is commonly encountered in the literature, descriptions or studies of Romanticism, or the Romantic Literary Movements, that developed and bloomed in the early-to-mid nineteenth century. The student who is the product of the newer millennia, however, may have a different understanding of “imagination” than that envisioned by the Romantics, just as the word “Romantic” itself may not adequately prepare today’s naive student for the nature of the content of the poetry and literature of the nineteenth century that they might explore, hoping to appropriate Shakespearean or Drydenesque expressions with which to entrance their lovers.
It is important that “imagination” and “Romanticism” be understood as it was by the Romantics. For that reason, I have added the term “satire,” (which I haven’t seen used a great deal in the literature in connection with “imagination” and “Romanticism).in order to better orient and connect the modern student’s thoughts to what was a driving force behind the literary productions of the Romantics.
Although it is seems reasonable to assume that the Romantic definition of “imagination” seems to have evolved as a result of long thought based on then-modern ideas and ideals of the nineteenth century, and the influence of prior great lights who had pondered and labored to formulate their own definition, it seems that the great eighteenth century ideals that were expressed at that time were based upon the same philosophical definitions for “imagination” that –later— were looked upon by our young Romantics as fodder to foment literary rebellion, even though:
“(While) The common thesis of eighteenth-century optimists was…The proposition that this is the best of possible worlds;….(which) gave rise to the belief that the adherents of this doctrine….(were) insensible to all the pain and frustration and conflict which are manifest through the entire range of sentient life… far from asserting the unreality of evils, the philosophical optimist in the eighteenth century was chiefly occupied in demonstrating their necessity (Lovejoy 319).”
Lovejoy adds that “the logical exigencies of the optimistic argument involved…ideas pregnant with important consequences for both ethics and aesthetics, since they were to be among the most distinctive elements in what perhaps best deserves to be named ‘Romanticism’ (319).”
The definition of Imagination, in fact, as it was slowly formulated, explored, and finally used by many Romantics, probably needs to be studied along with the contextual consideration of satire, and of the ideals behind the rebellious writings of the Romantics, in order to see how the ideas of the eighteenth century concerning Imagination were refined, and then redefined, perhaps to help buttress those philosophical arguments which they created to substantiate and legitimize their rebellion, which was, broadly speaking, arrayed against eighteenth century sentimentalism and superficiality. The general result of this rebellion was a “Romantic” idealism which fascinated not only their generation, but those to come. I think we have inherited from the Romantics our present notions of Imagination, which continue to have an impact upon the definition of imagination with which the layman and the psychologist must deal today.
I have been reading a little of Coleridge and Hazlitt, and was struck by some of Hazlitt’s love letters, which for me epitomize the ‘romantic’ in “Romanticism” while alerting me to the elements of both imagination and satire which he employed so well in Liber Amoris. Marilyn Butler, who analyzes the way the Romantics often presented thinly-masked, biting and satiric autobiographic self-images in her essay “Satire and the Images of Self in the Romantic Period: the Long Tradition of Hazlitt’s Liber Amoris,” commented that
“..an age’s self-image may not be as distinct as posterity’s view of it. The so-called Romanticists did not know at the time that they were supposed to do without satire…it is easy to exaggerate the break with the recent literary past, or with that portion of it we now designate Augustinian. Byron’s well-known tribute to Pope may have been controversial; Scott’s even better-advertised tribute to Dryden was less so…(210).”
In the matter of Coleridge, his well-known revisions chart the changes and fluidity in Romantic evolution of ideas, ideals, imagination. Says Stillinger, who gives us a whole book of Coleridge’s revisions:
“If Coleridge had written each of his poems once and once only, there would be no problem. As it is, we think that he did, and hence arise many oversimplifications and errors in our approach to his poetry. Chiefly these are the idea that for each of the poems there is but a single definitive text; the idea that the single definitive text of each poem must necessarily be a late one (in practical terms because there is none other in sight, in theoretical terms because such has been the tendency of generalizations about textual authority for most of the present century); and then the conclusion from these that Coleridge produced his late texts early in his poetic career. (9-10).”
I have chosen these two quotations to illustrate two tendencies which we have, as human beings who happen to read: one, to identify a movement in literature as well-defined by its proponents and adherents during its existence, particularly at the hey-day or height of the manifestation of its existence, to those who follow (and who always have such remarkable hindsight), and secondly, that we tend to believe that the products of such a movement were created, for the most part, as if sculpted from stone. But, as Stillinger makes clear, “In the theoretical framework of my study, (Coleridge) produced a new definitive version, the “final” text that he intended to stand at the moment, every time he revised a text (10).”
And why did Coleridge revise his work?
Many poets do so: I revise my own work because I change, and what I’ve written no longer weighs or feels or says quite what I meant, or I no longer wish it to say what I once wished it to say, or, perhaps, I have gained a greater sensitivity or ability to communicate what could not be said well at the prior instance (sometimes revisions weaken original work, though!).
Of perhaps all our Romantics, Coleridge has left for us the most sophisticated analysis of what he was about in the matter of writing, editing, criticism and the composition of poetry.
And, happily for us, he submerges himself into a long discussion – one might call it almost a tirade, in its exhaustive energy and vehemence – about imagination. Coleridge does not hesitate to take us on a philosophical and theological journey of great complexity in his attempt to fully explore the topic of imagination.
From a letter dated June 23, 1834:
“You may conceive the difference in kind between the Fancy and the Imagination in this way, that if the check of the senses and the reason were withdrawn, the first would become delirium, and the last mania. The Fancy brings together images which have no connexion natural or moral, but are yoked together by the poet by means of some accidental coincidence….(while) (t)he Imagination modifies images, and gives unity to variety; it sees all things in one, il peu nell’ uno. There is the epic imagination, the perfection of which is in Milton; and the dramatic, of which Shakespeare is the absolute master (http: Imagination in Coleridge 3).”
Coleridge’s theorizing may be clear to some: to my mind, he’s abstruse and convoluted in his thinking, and a variety of interpretations of what he meant about Imagination exists. What seems to be clear is that for Coleridge there are two sorts of Imagination, a primary and a secondary kind. Even so, this distinction between ‘pure imagination’ and ‘secondary imagination’ is apparently not clear enough to allow all other critics to agree with the analysis offered by Robert Penn Warren, according to notes from the source quoted directly above, as displayed in Coleridge’s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, where Penn Warren argues that “The Ancient Mariner is a poem of ‘pure imagination” in the sense that its subject is the poetic, or Secondary, Imagination itself.
Whalley (1946-7) believes that: “whether consciously or unconsciously” the albatross is “the symbol of Coleridge’s creative imagination.” House (1953) opposes the rigidity of Penn Warren’s symbolic analysis and argues that the poem is “part of the exploration…part of the experience which led Coleridge into his later theoretic statements (as of the theory of Imagination) rather than a symbolic adumbration of the theoretic statements themselves” (84, 113).
It might be useful, then, to take a glance at Imagination’s root definitions, as those distant but great philosophers, Plato and Aristotle, thought of it. After all, the Romantics seemed to have looked at the classic definitions, too. Basically, the Dictionary of Philosophy of Mind gives us a handy distillation of the definition of imagination as proposed by that philosopher of philosophers,
“Aristotle…(who) tells us that “imagination [phantasia] is (apart from any metaphorical sense of the word) the process by which we say an image [phantasma] is presented to us” (De Anima. 428a 1-4). It has been questioned in recent times whether the Greek words phantasia and phantasm are really equivalent to “imagination” and’(mental) image” as heard in contemporary usage. However, there can be little doubt that, until very recent times, theoretical discussion of phantasia, its Latin translation imaginatio, and their etymological descendants, continued to be rooted in the concepts introduced by Aristotle and the problems arising from his rather elliptical explanation of them” (http:1).
And for a long time, it might be argued, people really didn’t stray very far from this earliest known standardized definition for Imagination:
Very arguably this is true of all Western philosophical schools: Stoics, Epicureans and Neoplatonists quite as much as avowed Aristoteleans; Muslims as much as Christians; and, come to that, Empiricists quite as much as Rationalists” (http:1).
While “the connection between imagination and perception is the more fundamental,” it should also be pointed out that it is also ‘postulated’ that a difference exists between common sense [sensus communis] and phantasia, either of which can generate phantasmata,
“but when their immediate cause is an object directly before us the tendency is to refer to them as percepts, and to the process as perception; when memory of previously observed things is the source, reference will more likely be to memory and imagination. Thus imagination came to be particularly associated with thinking about things that are not actually currently present to the sense: things that are not really there” (2).
Though this is an oversimplified overview, it does roughly correspond to the situation as I have investigated it, and it only took a few lines of reading time to tell it to you.
Today, the ideas behind the words ‘fantasy’ and ‘imagination’ are likely to evoke these sorts of thoughts:
“…we sometimes find modern writers making a distinction between “memory imagery” and “imagination imagery”, or even restricting the use of “imagination” (and, a fortiori, “imaginary”) to thoughts about things that have never (or never yet) been actually experienced….(f)or some reason, words…such as “fantasy”, “fancy”, or “phantasm”, seem to…connote unreality even more strongly than “imagination” and its cognates…” (2).
And then we have Descartes, who links everything scientifically to flesh, brain and matter, the rational mind connected, it seems, to the body via the “Cartesian imagination/sensus communis” at the “pineal surface,” “the lynchpin that holds together the two metaphysical worlds of Cartesianism. As it had done for Aristotle, the imagination/sensus communis mediated between the bodily senses, and the {now incorporeal) rational mind” (3).
When the Romantics came along, the ideas of Philostratus (among others) were given fresh life as
“discussion concerning imagination shifted away from cognitive theory and epistemology, and towards its role in original, creative thinking, especially in the arts” (3). In other words, imagination was given value, along with passion, and even Coleridge [despite all his attempts to formalize his definitions along philosophic lines] “relied heavily on Kant and post-Kantian German idealism (and Plotinus….)…(with) results (from a philosophical perspective) fragmentary and largely incoherent” (4).
This brings us to the twentieth century, and Sartre (who seems to have respected the idea of imagination), stands against an array of ”analytical philosophers (who)….seem to doubt whether the imagination even exists. Gilbert Ryle declared, in The Concept of Mind, that “There is no special Faculty of Imagination, occupying itself single-mindedly in fancied viewings and hearings” 91949), and this soon became the widely accepted viewpoint” (4).
The fundamental concept of internal imagery and functioning imagination as a real process of mind has received some support from “cognitive psychologists such as….Paivio…Shepard, and….Kosslyn” as it has become once more ‘respectable as a topic for experimental psychological investigation” (4). But that doesn’t mean that “imagination” has regained status as anything more than “a representationally dependent auxiliary to other, more fundamental forms of mental representation, and current theories of image formation hardly aspire to the central place in cognitive theory once occupied by the imagination’ (5).
This is actually quite a fall from an almost pre-eminent position of consideration in the cognitive/creative processes as envisioned by Coleridge and others in the Romantic movement, even when the difficulties that Hume brought to its definition divided opinions: “According to Hume ‘Tis an established maxim in metaphysics, That…nothing we imagine is absolutely impossible (Treatise, I,ii,2)” (5). Without wading through examples that can prove to us how we can imagine some impossible things, and that the converse of Hume’s observation can lead to prickly non sequiturs, there is some physiological evidence available now that visual imagery and imagination are neurologically generated and can, in the future, no doubt be controlled:
“Neurological patients who have lost the retinotopically mapped regions in one cerebral hemisphere, leaving them blind in the corresponding half of their visual field, show certain impaired imaginary abilities in the blinded hemifield… However, other patients suffering from cortical blindness due to damage in these areas seem to have relatively normal imagery. Furthermore, some patients with localized damage in the retinotopically mapped areas experience vivid, well-formed “visual hallucinations” (i.e. imagery that is outside of conscious control–they do not typically mistake it for reality) precisely in the affected (blind or “blindsighted”) parts of their visual fields. This suggests that these brain areas cannot be essential for visual imagery” (http: Are Theories of Imagery…..6).
The above quotation may offer the reader a glimpse of the mechanistic and rigid way in which ideas and definitions of “imagination” and “imagery” are currently being approached by leading investigators of imagery and imaginative phenomena in the late twentieth cenury (the above quote refers to some of the results of recent investigations of Kosslyn, et al (1992-1997). There is not much room for any living, breathing corpus of an evolving definition for imagination here. It has already been decided that everything that emanates from that lump of complex tissue and fluids known as the ‘brain’ is limited by its physiological characteristics, parameters, and functions.
It is rather like analyzing Kubla Khan as the mere product of the influence of opium–as if there will ever be another Kubla Khan!
So worrying about the “definition” of imagination/Imagination just might be a waste of time for the poet, the writer, the artist. I have sometimes wondered if James Joyce’s outpourings in Ulysses was a response elicited not only by his knowledge of so many languages —as if they struck a freight train crashing against his skull—but also as the result of mercury treatments he is theorized to have taken in an attempt to cure the syphilis that claimed his eye and the sanity of his daughter (not, you won’t find more than a few papers on that subject— it’s research I’ve done, myself, from medical evidence I discovered in the 1970′s about Joyce, his wife and children, so far as I am aware).
In fact, if “Romanticism” indeed appropriated “Imagination” as a living definition –though that’s surely a simplified viewpoint–a definition that rested on a full understanding of the past, and which was being stressed and challenged by the skeptical attitudes of those whose reliance on science alone would render blossoms, imagination, and baby monkeys alike as only topics to analyze—then it was possibly the last stand attempt of creative human minds to secure a place of respect for what the mind could produce, for which the world might not have a place, nor understand, nor be ready.
It is the very liveliness of Imagination as the Romantics attempted to define it– aware of its past meanings–of how Milton and Blake and the ancient philosophers gave Imagination a place of respect in the dynamics of human thought— along with vibrant arguments over past and present agreements about what Imagination really stood for (and which it might no longer, for similar reasons today, stand for), that tends to attract me. It behooves us to see if we agree that ‘imagination” as we think it is today resembles at all the Romantic’s notion about it, or not.
To be able to give a name to that factor that affects your creative thought as does the concept of “imagination’ should not slay it or render it lifeless: imagination remains with the human race, recognized or not, so long as people dare to think for themselves. I like what Wordsworth calls “the imaginative will” because of the empowerment this term gives to the will that is adorned, amidst its potential for reasonableness, by the focused intellect. Margaret Sherwood says that Wordsworth, “searching for the single intellectual formula that would solve the complex problem of existence…(was) reduced by….dogmatic fatalism to depression that was well-night despair:
“The crisis of that strong disease, the soul’s last and lowest ebb….was a questioning as to the reality of the existence of the human will, of the power of choice, and of the adequacy of the reason to give grounds for choice….the story of Wordsworth’s recovery, as recorded in prelude, is one of the great chapters in human biography. In reaction from temporary submission to (the) doctrine…that man (is) the driven victim of external forces…the young poet (became) …conscious…of creative power within…(and) (h)is faith in “the imaginative will,” as a creative power, capable of vivifying the human soul at the pure sources of being, he ever after expressed in his poetry and…life” (182-183).
The power of his understanding of the relationship between the creative powers that Wordsworth felt flowing through him – imagination, and his will to turn this creative force into a creation by choice – by the exertion of his own will, has motivational value for the writer and the poet that transcends any technical, scientific definitions of “imagery” and “imagination” that have been produced from exploring traumatized and bisected monkey (or human) brains.
Imagination was recognized in various, past cultures as possessing its own particular dimensions, which now will be refined through Wordsworth, who redefines imagination as a choice which may acted upon by the will.
Today’s students, largely exposed to scientific method and scientific jargon, have not experienced the making of a major definition in the matter of creativity: it is almost a fearful thing to call oneself “creative.” To admit having a big imagination is to invite speculation as to one’s ultimate mental stability: there are already correlations that exist between creativity and manic depression, creativity and insanity. Unfortunately, the fact that a person in danger of insanity, or who is mentally unstable, might resort to a creative stratagem in order to survive or to improve one’s grasp, by the will, of reality, through the act of creation, does not seem to be understood in that light, and I suggest that this is an unfortunate oversight.
As for the rest of us, the use of imagination as a tool to explore realistic outcomes after making a certain choice provides a basis for understanding the utilitarian advantages of such a function. The viability of imagination as a source of attaining logical order in our lives, having explored, via the imagination, the likely and unlikely consequences of certain choices, is generally ignored. And of course, that same range of choice, developed as a result of contemplating imagined outcomes and scenarios, allows the artist, the writer, the poet, the logician and the scientist to make better creative choices in their respective fields.
Imagination, even today, might be understood, then, under Wordsworth’s interpretation as a device or resource— a potential means, one might say– to obtain or to take advantage of a strategy with which to cope with events or ideas potentially unendurable, or, to produce new ones, relative to, or irrelevant to, one’s surroundings, milieu, and environment, with the understanding that to exert Imagination is to utilize a key element in the successful adaptation, or expression, of the human being.
The Wordsworthian definition of Imagination empowers. It is a passport to new and unimagined events, to possible worlds otherwise unable to be entered without permission from some higher authority, whether deity or dictator. I suggest that the Romantic approach to Imagination allows the mind a degree of freedom for radical exploration which modern definitions might eventually deny to us (if we do not wish to be regarded as somehow overly creative, and, therefore, possibly mentally unstable, etc.).
In all such considerations, the element of satire should not be ignored. Imagination, alone, in any realization as a movement by Romantic writers/poets worthy of adoption in our own philosophy, must not exclude the consideration of the role of satire in its implementation. Satire can mask or disguise the creative product, allowing it to be a sugar-coating for what otherwise might be a difficult pill for a contemporary world – glutted on scientific thought – to swallow. So that we might get a better grasp of what “imagination” might have meant to Romantics, rather than what it now means to us, looking back at them, we need to consider that the role of satire has been somewhat overlooked, I think, as an influence in the works of the Romantics.
I consider their satirical asides and creations as a rational response to the social pressures which keep so many writers and artists pathetically poor. Just as farmers are at the bottom of the heap, supplying food to all the world, and nevertheless receiving less than anyone else for what they sell (as that food is processed and becomes more expensive per consumable unit, which the farmer must purchase back, keeping him poorer), so, too, artists, poets, and writers produce thoughts and ideas which others eventually adapt and enjoy, while the benefits of their labors, which employ Imagination, rarely return to them in the form of monetary rewards or respect.
Romantic Imagination was a dynamic concept that helped spur the fearless production of works which may have originated as responses to yet earlier works: the whole chain was almost a living structure, both dynamic and active, composed of a socially interacting set of creative people, who generally produced their works with vigor until they died. As the Romantics died, their creative outlook, their definition of Imagination, died with them. Their concept of Imagination yet struggled for expression, here and there: I see impressionistic painting, stream of consciousness writing, and other marvelous instances of the Romantic legacy still asserting itself in the works of the last great believers in imagination.
It is important to understand that explosions of creativity typically are associated with new things, or new ways of looking at things. It is imagination both stimulates and that is stimulated in this way, and it is the definition of imagination that was central to Coleridge’s almost desperate search for understanding the relevance of creativity in the grid-locked universe described by scientific method. Coleridge’s attempt to define Imagination reaches an apex in Chapter Thirteen of the Biographica Literaria, a statement so famous I won’t repeat it here, but of which Thomas McFarland says
“Not only is there no preparation for the threefold distinction of Chapter Thirteen in Coleridge’s previous writings, there is none even in the Biographica…in Chapter Thirteen…in an astonishing volte face, he writes himself a letter in which…(he) proceeds simply to dump upon (the reader) the threefold distinction…”(210).
Indeed, the spontaneous assertion of a threefold property to Imagination may have had its real roots in Blake’s opinions, according to McFarland: “To cast off Bacon, Locke & Newton from Albions covering, to take off his filthy garments, & clothe him with Imagination…” (215)
And yet Coleridge wanted to reconcile mysticism and Imagination, systematically if possible, with “the dictates of common sense with the conclusions of scientific Reasoning.” For Coleridge
“…shared the respect of his age for science and scientific theories, the confidence that human experience could be explained as physical nature could be explained, that there were laws of human nature as well as laws of motion….What he required was a means of reconciling the experience of the oasis [i.e. of visionary insight] with acceptable conceptions of physical and psychological reality” (216).
Not an ignoble venture.
Coleridge was aware that there is an element of passivity in the idea that Imagination is merely a by-product of a physical brain undergoing some permutations which cannot at present (but eventually might always) be controlled. McFarland shows how Coleridge tried to attack some of the difficulties that arise in relying only upon scientific concepts of imagination. When Coleridge understands not only Kant, but the objections of the philosopher Tetens, he begins to breathe more easily. An excerpt of Tetens’ thought will reveal what Coleridge was learning:
“‘Dichkraft can create no elements, no fundamental materials, can make only nothing out of nothing, and to that extent is no creative power. It can only separate, dissolve, join together, blend; but precisely thereby it can produce new images, which from the standpoint of our faculty of differentiation are discrete representations.’
There is accordingly a Selbstthatigheit— a spontaneous activity–in the “receptivity of the psyche” …a perceiving, reproducing and co-adunating power” (222).
Coleridge, noted McFarland, as especially found in Chapter Eight of his Biographica Literaria, embraced ideas such as these expressed by Tetens (even more, McFarlane asserts rather convincingly, than those of Kant), which gave him the intellectual relief he sought from the Newtonian outlook which had so depressed him:
“Newton was a mere materialist – Mind in his system is always passive – a lazy Looker-on an external World. If the mind be not passive, if it indeed be made in God’s Image, & that too in the sublimed sense— the Image of the Creator— there is ground for suspicion, that any system built on the passiveness of the mind must be false, as a system” (222).
While I cannot embrace Coleridge’s precise religious interpretations, nor, for that matter, the twofold or threefold vision of Imagination, with which we could occupy the timber of a whole tree made into paper, McFarlane makes another interesting argument that “the lineage of the secondary imagination extends not only backwards beyond Kant to Teens, but also beyond Teens to Leibniz, and finally beyond Leibniz to Plato.”
And that makes all the difference: Coleridge contemplates this unbroken succession of thought (as I think we, too, might profit from doing), and thus,
“With antecedents of this kind,….Coleridge’s threefold theory of imagination actually bears less on poetry than it does on those things that always mattered most to him— as they did to Leibniz and to Kant— that is, “the freedom of the will, the immortality of the soul, and the existence of God” (224-226).
With the advent of the computer, we entered a new frontier: we did not know how to explore it all – its functions and potential were not defined for us in advance. Of itself, the computer offered the human mind endless variations using Imagination. Once more, marvelous, creative things can happen, because we aren’t fettered by a totally mechanistic interpretation of everything that we do. It is a new creative frontier, waiting to be expanded and developed.
It will be tamed faster than any frontier behind it, as we speed up everything we process through that same medium – science – that now rules most of the domain of our minds with its interpretations of what is sane, what is not, what is real, what is not, and – no doubt soon to come – will dare dicate to us what we might be allowed to create, and what we will dare not. As evidenced in police states, satire, wit and humor can unlock thought-prisons. Satire, in particular, provides the creative imagination its last foot-hold on the mountain of which reason is King. In this King-of-the-Mountain scenario, satire cannot win, cannot wrest away any lasting laurels for Imagination. But it can challenge the King with a dissident voice.
. Says critic Marilyn Butler: “With the passing of time, critics seem to have become less rather than more aware of the satirical and intellectual strain in Romantic writing…” (191). That is because satire’s shafts strike most deeply into contemporary targets, some now so remote to our imaginations (dare I use the word?) that we no longer see the original target, if even the direction of the arrows.
That richness of potential for creativity (that a term such as “imagination” might have had on the minds of those sophisticates and idealists who thought of themselves as exemplars and pioneering rebels embracing Romanticism) as a holistic and all-pervading philosophy with a utilitarian function – dealing with a world in which man found himself suddenly aware that he might be in charge of his universe, that he might be standing alone, and alone responsible for the events of the world in which he lived, unsure whether or not his actions were be ordained by God(s) or imposed upon him by happenstance and instinct — this freedom may be denied us in our modern day. But not satire. Satire breaks through, sharp and sincere.
Morality and new meaning, when a human being could imagine good and evil as choices that might be made without interference from a higher moral power – these will not be topics of debate in a future where everything will be explained by DNA and environment. Nature was once man’s teacher, and the forces of his own nature his dictator, with the whole wide world opening before him, ready to explore and conquer. What was imagined could become real. What seemed to be real did not have to be substantiated by the senses. Today, using imagination – not mere formulae for success – in a world where scientists declare what we should or should not think, is the hallmark of an intellectual rebel.
Our challenge, today, is to preserve “Imagination” from any definition at all.
With this in mind, look once more, please, at the “definition” which was absorbed so rapidly by you, the reader, at the beginning of this article:
imagination- Traditionally, the mental capacity for experiencing, constructing or manipulating ‘mental imagery’ (quasi-perceptual experience). Imagination is also regarded as responsible for fantasy, inventiveness, idiosyncrasy, and creative, original and insightful thought in general, and, sometimes, for a much wider range of mental activities dealing with the non-actual, such as supposing, pretending, ‘seeing as’, thinking of possibilities, and even being mistaken. See representation.
Dictionary of Philosophy of Mind
Note the last part of this definition: ‘the mental capacity for’ ‘even being mistaken.’ To have the liberty to err, to be mistaken, to possess the ability to think about “the thing which is not,” as those all-logical Houyhnhnms of Jonathan Swift’s satirical imagination could not imagine – the right to be wrong that rests at the center of “Imagination” – this is a right and option we should guard as our unspeakably valuable creative heritage and treasured legacy from the Romantic tradition.
Thanks to Dr. Joseph Riehl (University of Louisiana at Lafayette) who suggested that I expand this essay.
Works Cited
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. S.T. Coleridge Notebooks. Kathleen Coburn and Merton Christianson, eds. 4 vols. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1990.
_______________________. Biographica Literaria. Chapts. 1-22. 1815. Etext available
at Project Gutenberg; for relevant extracts, see Imagination in Coleridge (below).
Butler, Marilyn. “Satire and the Images of self in the Romantic Period: the Long Tradition of Hazlitt’s Liber Amoris.” English Satire and the Satiric Tradition. Ed. Claude Rawson.
Padstow, Great Britain: Basil Blackwell, 1984. Pp. 209-225.
Dictionary of Philosophy of Mind, Voice of the Shuttle e-link.
Edwards, S. T. “Master Concepts in Literary Study: The Moral Imagination”
<http://www.stedwards.edu/newc/green/moral.htm> Pp. 1-5.
acquired 8/30/2000
Hobbes, Thomas. The Leviathan.
<http://osu.orst.edu/instruct/phl1302/texts/hobbes/leviathan-b.html> pp. 6-22
acquired 5/20/2004
“Imagination in Coleridge.” E-textual Extracts from University of Ottawa transcripts of The Letters of S.T. Coleridge. <http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~phoenix/im-51.htm> Pp 2-6.
acquired 7/28/99
Lovejoy, Arthur O. “Optimism and Romanticism.” Eighteenth Century English Literature: Modern Essays in Criticism. Ed. James L. Clifford. New York: oxford UP, 1959. Pp. 319-343.
McFarland, Thomas. “Theory of Secondary Imagination.” New Perspectives on Coleridge and Wordsworth. Ed. Geoffrey Hartman. New York & London: Columbia UP, 1972. Pp. 194-246.
Sherwood, Margaret. “Wordsworth: The Imaginative Will.” Undercurrents of Influence in English Romantic Poetry. New York: AMS Press, 1934, 1971.
Stllinger, Jack. Coleridge and Textual Instability: The Multiple Versions of the Major Poems.
New York & Oxford: Oxford UP, 1994. Pp. 1-140.
Thomas, Nigel J. T. “Are Theories of Imagery Theories of Imagination? An Active Perception
Approach to Conscious Mental Contact.” In press: Cognitive Science
<http://web,calstatela.edu/faculty/nthomas/im-im/im-im.htm> pp. 1-40
acquired 9/22/99
Some Additional Readings:
Babbitt, Irving. “The Problem of the Imagination.” On Being Creative and Other Essays, New York: Houghton Mifflin & Co., 1932.
Baker, J. V. The Sacred River: Coleridge’s Theory of the Imagination. Baton Rouge;
LA State UP, 1957. (This is not me!)
Baars, B. J. “When Are Images Conscious? The Curious Disconnection between Imagery and Consciousness in the Scientific Literature.” Consciousness and Cognition, 5, 1996. Pp. 261-264.
Tyler, T. L. “Elements of Plato in Coleridge’s Theory of the Imagination.” Essay for
Professors McGaughey and Dalsant, Dept. Of English, Humboldt University.
Judyth Vary Baker is an American writer, poet and artist who lives in Europe. She is dedicated to publishing poetry, fiction, non-fiction, and scholarly and literary articles online for not only students and scholars, but also for those generally denied access to literary and scientific journals on the Internet because they are not attending university classes or are not permanently situated in ivory towers. ”The pernicious habit of publishing only abstracts or a “first page” of an article unless a fee –often hefty– is paid has become endemic across the Internet: the publishers of scholarly and scientific journals should publish at least a small percentage of their articles in their entirety, online, for the enlightenment of all.” JVB
JVB’s biography can be found in Me & Lee: How I Came to Know, Love and Lose Lee Harvey Oswald, to be released by Trine Day publishers in 2010.
Videos Discuss World AIDS Day, Teen Pregnancy Prevention PSA The following summarizes selected women’s health related videos.Obama Marks World AIDS Day: President Obama released a video in conjunction with Thursday’s World AIDS Day. Obama styled for “building on the big progress we’ve published” and taken down his administration’s get of the first National HIV/AIDS Strategy (WhiteHouse.gov, 12/1). Meanwhile, former George W… Read more on
Speed up your metabolism. Burn those excess fats. Suppress your hunger. These are quick and easy terms coined by many weight loss and diet pills marketers to lure consumers to try their product.
In the cut-throat consumer world where manufacturers, retailers and wholesalers viciously compete for sales in the marketplace, consumers must be clever enough to make the right choices, regardless of the marketing noise surrounding them.
Health is wealth, as the saying goes. Deciding to plunge into a weight loss program, especially involving intake of supplemental pills requires careful scrutiny. Take time to understand the product.
So, what are the basic criteria in choosing the right pill?
1) Weight loss and diet pills must be safe to use. This is the most important criteria. The proper authorities must approve the product. There are several government authorities that are responsible for the assurance that the products are good for sale and safe for consumption
2) Do a little research on the product of interest. Some dietary supplements have side effects when taken for a significant period of time. It is best to choose a weight loss and diet pill that has no known side effect.
3) Natural and Organic diet pills, better known as herbal weight loss and diet pills, are better options. There are alternatives present in the market that are 100% comprised of natural ingredients. Synthetic chemicals pose more chances of side effects for long-term consumption.
To choose the effective diet pills
The second and equally important criterion for the ‘right pill’ is effectiveness. Let’s get real. The aim of every weight-watcher is to lose weight. So, the weight loss and diet pills must result to effective weight loss.
1) Do self research on clinical trials and the results documented on the diet pill in mind. Active ingredients in the pill should have been tested with positive results.
2) Read and clearly understand how the diet pill affects your body that will result to weight loss. By understanding how it works, not only will you be able to anticipate effects on your body functions by taking the pill, but also an integration with your diet regime can be done.
3) Happy customers are good signs of a product’s effectiveness. If you know people who have tried the product, and have indeed enjoyed significant and healthy weight loss, take it as a good sign. Be careful, though, and do not rush. Each individual’s body will have different reactions to different products. What works for them, does not necessarily mean it will work for you.
Confused, now?
Relax! The best way to resolve the dilemma of choosing the right pill is to consult your doctor. By providing a medical expert a comprehensive background of your medical history, your doctor can assess your current body requirements to improve your health status.
Don’t be surprised if the medical expert prescribes more than just the right pill. Successful weight loss requires more than just a pill-popping exercise. A proper diet and adequate exercise will likewise be advised by your doctor to optimize the results of your weight loss program.
Keep an open mind and stick with the routine. Watch as the weight loss and diet pills work wonders for you.
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Romance fuels any existing relationship and turns people from strangers to lovers. Sometimes you feel like you are running out of ideas especially if you have no Julia Roberts’ series. The rest of the world might not be helpful too but you should know that all the romantic things to be deployed are within you. You need to listen to your heart all the time and find simple romantic lines. The trick is in how you say them but not in what you say. The sincerity of your heart will always come out as new romantic phrases from a movie. “You look amazing” how did you feel the last time someone told you that? You must have felt boosted. It helps your lover to forget a bad day at work and also feel appreciated. Do not soak your lover in exaggerated lines lest you risk coming out as insincere.
Ever thought about the most romantic line in the midst of a fight? Next time you are quarrelling with your partner just say “come here.” If you give her a tight squeeze you are on your way to resolving an argument romantically. If you sense your fight is not about to end, you will do yourself justice by being romantic. It is the only way out. “What good did i do to deserve you?” This is an ultimate heartfelt line among all romantic lines. With such words, you are owning up your shortcomings and appreciating the person in your life. Love and intimacy bring out the real meaning of a relationship. “holding you feels like the most right thing to do” If you told me that i would melt under your embrace. This line enhances closeness between couples.
“How i met you must be the only way to happiness” This sounds so original that it invokes all types of love feelings. It melts most of the hearts ready to love. Have you ever noticed that absence makes the heart grow fonder? Yes it does. When a simple “i miss you” is said with all sincerity, it unlocks all the gates of passion. Look at your lover in the eyes and gently say “do you even know how much i love you? ” It is a question and the answer will definitely tell you the effect it have on your lover. The teary eyes and the stammering will tell it all. It is among the most sexy romantic lines.
“I love you” is a simple phrase and yet it is very famous. People make a big deal out of saying it because of its impact. Make a habit of saying it all the time when it is necessary. You might fail to say all the romantic things and be forgiven but nobody is willing to forgive you on this one. Be careful who you tell it to if you do not want to be misinterpreted. You can flirt with all the romantic lines as much as you wish but do not be careless with the words “i love you.” It is essential that you learn to be romantic by deploying the right romantic lines to the right person and at the right time.
Francis K. Githinji Is An Online Dating Expert. His Latest Project Shows How The Power Of Online Dating Can Be Harnessed Internationally and With Great Success, Or You Could Post Your Valued Comments On His Blog At
There is a wide incidence of women in the Western world who experience breast changes that are a direct consequence of their menstrual cycle and it is believed that as high as 70 percent of women are so afflicted. These women may find their breasts have become very uncomfortable due to their becoming tender, swollen or lumpy. This is one of the many women’s health issues that need to be studied and understood if one is to be able to treat the ailment and provide much needed succor to the patients. It is important to find an explanation for the condition and know which natural and medical treatments are available for this women’s health issue.
Breast Health: The Facts
Broadly speaking, women’s health issues can be categorized into several important concerns, of which include: breast problems, cystitis, endometriosis, fibroids, heavy periods, hysterectomy, irregular periods, menopause, miscarriage, no periods, osteoporosis, ovarian cysts, PMS, polycystic ovary syndrome, pregnancy, prolapse, thrush and vaginal infections. Women also face problems such as weight control and infertility.
In the case of breast cancer, one can safely say that it is widely prevalent in women living in the United States. This means that such an important women’s health issue needs to be better understood and this involves knowing the stage of the disease, new diagnostic methods versus recurrence, the woman’s age as well as prior treatments. Mostly, different women would respond to the crisis of having breast cancer in different ways but what is most important is for them to know and obtain as much information as possible so that they are better educated about the disease.
It is important that this women’s health issue be taken notice of, and a study of the risk factors involved with contracting breast cancer needs to be undertaken as some factors may have stronger links to breast cancer than others. These important risk factors are: gender, age, personal history of breast cancer, family history of cancer, high breast tissue density, breast hyperplasia, long term estrogen exposure, menopausal hormone replacement therapy, not having children or having first child after age 30, exposure to radiation, Ashkenazi Jewish heritage, genetics as well as diet, environment, and smoking. There is no denying the fact that breast cancer is an important women’s health issue for which no amount of research and development can be said to be enough.
Roland Parris Jefferson III is an online researcher based out of Los Angeles, California. For free tips, resources and expert advice on Women’s Health, please visit our Resource.
When your sweetheart’s birthday is just around the corner, you want to make it romantic and memorable. A birthday, like anniversaries, is a good occasion to relive your romance. If you are looking to impress your sweetheart with a romantic and memorable day, but remain clueless on how to plan a romantic birthday, here are some romantic birthday ideas to make the most of your celebration. Your sweetheart will love you all the more.
One of the nicest things someone can do for another person is to show appreciation. The most romantic birthday ideas are ones that offer some sentiment but also communicate a lot of appreciative elements. There are a number of different ways to show that you are thankful that you are involved with such a great person.
A wonderful approach to showing gratitude is to share notes of thoughtfulness or thanks. These romantic birthday ideas do require a lot of in depth thought and some may take a lot of time to produce but I have a trick that you might want to consider after considering the approach.
Write little notes that covey messages that are personal and ones that show gratitude and thoughtfulness on every day, which means 365 (yes, 366 in the case of leap years) times. Each little message is put on a small piece of paper that is folded and placed in a jar. These romantic birthday ideas are to be read each and every day for an entire year.
The person who receives the jar opens one note each morning or each evening throughout the entire year until the next birthday. The romantic birthday ideas are magnificent in that they are received every day for the entire year. This is a great approach to communicating thoughtful gratitude for someone you love dearly.
How about planning a weekend trip to Lake Michigan. If you plan at least a month ahead, you’ll be able to find some pretty competive airfares if you live far away. People do come from all over the world to visit this wonder of nature. Breathtaking views may be found all around the lake. Romantic restaurants abound. This idea is a knockout with anyone’s beloved!
For women, jewelry is always preceived as a gift and rubies, sapphires, emeralds and diamonds always top the list of gifts for wonderfully romantic birthday ideas. Birth stone rings are also nice. Do not be stingy. Purchase the best quality you can afford. Even a one-point diamond in gold earrings will move her to tears. Flowers are a absolute must!
Men are more difficult, but not impossible! There’s theatre, symphonies, ballet and opera if he is into these activities. Some guys who enjoy fishing would consider a day fishing together at the lake to be a very romantic birthday idea. So you just need to zero in on their favorite thing to do if they’re a more rugged kind of guy.
The most important thing to remember is to choose gifts and activities that show thoughtfulness on your part, so they know you really care.
Leng Chun Hung writes essential and practical tips for people struggling to find partners. Click here to found out more . Find out more
If you are looking to lose weight, like a lot of people today are, you might want to consider some of the remedies that can be found naturally in the world today. Many times people try to use chemicals and other drugs to lose weight, but there are many other things that you could consider.
These things can include a great work out routine to start with, and natural products that you can find which will increase your metabolism. One of the things that you can do is to try to use green tea to lose weight. This might sound like something that you shouldn’t take seriously, but actually, using green tea to lose weight is something that a lot of people have had a great deal of success with, for many reasons.
How Does It Work?
First of all, using green tea to lose weight is great because you are using something that is naturally occurring instead of using something that has been processed or a chemical that has been developed in a lab to try to allow you to lose weight. The naturally occurring ingredients in green tea will boost your immune system, as well as boost your metabolism. When both your immune system and your metabolism are stronger, you will find that it is much easier for you to lose weight completely naturally.
Raising your metabolism is the best part about using green tea to lose weight. This means that you will have more energy, first of all, which is going to allow you to move more and to do more during the day. This is a great way to lose weight because when you are constantly on the go, you will find that you are dropping pounds even just by being active. Being active is one of the best ways to lose weight.
Through using green tea to lose weight, your metabolism goes up, so along with having more energy during the day, your body is actually going to be able to take the food that you eat and change it into energy before it can become fat. This is the best way to use green tea to lose weight, and it is going to benefit you because along with the increase in your metabolism.
There are many more healthy things about green tea that are going to work together to make your body healthier over all. Using green tea to lose weight is a great way to be healthy too!
Ann Marier writes informative articles on providing helpful tips and advice. Her latest articles about the benefits of green tea including to fight lymphocytic leukemia
A fitness bootcamp can be the most convenient way to get the good physique that you have always desired. A fitness boot camp includes collection of outdoor exercises, so joining these camps are more likely to get the desired results as they are designed for your specific needs followed by expert advice.
It is the best way to stay fit & healthy. The types of bootcamps range from the camps offering weight loss solution to the camps that are focused on giving you physique perfect for sports. There are different combinations included to make a boot camp more useful for you like they may include Yoga and meditative exercises as well to take care of your mind and body at the same time.
However there are certain aspects that should be taken into consideration before joining a boot camp session, like people with specific physical mental disorders should always be careful while joining these camps they may not be helpful for them but carry the risk of intensifying there existing problem or create other physical problems for them. The following points should be taken into consideration before joining:
?The objective should be clear, for what purpose you want to join it, like general fitness, or modeling, or sports.
?One should find out the various exercises and programs that a particular fitness boot camp includes, and what all are the combinations available.
?One should counsel with the fitness expert and let him know for any specific disease or disorder, if you have, to avoid the risk.
?And of course to what extent your specific objectives are achieved will depend on the quality of the sessions, so make sure that you join a properly certified camp and get trained under a well trained staff to help you out.
The benefits of joining a good boot camp class include:
1)Good health 2)A disciplined life 3)A perfect stress buster
Over the years Fitness boot camps have taken a preference for people who prefer low cost and efficient workouts. The duration of these classes is generally between 4-8 weeks where the individual is exposed to various exercises. Joining a fitness boot camp is a wise decision that will help you burn calories and get good physique and body posture. These camps can be helpful for anyone from a regular 10 to 6 employee for general fitness or a prospective bride. The exercises covered in various camps can be different for different purposes but the all serve some common purposes as well like everyone who joins these classes feels rejuvenated and relaxed. No matter how stressful the day has been or going to be these sessions give you energy to start fresh and stay relaxed.
And it is also observed that people with regular exercise schedule are more productive in their work life and happy in their personal life. Targeted camps like these focus on giving you most suitable workout and exercises, to give you the best outcome for your time and effort you spend.
Also the sessions like these increase your social circle of like-minded people giving you good opportunity to network and learn from people with different attitudes, backgrounds and experience.
So this can actually be a life transforming experience and also a change from your regular schedule and at times an adventurous and spiritual experience as well. You get to understand your body, your strengths, and your weaknesses and learn to stretch yourself and to get yourself out of your comfort zone. It deserves a fair try to explore the world beyond your regular knowledge. So Stay Happy! Stay Healthy! Stay Relaxed!
Dan Clay is the owner of Dangerously Fit Boot Camp. If you would like to book a free 2 week trial to his or would like to try then visit .Article Source: