Gassendi's Ethics
Freedom in a Mechanistic Universe
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cornell University Press
Published:19th Sep '96
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This is the first book to explore the ethical thought of Pierre Gassendi, the seventeenth-century French priest who rehabilitated Epicurean philosophy in the Western tradition. Lisa T. Sarasohn's discussion of the relationship between Gassendi's philosophy of nature and his ethics discloses the underlying unity of his philosophy and elucidates this critical figure in the intellectual revolution.Sarasohn demonstrates that Gassendi's ethics was an important part of his attempt to Christianize Epicureanism. She shows how Gassendi integrated ideas of human freedom into a neo-Epicurean ethic where pleasure is the highest good, yet maintained a consistent belief in Christian providence. These views challenged what were then the new systems of philosophy, Hobbesian materialism and Cartesian rationalism. Sarasohn places Gassendi in his historical and intellectual context, considering him in relation to contemporary philosophers and within the patronage system that conditioned his own freedom. She investigates the links between his ethical thought and philosophy of science and makes sense of his attacks on astrology. Finally, her work clarifies Pierre Gassendi's considerable influence on seventeenth-century ethical and political philosophy, particularly on the work of John Locke—and thus on the whole English liberal tradition in political philosophy.
Lisa Sarasohn boldly steps out of her usual field in the history of science to make a persuasive plea for Gassendi's importance in the history of moral philosophy.... The book will prove itself to be invaluable as a clear summary and exposition not only of Gassendi's views on ethics but also of the epistemology upon which the moral theory is based.
-- D. George Boyce * British Journal for Eighteenth Century StudiISBN: 9780801429477
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm
Weight: 907g
256 pages