A Parliament of Souls
Limits and Renewals 2
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:4th Oct '90
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Limits and Renewals is a trilogy based on the Stanton Lectures in the Philosophy of Religion delivered at the University of Cambridge in 1986-8. In this, the second volume, Professor Clark attempts to restate a traditional philosophy of mind, drawing upon philosophical and poetic resources that are often neglected in modern and post-modern thought, and emphasizing the moral and political implications of differing `philosophies of mind and value'. He presents a study of the soul as it has traditionally been conceived and as it can be understood through imaginative attention to our changing moods, beliefs, and fears. He argues that without that traditional concept we have little reason to believe that liberal values (rational thought and individual autonomy) are either possible or desirable. Particular topics discussed include the political context of identity claims, the uses of introspection, free will, `the beast within' as alien monster or necessary angel, the possibility of knowledge and the dangers of curiosity, the fear of death, the philoprogenitive gene, the political roots of the distinction between facts and values, and the body-mind problem. Notable features of the book are the author's citation of writers other than the conventionally philosophical (Augustine, Hopkins, Stapledon, and Weil), and the emphasis that he gives to traditions other than the self-consciously secular.
'highly literate and addressed to the educated in the Anglo-American culture ... Professor Clark is an eloquent enemy of the kind of philosophy that envies science and dismisses religion as a mere matter of feelings producing illusions.' David L. Edwards, Church Times
`a finely crafted set of essays ... Clark's writing is a profound challenge to modern philosophy's conventional canons' Metaphysics
`A Parliament of Souls is a rich and important book. It is important because it tackles, with considerable force, basic anthropological and cosmological assumptions that tacitly inform moral views which are widely held in Western culture, are subversive of genuinely liberal values, and must be countered if Christian ethics is going to fall on anything but deaf ears. It is a rich book, partly because of the range of material from which Professor Clark characteristically draws.' Studies in Christian Ethics
ISBN: 9780198242369
Dimensions: 223mm x 145mm x 18mm
Weight: 407g
208 pages