Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Influence of Thomas Traherne on the Philosophy of Herbert Read

View through CrossRef
The article examines the influence of the 17th-century religious thinker and poet Thomas Traherne on the philosophy of Herbert Read. The focus is on one of Tra­herne’s works, Centuries of Meditations (1674, published 1908), since it had the greatest impact on Read. The author of the article identifies two main vectors of this influence: the sense of glory, which became Read’s intellectual and moral guide, and childhood experience, referring to genuine reality. Traherne’s two most important intuitions – infantile innocence, endowed with special knowl­edge-vision (embodied in the image of the “Infant-Ey”), and the sense of glory as the main principle of his rational mysticism – become the connecting thread between Traherne’s work and Read’s philosophy. Already in Read's first autobi­ography of 1933, one of his central concepts appears – “innocent eye” – which is comparable to Traherne’s concept of “Infant-Ey”. Read calls the experience of childhood the only real experience, and all subsequent, adult life – an echo of that life with innocent sensitivity. This is consonant with Traherne’s ideas that it is the infant state that is related to the transcendent and universal. It is impor­tant to note that Traherne emphasizes not only the innocence and purity inherent in a small child, but also the special knowledge that is revealed to him. This un­derstanding is also characteristic of Read’s philosophy. Along with the concept of “innocent eye”, the concept of the sense of glory (Read interprets it as the de­light of involvement in the beauty and mystery of the universe) becomes funda­mental in the philosophy of Herbert Read.
Institute of Philosophy, Russian Academy of Sciences
Title: The Influence of Thomas Traherne on the Philosophy of Herbert Read
Description:
The article examines the influence of the 17th-century religious thinker and poet Thomas Traherne on the philosophy of Herbert Read.
The focus is on one of Tra­herne’s works, Centuries of Meditations (1674, published 1908), since it had the greatest impact on Read.
The author of the article identifies two main vectors of this influence: the sense of glory, which became Read’s intellectual and moral guide, and childhood experience, referring to genuine reality.
Traherne’s two most important intuitions – infantile innocence, endowed with special knowl­edge-vision (embodied in the image of the “Infant-Ey”), and the sense of glory as the main principle of his rational mysticism – become the connecting thread between Traherne’s work and Read’s philosophy.
Already in Read's first autobi­ography of 1933, one of his central concepts appears – “innocent eye” – which is comparable to Traherne’s concept of “Infant-Ey”.
Read calls the experience of childhood the only real experience, and all subsequent, adult life – an echo of that life with innocent sensitivity.
This is consonant with Traherne’s ideas that it is the infant state that is related to the transcendent and universal.
It is impor­tant to note that Traherne emphasizes not only the innocence and purity inherent in a small child, but also the special knowledge that is revealed to him.
This un­derstanding is also characteristic of Read’s philosophy.
Along with the concept of “innocent eye”, the concept of the sense of glory (Read interprets it as the de­light of involvement in the beauty and mystery of the universe) becomes funda­mental in the philosophy of Herbert Read.

Related Results

What is Analytic Philosophy
What is Analytic Philosophy
Special Issue: What is Analytic PhilosophyReferencesHaaparantaG. P. Baker and P. M. S. Hacker. Frege: Logical Excavations. Oxford, Blackwell, 1984.M. Dummett. The Interpretation of...
Escaping the Shadow
Escaping the Shadow
Photo by Karl Raymund Catabas on Unsplash The interests of patients at most levels of policymaking are represented by a disconnected patchwork of groups … “After Buddha was dead, ...
Artificial Intelligence and Engineering: Philosophical and Scientific Perspectives in the New Era
Artificial Intelligence and Engineering: Philosophical and Scientific Perspectives in the New Era
In this work, a general definition, meaning, and importance of engineering are expressed generally, and the main branches of engineering are briefly discussed. The concept of techn...
Natural philosophy, medieval
Natural philosophy, medieval
Medieval Latin natural philosophy falls into two main periods, before the rise of the universities (mainly in the twelfth century, when works were produced in connection with arist...
On Becoming Anglican: Emerging Anglican Thought in the Works of Thomas Traherne
On Becoming Anglican: Emerging Anglican Thought in the Works of Thomas Traherne
AbstractThe writings of Thomas Traherne (1637–74) are explored as a source of and model for the idea of Anglicanism. In his concern for a middle way between Roman Catholicism and r...
Philosophy of Russia in China (2007–2022)
Philosophy of Russia in China (2007–2022)
The article provides an overview of the Russian philosophy studies in China over the past 16 years. In addition to the Russian religious philosophy and Marx­ist philosophy that tra...
Errata
Errata
P. 1. 32, 10, for 100: 180,46, read , 100 : 80, 46. 35, 12, note , for ce dernier au...
Errata
Errata
Page 7/2, line 20, for parts , read part. Page 73, line 3, for between , read below. Page 98, line 4 from bottom, dele the comma aft...

Back to Top