Creative Intuition in Art and Poetry [Book Review]

Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 7:193-194 (1957)
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Abstract

This 1957 lecture is the tenth in the Eddington Memorial series which “deal with some aspect of contemporary scientific thought considered in its bearing on the philosophy of religion or on ethics.” Poetry would seem to be the outsider here. But Professor Wood shares a contemporary concern over “the growing divergence between the young scientific culture and the traditional literary culture”, and insists that the University must hold to its function of enlarging the intellectual imagination and so must keep poet and scientist on intelligible speaking terms. Commendably enough he himself tries to draw them together under the flag of a particular quotation—Shakespeare’s.

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