In An Ethic of Trust: Mutual Autonomy and the Common Will to Live, W. Royce Clark uses the work of theologians and philosophers Albert Schweitzer, Friedrich Nietzsche, and John Rawls to create an inclusive ethic in which both the religious and non-religious will have equal freedom and stability.
In An Ethic of Trust: Mutual Autonomy and the Common Will to Live, W. Royce Clark uses the work of theologians and philosophers Albert Schweitzer, Friedrich Nietzsche, and John Rawls to create an inclusive ethic in which both the religious and non-religious will have equal freedom and stability.
Chapter 1: For What Will You Vote? Chapter 2: Adjusting to the New Millennium in Search of a Common Ethic Chapter 3: The Relief of Recognizing Different Ethical Grounds or Sets Chapter 4: Ethics of the "End": Myth/Mysticism, "Will to Live," or Total Presence? Chapter 5: The Instinctual End or Purpose as Life-Process Chapter 6: The "Best (or "Worst") of All Possible Worlds"-Perspective or Attitude? Chapter 7: Theoretical Trust in Unity Despite Differences Chapter 8: Concluding Challenge: to Become Responsible in the Present
Chapter 1: For What Will You Vote? Chapter 2: Adjusting to the New Millennium in Search of a Common Ethic Chapter 3: The Relief of Recognizing Different Ethical Grounds or Sets Chapter 4: Ethics of the "End": Myth/Mysticism, "Will to Live," or Total Presence? Chapter 5: The Instinctual End or Purpose as Life-Process Chapter 6: The "Best (or "Worst") of All Possible Worlds"-Perspective or Attitude? Chapter 7: Theoretical Trust in Unity Despite Differences Chapter 8: Concluding Challenge: to Become Responsible in the Present
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