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Ultimate Questions

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

How to live meaningfully in the face of the unknowable
We human beings had no say in existing—we just opened our eyes and found ourselves here. We have a fundamental need to understand who we are and the world we live in. Reason takes us a long way, but mystery remains. When our minds and senses are baffled, faith can seem justified—but faith is not knowledge. In Ultimate Questions, acclaimed philosopher Bryan Magee provocatively argues that we have no way of fathoming our own natures or finding definitive answers to the big questions we all face.
With eloquence and grace, Magee urges us to be the mapmakers of what is intelligible, and to identify the boundaries of meaningfulness. He traces this tradition of thought to his chief philosophical mentors—Locke, Hume, Kant, and Schopenhauer—and shows why this approach to the enigma of existence can enrich our lives and transform our understanding of the human predicament. As Magee puts it, "There is a world of difference between being lost in the daylight and being lost in the dark."
The crowning achievement to a distinguished philosophical career, Ultimate Questions is a deeply personal meditation on the meaning of life and the ways we should live and face death.

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    • Library Journal

      February 15, 2016

      Magee (The Story of Philosophy), former BBC interviewer of contemporary philosophers (The Great Philosophers), offers his personal convictions based on a lifetime of philosophical reflection on "the human predicament": that humans find themselves alive in time and space and constrained to make sense of their existence. The themes that weigh most heavily in his analysis derive from Immanuel Kant and Arthur Schopenhauer--that humans cannot know the nature of reality given the limitations and biases of the human senses and reason. Magee is especially cognizant of the unknowability of (and thus, the fallacious character of belief in) God and of what happens after death. VERDICT Readers will be aware that no matter how persuasive they find Magee's reasoning, it is distinctively his own and depends solely on his take on the history of philosophy that informs it. The author writes with grace and offers a thoughtful summation of human experience, fully aware that he faces soon enough (as all his readers do) the end of life.--Steve Young, McHenry Cty. Coll., Crystal Lake, IL

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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