The Humane Perspective is a welcome call to dare to think-in all of its varied meanings.

Deborah Casewell, Ratio Journal

These essays, along with his broader work on humane philosophy, are a singular service to contemporary anglophone philosophy and its future.

Zachary Mabee, Philosophy in Review

The book brings together fourteen essays from the work of John Cottingham on moral philosophy and the philosophy of religion spanning the past fifteen years. The papers are closely related in so far as they all deal with the perennial moral and spiritual challenges of human existence, and the search for meaning and value in human life. As well as being thematically linked, they also share a common style and methodology, illustrating the distinctive goal that has increasingly informed the author's work in recent years, that of promoting a more 'humane' conception of philosophizing. While in no way discarding the technical tools of the professional philosopher such as abstract argumentation and analysis, whose value and importance are unquestionable, this approach is notable for drawing on the full range of resources available to the human mind, including those that depend on literary, artistic, poetic, imaginative, aesthetic, and emotional modes of awareness. In contrast to the model of the philosopher as a kind of detached scrutineer, the essays exemplify the belief that there is a distinctive and valuable kind of philosophical understanding that requires a more involved and engaged stance. The philosophical questions dealt in the volume all fall broadly within the familiar domains of moral philosophy and the philosophy of religion, but the reflections offered on these areas of human thought and practice always aim to be sensitive to how morality and religion actually operate in the lives of the human beings involved.
Les mer
This collection brings together some of the most important papers in moral philosophy and the philosophy of religion of an author who has been a standard-bearer for a distinctive and original philosophical approach, shedding fresh light on many of the key issues in moral philosophy and philosophy of religion.
Les mer
Preface and Acknowledgements Part One: Manifesto and Method 1: The Humane Perspective Appendix to Chapter 1: Conspectus of the Volume 2: What is Humane Philosophy and Why it is At Risk? Part Two: Morality and Meaning 3: Integrity and Fragmentation 4: Happiness, Temporality, and Meaning 5: Philosophy, the Good Life, and Spirituality 6: Conversion, Self-discovery, and Moral Change Part Three: Science and its Limits 7: Confronting the Cosmos: Scientific Rationality and Human Understanding 8: Transcending Science: Humane Models of Religious Understanding 9: Brain Laterality and Religious Awareness 10: Which Naturalism? Part Four: Reaching for the Transcendent 11: Religion and the Mystery of Existence 12: From Desire to Encounter: the Human Quest for the Infinite 13: The Meaning of Life and Transcendence 14: Engagement, Immersion, and Enactment: the Role of Spiritual Praxis in Religious Belief Bibliography Index
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John Cottingham is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Reading University, where he was Head of Department and Chair of Graduate Studies. He has served as Chairman of the British Society for the History of Philosophy, as President of the British Society for Philosophy of Religion, and as editor of the journal Ratio. He has published fifteen books as sole author, plus seventeen editions, translations, and edited collections, and over 150 articles. His research in moral philosophy and philosophy of religion focuses on the meaning of life and the relation between religious belief and practice. He is a leading authority on the philosophy of Descartes.
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Collects fourteen of the author's most important essays, divided into four key areas: manifesto and method; morality and meaning; science and its limits; and reaching for the transcendent. Includes an introductory chapter specially written for the volume, that presents a manifesto for the 'humane' approach to philosophy, setting out its main elements and explaining its advantages. Tackles in a clear and accessible way central questions about the human quest for meaning and value and the nature of the religious framework for interpreting that quest.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198918912
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Oxford University Press
Vekt
516 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
160 mm
Dybde
17 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
256

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

John Cottingham is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Reading University, where he was Head of Department and Chair of Graduate Studies. He has served as Chairman of the British Society for the History of Philosophy, as President of the British Society for Philosophy of Religion, and as editor of the journal Ratio. He has published fifteen books as sole author, plus seventeen editions, translations, and edited collections, and over 150 articles. His research in moral philosophy and philosophy of religion focuses on the meaning of life and the relation between religious belief and practice. He is a leading authority on the philosophy of Descartes.