A Robert Spaemann Reader
Philosophical Essays on Nature, God, and the Human Person
Jeanne Heffernan Schindler editor DC Schindler editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:3rd Sep '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The German philosopher Robert Spaemann is one of the most important living thinkers in Europe today. This volume presents a selection of essays that span his career, from his first published academic essay on the origin of sociology (1953) to his more recent work in anthropology and the philosophy of religion. Spaemann is best known for his work on topical questions in ethics, politics, and education, but the light he casts on these questions derives from his more fundamental studies in metaphysics, the philosophy of nature, anthropology, and the philosophy of religion. At the core of the essays contained in this book is the concept of nature and the notion of the human person. Both are best understood, according to Spaemann, in light of the metaphysics and anthropology found in the classical and Christian tradition, which provides an account of the intelligibility and integrity of things and beings in the world that safeguards their value against the modern threat of reductionism and fragmentation. A Robert Spaemann Reader shows that Spaemann's profound intellectual formation in this tradition yields penetrating insights into a wide range of subjects, including God, education, art, human action, freedom, evolution, politics, and human dignity.
Spaemann tends, admittedly, to write in a more exploratory, historicizing and dialectical way than is the norm in Anglophone philosophy. But this style masks, I believe, a highly integrated and rigorous vision-a vision well conveyed by this engrossing, erudite and long-overdue volume. * Tom P S Angier, Philosophical Quarterly *
ISBN: 9780199688050
Dimensions: 241mm x 164mm x 21mm
Weight: 544g
250 pages