America is in the process of overcoming the modern, which is expressed negatively as hyper-individualism, materialism, moral disease, fundamentalism, and nihilistic terrorism. In its positive expression the modern develops beyond itself, into a post-traditional ethic and spirituality in which it becomes possible to affirm life and reappropriate the wisdom of traditions, in a genuinely pluralistic environment of dialogue, continuous growth, and ever-expanding horizons of "liberty and justice for all."
America is in the process of overcoming the modern, which is expressed negatively as hyper-individualism, materialism, moral disease, fundamentalism, and nihilistic terrorism. In its positive expression the modern develops beyond itself, into a post-traditional ethic and spirituality in which it becomes possible to affirm life and reappropriate the wisdom of traditions, in a genuinely pluralistic environment of dialogue, continuous growth, and ever-expanding horizons of "liberty and justice for all."Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Stephen Rowe is a professor at Grand Valley State University.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword: Martin E. Marty Part I America and the Problem of Modernity Chapter 1: Worldview, Choice, and Dialogue Chapter 2 Ideologues, Nihilists, and the Depressed - and Relationalists Chapter 3 Moral Disease and Nothingness: Chapter 4 Nothingness and Gift: Eleven Glimpses Part II Relational Worldview Chapter 5 Reappropriating Tradition Chapter 6 Dialogue as Democratic Possibility: Reappropriating the Modern Chapter 7 What We Can Learn From/With China Chapter 8 Dialogue, Development, and Pluralism Part III Reviving Civic Virtue Chapter 9 A Liberal Confession Chapter 10 American Clash and Revival Chapter 11 Pragmatism Revisited Chapter 12 Democratic Life, American Hope: A Meditation on/from the Practical Turn Chapter 13 Liberal Education as Democratic Practice Conclusion: Democracy Somewhere
Foreword: Martin E. Marty Part I America and the Problem of Modernity Chapter 1: Worldview, Choice, and Dialogue Chapter 2 Ideologues, Nihilists, and the Depressed - and Relationalists Chapter 3 Moral Disease and Nothingness: Chapter 4 Nothingness and Gift: Eleven Glimpses Part II Relational Worldview Chapter 5 Reappropriating Tradition Chapter 6 Dialogue as Democratic Possibility: Reappropriating the Modern Chapter 7 What We Can Learn From/With China Chapter 8 Dialogue, Development, and Pluralism Part III Reviving Civic Virtue Chapter 9 A Liberal Confession Chapter 10 American Clash and Revival Chapter 11 Pragmatism Revisited Chapter 12 Democratic Life, American Hope: A Meditation on/from the Practical Turn Chapter 13 Liberal Education as Democratic Practice Conclusion: Democracy Somewhere
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