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ISBN 978-1-929490-35-6
Hardcover
October 14, 2008
576 pages
6 x 9 1/4"
$29.95
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Worldly Wisdom
Great Books and the Meanings of Life
by James Sloan Allen
The author engagingly explores
some fifty classic works of philosophy, social thought, and literature (mainly
but not exclusively from the West) to elucidate their contents and draw out
ideas valuable for understanding human life in this world and for living that
life well. Worldly Wisdom has a distinctly humanistic slant, with
a suggestion of a thinker's self-help book.
As Allen writes: "You don't have to be a philosopher to think
about the meaning of life. Everyone does it. Sometimes we think about the
meaning of life itself—where it came from, where it is going, what is its
purpose, and so on. But more often we think about the many smaller meanings
of our lives as we live from day to day. . . . These ideas may not be
altogether conscious. And most probably go unstated. But we cannot live without
them. . . . There would not be any classic writings, or Great Books, of world
civilization without these ideas either. . . . In one way or another, these
writings all deal with how we find meaning in our lives—or how we give
meanings to our lives. Classic authors just differ from other people by
having more elaborate ideas on this subject, and by articulating their ideas
more memorably. This is how classic writings give us what I will call 'good
ideas,' and 'useful humanism,' and 'worldly wisdom.' "
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A cultural historian, essayist, and critic,
James Sloan Allen received his doctorate from Columbia
University. He has taught at Columbia, Haverford College, the
New School, and the Juilliard School, where he was provost and dean. He also is the author of The Romance of Commerce and Culture:
Capitalism, Modernism, and the Chicago-Aspen Crusade for Cultural Reform.
For several years he has been teaching a Great Books class for adults in New
York City. He
and his wife share residences between Honolulu and Philadelphia. |
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