Milton's Secrecy: And Philosophical HermeneuticsJohn Milton's secrecy, in short, is anti-secrecy. The significance of his (anti)secrecy is that it constitutes an attempt to confront and preclude the very hermeneutic structure - the very discovery-model of knowledge - that we have come to see as normative. |
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Contents
Against Secrecy | 1 |
Expressing the Conscience | 31 |
The Armor of Intention | 57 |
The Armor of Intension | 93 |
Talking and Learning in Paradise | 123 |
Secrecy Again? | 159 |
175 | |
193 | |
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Common terms and phrases
Adam allows already appear argue argument attempt becomes body called Calvin Cambridge claim Comus conscience consistent conversation critical culture deconstruction describes dialogue difference discovery divine effect English example exoteric expression fall final follows function Gadamer God's going hair heart hermeneutic idea indicates intention intentionalism interpretation inwardness Italy James John kind knowledge Lady language least Literary London Lycidas matter meaning method Milton mind moral natural never object objectivism once Paradise performance perhaps Philosophy play political position possibility precisely present produce Protestant question reading reason reference remains Renaissance representation result rhetorical Samson Satan scales secrecy secret seems sense significance simply soul speaking strong Studies suggested talk tells theory things thoughts tradition Truth turn understanding University utterance witness writes York