Publication history
Coleridge had intended his disciple, Green, to publish the ''Opus Maximum'' after Coleridge's death but Green failed to do this, instead publishing his own work, ''Spiritual Philosophy; Founded on the Teaching of the Late Samuel Taylor Coleridge''. Green's work began by claiming that the distinction between the Reason and the Understanding was merely one of degree--a claim which showed that Green had not understood Coleridge's most fundamental distinction. Green's failure to publish the ''Opus Maximum'' caused some controversy in the 1850s. Green argued that the manuscripts were incomplete and 'scarcely adapted for scientific readers, ... or the requirements of modern science', though Green's decision also prevented Coleridge's followers, immediate and future, from understanding his philosophical system--and the advances Coleridge had made following the failure of the ''The argument
As might be expected of a work by Coleridge, the ''Opus Maximum'' contains a miscellany of contents. As he wrote in a letter in 1818, 'my Thought are like Surinam toads--as they crawl on, little Toads vegetate out from back & side, grow quickly, & draw off the attention from the mother Toad'. Evans argues that the volume's apparently unsystematic form reflects Coleridge's belief that arguments for God cannot be demonstrated using the resources of the Understanding, but must draw their substance from within their readers through the power of the Reason, and that the work is designed rhetorically to achieve this. The argument is broadly neo-platonic. As Carlyle commented sardonically, Coleridge had discovered 'the sublime secret of believing by "the reason" what the "understanding" has been obliged to fling out',. Coleridge argued that the Kantian strictures on metaphysical argument only applied within the realm of the Understanding and did not restrict neo-platonic argument founded in the Reason. His argument can be rendered schematically: #Coleridge argues that 'will must be conceived as anterior to all' (OM 194) since will is the only entity capable of instantiating itself and thus providing the ground of the universe. #The will can only instantiate itself in the form of a person (OM 166, 172, 195). #Personhood is a communal concept: there can be no I without a Thou (OM 194-196). #Since will, when actual, is unified, the I and the Thou must in some sense be the same. Fully actual Selfhood or Personhood can thus only arise within the Trinity, where the Father comes into self-consciousness in His recognition of the Son (OM 194-199). #There is no sense in which the Trinity is riven, like Schelling's 'Absolute' or unconscious God. The Son, within the Trinity, is not Schelling's self-as-object; and Coleridge's system does not share the unstable foundations of Schelling's ''System of Transcendental Idealism'' where the two primary and opposing forces can only come into being in a final synthesis--which is impossible and therefore infinitely deferred. #However, the human will, which is fallen, is internally riven and thus can be derived from Schelling's deduction. #The human will has its origin in the fall of the Satanic or Apostatic will (OM 326). The Apostatic will wills itself as something separate from God. However, will can only be actual if it is realised in the Trinity, so the Apostatic will becomes mere potential, lacking in all actuality. #God offers redemption to the fallen will, in the form of a gift of actuality (OM 316-320). That part of the Apostatic will which accepts this gift comes into being. This is the origin of nature and of human selves. #Human selves thus arise out of an original polarity of potential and actual (OM 227). These are the two forces that Schelling spoke of as lying at the heart of selfhood, but Coleridge gives them a firmer foundation and one which does not contaminate the Godhead with division or infinite failure (OM 317, 322, 326). #Having set Schelling's argument on sounder foundations, Coleridge is free to use Schelling's argument (the transcendental deduction which was missing in the ''Biographia'') to explain the origins of nature and of human selves. See ''The significance of the argument
The argument above supplies the transcendental deduction that was missing from the ''Biographia'', with the deduction of the primary imagination appearing in the ''Logic''. Perkins and Reid argue that the ''Opus Maximum'' could not have been written until Coleridge made the conceptual breakthrough contained in a note presumably intended for Green in September of 1818:It is ever awful to me to reflect on the morning of our first systematic Conversation, when we opened Schelling's Introduction to his Naturphilosophie and looking thro' the first 20 pages obtained a clear conviction, that he had imprisoned his System within a Circle that could never open ....The argument in the ''Opus Maximum'' still formed the basis of Coleridge's thinking until his death in 1834. In April 1830, he said of the distinction between the actual and the potential:
This, this Principle must be studied and studied, till it is completely mastered—… before the other parts of the System can be received with a clear light.''The Notebooks of Samuel Taylor Coleridge'', Vol.5: 6272.His failure to publish thus did not arise from a change of mind, though there is evidence that he continued to refine the argument in the late 1820s, so as to account for the survival of the soul after the death of the body.
References
{{reflist Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2002 books