The Things That Really Matter
Philosophical conversations on the cornerstones of life
Contributor(s)
Hauskeller, Michael (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
While being rooted in the academic discourse, The Things That Really Matter comprehensively explores the most fundamental aspects of human life in an accessible, non-technical language, adding fresh perspectives and new arguments and considerations that are designed to stimulate further debate and, in some cases, a deliberate redirection of research interests in the respective areas. It features a series of conversations about the things in our life that we all, in one way or another, wrestle with if we are at all concerned about what kind of world we live in and what our role in it is: things like birth, age, and death, good and evil, the meaning of life, the nature of the self and the role the body plays for our identity, our gendered existence, love and faith, free will, beauty, and our experience of the sacred. Situating abstract ideas in concrete experience, The Things That Really Matter encourages the reader to participate in an open-ended dialogue involving a variety of thinkers with different backgrounds and orientations. Lively and accessible, it shows thinking as an open-ended process and a collaborative endeavour that benefits from talking to each other rather than against each other, featuring real conversations, where ideas are explored, tested, changed, and occasionally dropped. It is thinking in motion, personal yet universal.
Keywords
philosophy; ethics; morals; values; anthropology; societyDOI
10.14324/111.9781800082175ISBN
9781800082175, 9781800082182, 9781800082199, 9781800082205, 9781800082212, 9781800082175Publisher
UCL PressPublisher website
https://www.uclpress.co.uk/Publication date and place
London, 2022Imprint
UCL PressClassification
Social and political philosophy
Western philosophy from c 1800
Philosophy of mind
Philosophy: aesthetics
Ethics and moral philosophy
Philosophy of religion
Gender studies, gender groups
Sociology: death and dying
Psychology: the self, ego, identity, personality