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Sloan argues that a fundamental transformation of our ideas about
knowing, our selves, and our world is not only possible, but
necessary. The key to this transformation lies in an understanding
of insight-imagination--the involvement of the thinking, feeling,
willing, valuing person in knowing. The possibility and mode of
effecting this transformation is the subject of
Insight-Imagination. Sloan examines alternative and potentially
more constructive intellectual approaches as developed in the
radical humanities and the world's great religious traditions. The
author explores the role of education in the transformation of
consciousness and the effect of this transformation on education.
As human beings, what is our true relation to the animals on earth?
What is our responsibility to our fellow creatures? Douglas Sloan
explores these and other questions in this important book on the
human animal connection. His explorations are based on personal
experience and wide-ranging research into the work of Rudolf
Steiner and others, including scientist students of the inner life
of animals and committed defenders of animal wellbeing. Rudolf
Steiner describes how from the beginning of creation humans and
animals have been united in deep kinship. A loss of the sense of
this human animal connection has resulted in an immense animal
suffering the world over. Many questions arise: are animals
conscious? Do they have a spiritual reality, souls and selves? Do
they have emotional empathy, language and memory? Are we justified
in eating them, hunting them, experimenting on them? This book
argues that we must start to relate to animals in a completely new
way -- a relationship that understands and respects animals' inner
spiritual being, and one that requires a deep grasp of our own
spiritual being in relation to theirs and offers help to do so,
both in concept and in everyday action.
Insight-imagination is an important contribution to emerging
postmodern understandings of science and epistemology. Sloan argues
that the modem 'technicist' worldview is responsible for the
ecological devastation and pervasive spiritual alienation
threatening humanity in our age. He explains in clear,
non-technical language how the ideas of physicist David Bohm,
philosophers Michael Polanyi and Owen Barfield, and other holistic
thinkers portray a way of knowing that engages the whole person in
a deeply meaningful relationship with the world.
In this book, Douglas Sloan explores the impact that the Protestant
theological renaissance had on American colleges and universities.
In particular, Sloan focuses on the church's most significant claim
to have a continuing voice in higher education: its particular
ability to demonstrate a connection between faith and the dominant
modern conceptions of knowledge. Sloan looks at the ways the
mainline Protestant churches did, and did not, deal effectively
with this faith-knowledge situation and the subsequent cessation of
the church's large-scale engagement with American higher education.
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