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The inevitability and finality of death have prompted some of the
world's most poignant and memorable literature, from the Epic of
Gilgamesh of ancient Babylon to the works of contemporary poets and
novelists. The conviction that death means everlasting extinction,
with no possibility of an afterlife, is described by Peter Heinegg
as 'mortalism'. In this unique anthology, he has collected more
than fifty selections of poetry and prose that reflect this view.
In perusing this intriguing volume, the reader will find that
mortalism was the viewpoint shared by many of the most profound and
creative minds in history.
Bitter Scrolls is a broad survey of our "sacred texts," both Holy
Writ (Hebrew Bible, New Testament, Qur'an) and secular
masterpieces, from the Epic of Gilgamesh to the work of William
Butler Yeats and D.H. Lawrence, whose canonical status often
exempts them from the sort of hardnosed, commonsense criticism that
we uniformly apply to contemporary literature and art. A frank look
at this literature reveals a stunning combination of bias and
blindness toward women. Acknowledging this would, in any case, be
painful and depressing; but confronting it in some of our greatest
minds-Homer, Aeschylus, Virgil, Boccaccio, Rabelais, Shakespeare,
Milton, Pope, Wordsworth, and so on-must inevitably give rise to
profound, if no longer unusual, culture shock. With few exceptions,
we can no more remake the canon than we can redesign our family
tree, but we need to come to terms with the toxic contents of our
art.
Here is a book to encourage Catholics who feel that the Church
suffers from a certain style of centralism and legalism from the
Church of Rome. Pointing out that too many people in the Roman
Curia practice a mentality that is neither according to Vatican II
nor the Gospel, the author encourages us to question such mentality
until a true and thorough renewal happens.
A spiritual portrait of St. Gerard drawn from his writings and the
lived expressions of his spirituality. The passsion behind Gerard's
love for God is shared with simplicity and candor. This book will
be of interest even to those already familiar with St. Gerard.
This inspiring book, reissued in a new translation for the modern
reader, is considered to be Saint Alphonsus Liguori's best
devotional work. Divided into seventeen small chapters, each
preceded by prayers and intercessions, it offers practical
prescriptions for living a holy life.
In today's world, we are witnessing both the spread of a hopeful
secular humanism and the persistence of cultural traditions that
mindlessly glorify humans and are paving the path to environmental
collapse. Peter Heinegg addresses how we are now on a collision
course heading toward ecological catastrophe-the one solution to
this being a true "agonizing reappraisal" of who we are and how we
do things. In Dim and Dimmer, Peter Heinegg tackles the question:
"Can the 'New Enlightenment' already dawning save the day?"
Even as the number of unbelievers continues to rise, religion in
America still gets unwarrantably good press. The tenets and
teachings, however nonsensical, of each and every "community of
faith" may not be attacked. Secular academics who would never be
caught in a synagogue, church, or mosque seldom fail to manifest
politically correct reverence for the creeds, codes, and cults of
the religious. Unfortunately, the central religious concept of the
"sacred" proves, upon closer inspection, to be fictitious. The
understandably popular "holy" times, places, deities, peoples,
books, laws, and scenarios for the afterlife are fantasies
projected into everyday experience by human beings trapped in time
and unwilling to accept their own transiency and long-term
insignificance. This book surveys the various traditional
"fortresses" of the sacred and finds them all empty and
indefensible.
"Abrahamic religion" has long been a buzzword in ecumenical
discourse. It is the notion that Judaism, Christianity, and Islam,
despite their profound differences, are united in their reverence
for Abraham-not just as the progenitor of Israel, but as a
universal father in the faith. Abraham's Ashes offers a forceful
critique of the biblical and Qur'anic views of Abraham, showing how
at the heart of all prophetic religions lies an untenable myth of
suprarational magical thinking about "revelation." This myth
involves communiques to a privileged male from a mysterious
patriarchal God who demands, and in the case of Jesus, actually
receives the tribute of human sacrifice. This cruel story proves to
be an apt introduction to the bizarre, contradictory, and
oppressive fantasy known as monotheism.
Crazy Culture is a series of broadsides against many widely held
misconceptions in both academe and the general public, who is often
seen clustering under the politically correct banner of
multiculturalism. Heinegg confronts the notion that all
culture-especially that of non-westerners and oppressed
minorities-is somehow good in itself and that outsiders have no
right to criticize or condemn any cultures except their own. He
also challenges the view that the term "culture" applies primarily
to a handful of masterpieces, as opposed to the great bulk of
artistic products and folkways, and that the proper attitude toward
the vast spectrum of culture, past and present, is sentimental
admiration. Surveying both the history and ideology of cultural
realms such as our treatment of animals, religion, sexual norms,
politics, economics, urban life, the arts, and athletics, Heinegg
deftly identifies and explains ubiquitous traces of cultural sins
by humanity.
God: An Obituary is a satirical-analytical view of monotheism in
our time. Building on the work of both the great traditional
unbelievers-Hume, Mill, Nietzsche, and Freud, among others-and
contemporary critics-Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Ibn Warraq,
etc.-Heinegg exposes the intellectual and moral bankruptcy of
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. In a series of thematic
reflections, the author remarks on the absurdity of continuing to
worship a being whose existence is attested to almost exclusively
by the ravings of hallucinatory "prophets," and whose track record
was and is marked by violence, oppression, and nonsense. Heinegg
argues that the best way to dispose of God once and for all is to
subject "him" -and "his" devotees-to a steady enfilade of pointed
rational mockery.
That Does It: Desperate Reflections on American Culture is an
enfilade of critical attacks on the absurdities, stupidities, and
crimes of present-day American life. It's targets are
dumb-but-dangerous politicians, infantile-but-invasive preachers,
saccharine-but-poisonous cliches, mindless entertainment, spineless
media, and a national lifestyle marked by manic consumption and
extravagant wastefulness, narcissistic complacency,
pseudo-patriotism, and the idiotic worship of more idols than you
could throw a verbal IED at. The book provides a handy checklist of
ills, from the life threatening to the merely obnoxious, afflicting
the American psyche and body politic, which it then proceeds to
submerge in satirical acid. This probably doomed assault on
American cluelessness is recommended to all readers who have
recently found themselves snorting indignantly at the nonsense
dripping out of TV sets, car radios, talk shows, cineplexes, and
White House news briefings.
Like war and politics, philosophy is too important to be left to
professionals. Oh Wait-Now I Get It illustrates this basic truth by
tackling a broad spectrum of issues, which include: history,
religion, government, sex, family, and death. In fact, the entire
contemporary cultural scene from the perspective of a thoughtful
amateur philosopher is brought forth within this book. Recalling
Neitzsche's dictum that all philosophy is also confession,
Professor Peter Heinegg begins with some autobiographical pieces on
his background, which include seven years in Jesuit seminaries and
doctoral studies at Harvard. He then offers approximately
three-dozen brief, pointed, and witty essays that focus on
present-day issues, but draw upon a lifetime of reading, teaching,
and writing about the great literary and philosophical classics.
Good God! (And Other Follies) takes a critical and satirical look
at the wave of religiosity now sweeping the country. From
faith-based initiatives to bans on stem cell research, from public
postings of the Ten Commandments to attacks on evolution, American
godliness has apparently never had it so good. Much of this
behavior and even more of the God-talk accompanying it, whether
fueled by passionate faith, cultural resentment, or political
opportunism, is intellectually absurd. This book points out this
absurdity and explores the underlying fallacies, contradictions
and, at times, sheer nonsense that beset not only Christianity, but
Judaism and Islam as well.
Better Than Both: The Case for Pessimism is an experiment in
"popular philosophy." It presents and discusses (literally)
life-and-death issues in non-technical, everyday language. This new
work sees pessimism not as a kind of depressed moodiness or
self-indulgent negativity, but as the inevitable result of any
fair-minded survey of the world we actually live in. It reaches
this conclusion by looking into basic human psychology, the record
of history, the experience of aging and death, the failure of
religion, and many features of both ancient and modern culture.
Acknowledging the truth of pessimism, as opposed to optimistic
self-deception, serves both to inoculate us against the suffering
that is either bound or liable to come our way, and to help us
enjoy the pleasures that life can afford. Realistic pessimism
unlike "silly pessimism," also described here never denies the
deep, intense joys of life, without whose seductive appeal the
human race would long ago have vanished from the planet. It simply
cautions, since probability is the best guide to decision-making,
against basing any belief-system or choosing any course of action
on delusively long odds. The book refers to a broad spectrum of
writers and thinkers, such as Nietzsche, Mark Twain, and King
Solomon for insight."
This warm, richly detailed biography brings the beloved saint alive in all his human and profoundly spiritual dimensions.
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