How do we, as individuals, accommodate a pessimistic and misanthropic
view of the world? If the human condition is impossible to ameliorate,
then how should we live? How do we bring about the wellbeing and
happiness we seek in the face of such overwhelming evidence that our
condition is and will remain very bad indeed and owes significantly to
our own entrenched failings? In this thoughtful and insightful book
the philosopher David E. Cooper explores this fundamental dilemma. He
rejects an activist commitment to radical improvement of the human
condition, and instead advocates quietism as a way to live as well and
as happily as we can. This quietist position, which draws on Buddhist
and Daoist ideas as well as those from western philosophy, is
supplemented by finding refuge from the everyday human world in a
"place" both "other" and "better" than that world. Such places of
refuge, Cooper argues, are best found in natural environments. Refuge
in nature, whether a garden or a wilderness, cultivates an attunement
to, or a sense of, the way of things, and thereby invites assurance of
being "in the truth" and the enjoyment that such assurance fosters.
The quietist who finds refuge in nature lives as well as and as
happily as anyone can do who accepts the negative verdict on the human
condition.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781788217729
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter