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Books > Philosophy
This forward-thinking book illustrates the complexities of the
morality of human rights. Emphasising the role of human rights as
the only true global political morality to arise since the Second
World War, chapters explore its role as applied to often
controversial issues, such as capital punishment, the exclusion of
same-sex couples from civil marriage and criminal abortion bans.
Clarifying and cross-examining the morality of human rights,
Michael J. Perry discusses their connection to moral equality and
moral freedom, as well as exploring the significance of
anti-poverty human rights. This illuminating book concludes with an
explanation as to why the morality of human rights is acutely
relevant to challenges faced by humanity in the modern era. In
particular, the challenges of growing economic inequality and
climate change are emphasised as having profound relevance to the
morality of human rights. Interrogating the Morality of Human
Rights will be of great benefit to both undergraduate and graduate
students who are contemplating the idea of human rights and their
morality within their studies. Professors and academics with cause
to study and research human rights would also find it to be of
interest, particularly those in the field of legal scholarship.
Meaning (significance) and nature are this book's principal topics.
They seem an odd couple, like raisins and numbers, though they
elide when meanings of a global sort-ideologies and religions, for
example-promote ontologies that subordinate nature. Setting one
against the other makes reality contentious. It signifies workmates
and a coal face to miners, gluons to physicists, prayer and
redemption to priests. Are there many realities, or many
perspectives on one? The answer I prefer is the comprehensive
naturalism anticipated by Aristotle and Spinoza: "natura naturans,
natura naturata." Nature naturing is an array of mutually
conditioning material processes in spacetime. Each structure or
event-storm clouds forming, nature natured-is self-differentiating,
self-stabilizing, and sometimes self-disassembling; each alters or
transforms a pre-existing state of affairs. This surmise
anticipated discoveries and analyses to which neither thinker had
access, though physics and biology confirm their hypothesis beyond
reasonable doubt. Hence the question this book considers: Is
reality divided:nature vrs. lived experience? Or is experience,
with all its meanings and values, the complex expression of natural
processes?
A deluxe special edition of the ancient classic written by the
Roman Emperor known as "The Philosopher" Meditations is a series of
personal journals written by Marcus Aurelius, Emperor of Rome from
169 to 180 AD. The last of the "Five Good Emperors," he was the
most powerful and influential man in the Western world at the time.
Marcus was one of the leaders of Stoicism, a philosophy of personal
ethics which sought resilience and virtue through personal action
and responsibility. Stoicism, viewed as a foundation of modern
self-help, has inspired many personal development and psychotherapy
approaches through to the present day. Meditations is perhaps the
most important source of our modern understanding of Stoic
philosophy. Its twelve books chronicle different stages of Marcus
Aurelius' life and ideas. Although he ruled during the Pax Romana,
the age of relative peace and stability throughout the empire, his
reign was marked by near-constant military conflict and a
devastating plague which killed upwards of five million people.
Aurelius' writings give modern readers an unprecedented look into
the "spiritual exercises" which helped him through his tumultuous
life and strengthened his patience, empathy, generosity,
self-knowledge and emotional health. The private reflections
recorded in the Meditations were never meant to be published,
rather they were a source for Marcus' own guidance and
self-improvement, and jotted down by campfires or in military tents
on the Roman front. The lessons, insights and perspectives
contained within this remarkable work are just as relevant today as
they were two millennia ago. This volume: Presents the timeless
wisdom of Emperor Marcus Aurelius and his Stoic philosophy, with
new research on his life and times Contains valuable insights on
topics such as resilience, moderation and emotional control
Discusses how to live "in agreement with nature" and abide by
strong ethical principles Part of the bestselling Capstone Classics
Series edited by Tom Butler-Bowdon, this attractive, high-quality
hardcover volume includes: An original Introduction by Marcus
Aurelius authority and Stoicism expert Donald Robertson, author of
How To Think Like A Roman Emperor. A modernised, up to date version
of the classic George Long translation. Meditations: The Philosophy
Classic is a volume which will occupy a prominent place in any
library for years to come.
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Light
(Paperback)
Helen Modet
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R535
Discovery Miles 5 350
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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