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The Harmony of Nature and Spirit: Meaning in Life (Meaning in Life/Irving Singer, Vol 3) [Hardcover]

Professor Irving Singer (Author)


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Book Description

September 23, 1996 Meaning in Life/Irving Singer, Vol 3

"Irving Singer has many wise and instructive things to say about happiness and how we can get beyond suffering in life. His discussion of the love of life as contrasted with the love of love... is a profoundly important one. It is a gold mine for those who wish to better understand the intellectual foundations of the good life."--Marvin Kohl, The New School of Social Research

Preceded by The Creation of Value and The Pursuit of Love, this final book in Singer's Meaning in Life trilogy studies the interaction between nature and spirit, and examines the ways in which we may resolve our sense of being divided and thereby overcome the suffering in life. The Harmony of Nature and Spirit suggests that the accord between nature and spirit, and between meaning, happiness, and love, arises from an art of life that employs the same principles of imagination and idealization as those that exist in all artistic creativity. Living the good life is an art that seeks the harmonization of meaning with consummatory happiness. It is through the meaning created by imagination and idealization, Singer says, that happiness and the love of life become available to us.

"Rarely does one get a chance to see such a polished, mature, and humane piece of writing, all the rarer in philosophy. Long ago, philosophers would write sophisticated books for a general, literate audience. James's Varieties of Religious Experience or Santayana's Life of Reason come to mind. Singer's work stands in near isolation because it continues this tradition."--Thomas Alexander, Southern Illinois University

"The book's freshness, perceptiveness, and clarity make it worthwhile for educated lay readers and professionals alike."--Robert Hoffman, Library Journal


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In the venerable tradition of Socrates, Cicero, and Santayana, Irving Singer elucidates a naturalistic philosophy of the good life. The key to Singer's art of life is to take life as art, which allows a dovetailing of reality (nature) with the creative self (spirit).

In a straightforward, unpretentious style, the reader is led away from Cartesian dualism through a deft synthesis of concepts from Schopenhauer, Mill, Kant, Hume, Husserl, Sartre, Dewey, and Santayana, to an aesthetic philosophy that takes imagination and consummatory enrichment not only as the basis of art but also of ethics. There are contestable points in Singer's work, but Singer himself says that this is as it should be: this is not a work of syllogistic theorizing, rather it is a world view that others may consider and revise. Singer's philosophy should appeal to those who seek a viable holism within the Western tradition. This volume may be read independently of the first two books in the trilogy.

From Library Journal

This third volume of Singer's trilogy Meaning in Life (Free Pr., 1991; the second volume is The Pursuit of Love, LJ 5/15/94) begins by rejecting Schopenhauer's belief that nature well-nigh precludes human happiness and by offering an alternative account of nature and our place in it. Pursuing an idea (stated in the earlier volumes) that our imagination makes ideals by which we create meaning, Singer contends that the aesthetic principles exemplified in art (freedom within conventional constraint; harmonious integration; consummatory experience) apply as well to life and, if realized, bring happiness. He then argues that both ethics and religion are based on aesthetic aspects of experience and concludes by analyzing love in terms of compassion, sympathy, and empathy. The book's freshness, perceptiveness, and clarity make it worthwhile for educated lay readers and professionals alike. For academic collections.?Robert Hoffman, York Coll., CUNY
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 234 pages
  • Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press (September 23, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0801854261
  • ISBN-13: 978-0801854262
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6.3 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #640,465 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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