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S. Clucas (1991)
Poetic atomism in seventeenth-century England: Henry More, Thomas Traherne and scientific imagination‘Renaissance Studies, 5
J. Bland (2010)
The Generation of Edward Hyde
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Henry More, 1614-1687
R. Ward, S. Hutton, C. Courtney, M. Courtney, R. Crocker, A. Hall (2000)
The life of Henry More
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Robert Southey, S. Coleridge (1969)
Omniana, or Horae otiosiores
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Galileo, Ficino, and Henry More's PsychathanasiaJournal of the History of Ideas, 29
J. Hoyles (1971)
The Waning of the Renaissance 1640–1740
J. Henry (1986)
A Cambridge Platonist's Materialism: Henry More and the Concept of SoulJournal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 49
D. Fouke (1997)
The Enthusiastical Concerns of Dr. Henry More: Religious Meaning and the Psychology of Delusion
A. Akasoy, Guido Giglioni (2013)
Renaissance Averroism and Its Aftermath: Arabic Philosophy in Early Modern Europe
S. Hutton (2013)
The Cambridge Platonists and Averroes
A. Jacob (1985)
Henry More's Psychodia Platonica and its Relationship to Marsilio Ficino's Theologia PlatonicaJournal of the History of Ideas, 46
R. Ward, S. Hutton (2012)
The Life of Henry More: Parts 1 And 2
Valery Rees (2009)
Ficinian Ideas in the Poetry of Edmund SpenserSpenser Studies, 24
Igor Agostini (2013)
Leech, David, The Hammer of the Cartesians. Henry More’s Philosophy of Spirit and the origins of modern Atheism, Leuven-Paris-Walpole, MA, Peeters, 2013.
J. Bland (2010)
The Generation of Edward Hyde: The Animal within, from Plato to Darwin to Robert Louis Stevenson
Guido Giglioni (2011)
Coping with Inner and Outer Demons: Marsilio Ficino’s Theory of the Imagination
M. Nicolson (1922)
More's PsychozoiaModern Language Notes, 37
David Leech (2011)
Ficinian Influence On Henry More’s Arguments For The Soul’s Immortality
[In the collection of poems entitled Psychodia Platonica (‘The Platonic Song of the Soul’, 1642; 1647), and in particular in the poem entitled Psychozoia (‘The Life of the Soul’), Henry More laid the groundwork for his life-long inquiry into the nature of the human self. He provided a poetic commentary of Plotinus’s Enneads in which three ontological dimensions – the life of nature, animal perception and the intellect – created an allegorical background against which one could articulate a systematic analysis of the individual human self in its relationships with God and created reality. Psychozoia ended with a conversion, in which the soul of a Platonic pilgrim (Mnemon) was released from its condition of ‘autaesthesia’ (the kind of self-consciousness that fails to disengage from selfishness) so that it was finally able to reach a state of ‘anautoaesthesia’ (the awareness that true happiness can only lie in surrendering one’s will to the One, i.e., God). Significantly, More characterized this crucial shift from self-perception to the annihilation of the individual self as a motion towards ‘self-senslessnesse’ and ‘self-deadnesse’. Regardless of its aesthetic merits, More’s poem dramatizes key philosophical notions, while bringing to the fore the prodigious effervescence of his linguistic skills. In this sense, Psychozoia remains an important document to understand the evolution of More’s thought.]
Published: Jan 2, 2020
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