ABSTRACT

The origins, nature, function and effects of imagination have engrossed writers, theologians, philosophers and practitioners of the arts across the ages; its influence on painting and music continues to be debated. It has been simultaneously feared as a dangerous, uncontrollable force and revered as the supreme visionary power. Cocking's Imagination is an exploration of the history of imagination from antiquity to the Renaissance. The book opens with a treatment of imagination in the writings of Aristotle and Plato. Developments in the Middle Ages are traced, with particular attention to the parallel tradition in Islamic thought of the period and the book pursues the concept through the theories of Dante and the Neo-platonists to the High Renaissance. The manuscript was left unfinished on Professor Cocking's death in 1986 and has been edited by Penelope Murray, who adds an introductory essay. The book will be of particular value as a background to the explosion of interest in the imagination in the Romantic period.

chapter 1|26 pages

The Greek Rationalists

Plato, Aristotle and the Stoics

chapter 2|22 pages

Imagination begins to be recognized

Literary theorists and Neopythagoreans in the early centuries Ad

chapter 3|20 pages

The Neoplatonists

Imagination as the ‘vehicle of the soul'

chapter 4|21 pages

Neoplatonism in Christian guise

The mystic way as the affirmation and negation of images

chapter 5|11 pages

Holy images

chapter 6|40 pages

Imagination in Islam*

chapter 7|27 pages

The Western Middle Ages

chapter 8|27 pages

Ficino

chapter 10|40 pages

The French Renaissance and after 1

chapter |14 pages

Epilogue

The imagination as messenger: From Plato to Kristeva