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This book answers questions about secularization: Does it dissolve
religion, or transform it into faith in a universally valid value?
Is it restricted to the west or can it occur everywhere? Using
ideas of Max Weber, the book conceives secularization as a process
comparable to the rational development of science and production.
What is the value secularization propagates? Sifting historical
texts, Steinvorth argues the value is authenticity, to be
understood as being true to one's talents developed in activities
that are done for their own sake and provide life with meaning, and
as unconditionally commanded. How can a value be unconditionally
demanded? This question leads to an investigation of the self that
combines Kant's ideas on the conditions of the possibility of
experience with modern brain science, and to the metaphysical
deliberation whether to prefer a world with creatures able to do
both good and evil to one without them. It is not enough, however,
to point to facts. We rather need to understand what
secularization, religion and their possible rationality consist in.
Max Weber's sociology of religion has provided us with the
conceptual means to do so, which this book develops. Secularization
is rediscovered as the same progress of rationality in the sphere
of religion that we find in the development of the spheres of
science, art, the economy and politics or public affairs. It proves
to be the perfection rather than the dissolution of religion - a
perfection that consists in recognizing authenticity as the
successor of the absolute of religion.
Transforming Capitalism addresses the challenges to shareholder
capitalism. It explores: fair play in the market place;challenges
on systemic, organizational and individual levels; the need to
refocus our economic system around community and cooperation; the
current challenges and transform capitalism.
In this small book, Ulrich Steinvorth describes the reasons why
analytic philosophy, which started as an anti-metaphysical project,
has become a strong advocate of metaphysics, and why it must become
synthetic, normative, and naturalistic. Steinvorth argues that
self-regulation is the common property of all being, that we can
talk of an increase or escalation of self-regulation in the
evolution of being, and that self-regulation becomes
self-determination in man. Considering objections to this view
related to questions of free will, consciousness, the naturalistic
fallacy, and teleology, he draws on cybernetics, dual process
theory, physical cosmology, and Leibniz's ("demiurgic") idea of
measuring the goodness of a world by the number of possibilities
opened up by the world. To test his approach and show its political
relevance, he applies it to political liberalism.
In this book, Ulrich Steinvorth offers a fresh analysis of
rationality as the core part of Western thinking. Western
rationality includes a critique of tradition and collectivism and a
defence of human rights and individualism, but is impregnated in
all its elements by a conception of the self that was formed by
Locke and utilitarianism. This conception is compatible with
classical physics, but is no help in understanding the facts of
human psychology and history. Steinvorth argues that Descartes
conception of the self offers an alternative. When freed from the
dualism in which Descartes conceived it, it achieves what the
Lockean conception does not. In particular, it allows understanding
the human craving for extraordinariness and the achievements of the
West in science and art as well as its political disasters in the
twentieth century. Moreover, it enables us to understand why
individualism a hallmark of modernity became an ideal that implies
universal rights; how individualism could peak in the ideal of
equal liberty; and why it is now in decline. Most importantly, the
Cartesian concept of the self is shown to offer a way of protecting
modernity against the dangers that it now encounters.
This book explores the morality of pride, a value that has been
condemned through history and is still largely unwelcome in many
societies. The author explores the nature of the self and free
will, and how pride links to technology and rational theology. It
refers to the work of Lionel Trilling, Allan Bloom, Charles Taylor
and Heidegger on authenticity; Jacob Burckhardt, Stephen Toulmin,
Max Weber and Mark Lilla on modernity; Christine Korsgaard on the
self; John Rawls and Ruth Benedict on morality; and the Stoics and
Kant on free will.
Premodern societies believed in something sacred that obliged
unconditionally. Modern societies rely on fallible science. Do they
also need something absolute, a secular sacred? Steinvorth analyzes
the writings of modern philosophers who claim that there is an
absolute norm: the norm to be rational and authentic. In his view,
their claim is true if it is reinterpreted. The norm is not moral,
as it was thought to be, but metaphysical, and authenticity is not
self-realization, but doing things for their own sake. In
discussing the pros and cons of philosophical claims on absolutes,
this book spreads out the rich pool of philosophical ideas and
clarifies urgent contemporary questions about what can be demanded
with universal validity. It argues this is not only the principle
of justice, not to harm, but also a metaphysical principle by which
to find meaning in life. Moreover, it points to some consequences
this principle has in politics.
This book answers questions about secularization: Does it dissolve
religion, or transform it into faith in a universally valid value?
Is it restricted to the west or can it occur everywhere? Using
ideas of Max Weber, the book conceives secularization as a process
comparable to the rational development of science and production.
What is the value secularization propagates? Sifting historical
texts, Steinvorth argues the value is authenticity, to be
understood as being true to one's talents developed in activities
that are done for their own sake and provide life with meaning, and
as unconditionally commanded. How can a value be unconditionally
demanded? This question leads to an investigation of the self that
combines Kant's ideas on the conditions of the possibility of
experience with modern brain science, and to the metaphysical
deliberation whether to prefer a world with creatures able to do
both good and evil to one without them. It is not enough, however,
to point to facts. We rather need to understand what
secularization, religion and their possible rationality consist in.
Max Weber's sociology of religion has provided us with the
conceptual means to do so, which this book develops. Secularization
is rediscovered as the same progress of rationality in the sphere
of religion that we find in the development of the spheres of
science, art, the economy and politics or public affairs. It proves
to be the perfection rather than the dissolution of religion - a
perfection that consists in recognizing authenticity as the
successor of the absolute of religion.
This book explores the morality of pride, a value that has been
condemned through history and is still largely unwelcome in many
societies. The author explores the nature of the self and free
will, and how pride links to technology and rational theology. It
refers to the work of Lionel Trilling, Allan Bloom, Charles Taylor
and Heidegger on authenticity; Jacob Burckhardt, Stephen Toulmin,
Max Weber and Mark Lilla on modernity; Christine Korsgaard on the
self; John Rawls and Ruth Benedict on morality; and the Stoics and
Kant on free will.
Transforming Capitalism addresses the challenges to shareholder
capitalism. It explores: fair play in the market place;challenges
on systemic, organizational and individual levels; the need to
refocus our economic system around community and cooperation; the
current challenges and transform capitalism.
In this book, Ulrich Steinvorth offers a fresh analysis of
rationality as the core part of Western thinking. Western
rationality includes a critique of tradition and collectivism and a
defence of human rights and individualism, but is impregnated in
all its elements by a conception of the self that was formed by
Locke and utilitarianism. This conception is compatible with
classical physics, but is no help in understanding the facts of
human psychology and history. Steinvorth argues that Descartes
conception of the self offers an alternative. When freed from the
dualism in which Descartes conceived it, it achieves what the
Lockean conception does not. In particular, it allows understanding
the human craving for extraordinariness and the achievements of the
West in science and art as well as its political disasters in the
twentieth century. Moreover, it enables us to understand why
individualism a hallmark of modernity became an ideal that implies
universal rights; how individualism could peak in the ideal of
equal liberty; and why it is now in decline. Most importantly, the
Cartesian concept of the self is shown to offer a way of protecting
modernity against the dangers that it now encounters.
Gibt es Bedingungen gerechten Handelns, die die Politik zu beachten
hat? Namhafte Philosophen aus dem deutschen Sprachraum begrunden in
diesem Buch, warum sich politisches Handeln am Massstab der
Gerechtigkeit orientieren muss, und zeigen am Beispiel aktueller
politischer Probleme, welchen Beitrag die Philosophie zur Klarung
der Prinzipien einer gerechten Politik zu leisten vermag."
Premodern societies believed in something sacred that obliged
unconditionally. Modern societies rely on fallible science. Do they
also need something absolute, a secular sacred? Steinvorth analyzes
the writings of modern philosophers who claim that there is an
absolute norm: the norm to be rational and authentic. In his view,
their claim is true if it is reinterpreted. The norm is not moral,
as it was thought to be, but metaphysical, and authenticity is not
self-realization, but doing things for their own sake. In
discussing the pros and cons of philosophical claims on absolutes,
this book spreads out the rich pool of philosophical ideas and
clarifies urgent contemporary questions about what can be demanded
with universal validity. It argues this is not only the principle
of justice, not to harm, but also a metaphysical principle by which
to find meaning in life. Moreover, it points to some consequences
this principle has in politics.
Die Medizin zieht heute aus zweierlei Grunden eine gesteigerte
Aufmerksamkeit des Rechts und der Ethik auf sich: Sie erschliesst
neue Bereiche des technisch Machbaren, von der Fortpflanzung bis
zur Organtransplantation. Daraus resultieren bisher unbekannte
Problemstellungen, die unsere moralischen Intuitionen und unser
Judiz verunsichern. Zugleich droht die Medizin aber zu einem
knappen Gut zu werden, dessen Verwaltung neuartige Fragen der
Verteilungsgerechtigkeit aufwirft.
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