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Visionary Materialism in the Early Works of William Blake: by Matthew J. A. Green (auth.)

By Matthew J. A. Green (auth.)

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Additional info for Visionary Materialism in the Early Works of William Blake: The Intersection of Enthusiasm and Empiricism

Example text

Moreover, it involves explaining mental processes according to mechanical principles, mapping the mind onto the operations of the Newtonian universe. To this extent, Locke's punctual self operates as a precursor to the sorts of physiologically grounded psychology practised by later thinkers such as Hartley and Priestley. However, this line of inheritance cannot be translated into proof of Locke's own materialism. Despite the fact that his reification of the mind functions as a precursor for later materialistic models, Locke represents the punctual self as completely divorced from material existence.

J (Urizen, 4:24-6; E72) Again we find the connection between withdrawal and 'dark contemplation' together with an emphasis on 'metals'. The connection here is not such as to indicate a direct link between Urizen and Steelyard, which seems unlikely given that the latter is widely held to represent Blake's friend John Flaxman. However, while Urizen does not develop out of Steelyard's character, the two do seem to share some of the same negative characteristics. Not only is Mr Steelyard a 'law giver' and a 'Saint', but in his tirade against Mrs Gittipin he praises the deference of boys as opposed to the 'tongue' of girls: A girl has always more tongue than a boy I have seen a little brat no higher than a nettle & she had as much tongue as a city clark but a boy would be such a fool not have any thing to say and if any body askd him a question he would put his head into a hole & hide it.

59-60; E457). J (Urizen, 4:24-6; E72) Again we find the connection between withdrawal and 'dark contemplation' together with an emphasis on 'metals'. The connection here is not such as to indicate a direct link between Urizen and Steelyard, which seems unlikely given that the latter is widely held to represent Blake's friend John Flaxman. However, while Urizen does not develop out of Steelyard's character, the two do seem to share some of the same negative characteristics. Not only is Mr Steelyard a 'law giver' and a 'Saint', but in his tirade against Mrs Gittipin he praises the deference of boys as opposed to the 'tongue' of girls: A girl has always more tongue than a boy I have seen a little brat no higher than a nettle & she had as much tongue as a city clark but a boy would be such a fool not have any thing to say and if any body askd him a question he would put his head into a hole & hide it.

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