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First published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
First published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
Originally published in 1961. This book is a study of some important ways of knowledge and experience and of the symbols through which they become articulate. Both 'knowledge' and 'experience' are interpreted in wide senses which are sanctioned by common use - though not always by the usage of philosophers and scientists. The four main fields considered are: the arts, religion, moral knowledge, and our knowledge of one another. These fields, though distinguishable, are nevertheless found to be interrelated in subtle and interesting ways, and it is contended that increase of 'wisdom', or 'educated understanding', can be achieved only through acceptance and assimilation of all their many-sided disciplines into personal insight. The book deals in a new way with questions of perennial interest which, because they are fundamental, are difficult. Nevertheless, the writing is lucid and untechnical and addressed to a wide range of readers.
Originally published in 1961. This book is a study of some important ways of knowledge and experience and of the symbols through which they become articulate. Both 'knowledge' and 'experience' are interpreted in wide senses which are sanctioned by common use - though not always by the usage of philosophers and scientists. The four main fields considered are: the arts, religion, moral knowledge, and our knowledge of one another. These fields, though distinguishable, are nevertheless found to be interrelated in subtle and interesting ways, and it is contended that increase of 'wisdom', or 'educated understanding', can be achieved only through acceptance and assimilation of all their many-sided disciplines into personal insight. The book deals in a new way with questions of perennial interest which, because they are fundamental, are difficult. Nevertheless, the writing is lucid and untechnical and addressed to a wide range of readers.
Reid's memoir covers life in a Scottish manse in the late nineteenth century, his schooling at the Leys in Cambridge before the first world war, and philosophical life in the inter-war period--with sketches of leading figures from Russell (whom he disliked) to Wittgenstein, Moore and Whitehead. And his memoir has a cast of ancillary characters from Harold Laski (the political theorist) to A.S. Neill (the educationalist) and Alfred Zimmern (one of the founders of UNESCO), not to mention a number of leading figures in the religious debates of the period. Louis Arnaud Reid was an influential writer on aesthetics in the middle part of the twentieth century, and later held the foundation chair in the philosophy of education at the University of London's Institute of Education.
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