Confusion in the West
In their trenchant panoramic overview – ranging from antiquity to the present-day – John and Anna Rist write with authority and ennui about nothing less than the loss of the foundational culture of the West. The authors characterize this culture as the 'original tradition', viewing its erosion as one which has led to anxiety about the entire value of Western thought. The causes of the disintegration are discussed with an intensity rare in academe. Critics of modernity ordinarily concentrate on the Enlightenment and the book certainly offers deep analysis of Enlightenment thought. But it goes further. Thus the cruelty of modern totalitarianism is now depicted as in the spirit of the French Revolution and its implacable hostility to a vanished primordial heritage, while scientism, bureaucracy and consumerism appear as the only rivals to a threatening nihilism. The book argues that Western thought has created a set of conflicting moral and spiritual customs: to the detriment of coherence, in individual minds as in society and culture.
- Combines work from philosophy, political science and psychology
- Raises basic questions about the state of Western culture in a form accessible to any thinking person
- Challenges readers to examine the coherence of their basic political; and ethical beliefs
Product details
No date availableAdobe eBook Reader
9781009218405
0 pages
Table of Contents
- 1. Confusion introduced
- 2. Athens, Rome, Jerusalem
- 3. From Constantine to Henry VIII
- 4. Man enlightened: Montaigne to Kant
- 5. Totalitarian man: theory and practice
- 6. Scientistic humanism
- 7. World War, bureaucracy, consumerism
- 8. Sexual liberation and the subversion of the person
- 9. Personalism, virtue ethics and the original tradition
- 10. Culture, what culture? 2021.