Doubting Conscience: Donne and the Poetry of Moral ArgumentUniversity of Michigan Press, 1975 - 199 pages Considers Donne's "Songs and Sonnets" in light of 16th- and 17th-century casuists. |
Contents
Donne and Casuistry | 1 |
The Dramatic Grounds of Moral Argument | 13 |
Truth and the Speaker | 33 |
Copyright | |
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Other editions - View all
Doubting Conscience: Donne and the Poetry of Moral Argument Dwight Cathcart No preview available - 1975 |
Common terms and phrases
act and end action applicable argument arises articulation ascetic theology bodies bracelet Canonization casuistry casuists clearly concept concerned conflict confronts consequence contradiction defines deny disjunction Donne Donne's poetry Donne's speaker doubting conscience ecstasy employed epistemology Escobar expressive Extasie face fact flea flea's bite forbidding mourning force formulation fornication forty-eight lines important insofar interlocutor Jeremy Taylor Jesuits John Donne kill kind knowledge law governing lovers lyric ment merely metaphor method minor premise moral theologians moral truth murder nature occasion one's opinion paradox particular perception of truth Perkins persons poem poet posed Probabiliorism probabilism probability of truth proper act question Ramistic reader reason recognizes response second stanza seems sense separate situation skepticism Songs and Sonets soules language speak speaker argues speaker asserts speaker knows speaker says statement suggest syllogism theology things thou tion true understanding Valediction virtue weeping William Ames William Perkins woman