Book Cover

Faith, Reason, and Political Life Today

Contributor(s): Brady, Michelle E (Contribution by), Cantor, Paul a (Contribution by), Darby, Thomas (Contribution by), III, Henry T Edmondson (Contribution by), Gardner, Stephen L (Contribution by), Guerra, Marc D (Contribution by), Johnson, Gregory R (Contribution by), Knippenberg, Joseph M (Contribution by), Lawler, Peter Augustine (Contribution by), Mahoney, Daniel J (Contribution by), Pontuso, James F (Contribution by), Seaton, Paul (Contribution by), Woodiwiss, Ashley (Contribution by), McConkey, Dale (Editor)

ISBN: 9780739102237

Publisher: Lexington Books

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Pub Date: March 21, 2001

Dewey: 261.7

LCCN: 00048389

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.68" H x 9.30" L x 6.16" W ( 0.83 lbs) 296 pages

Series: Applications of Political Theory

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: This rich and varied collection of essays addresses some of the most fundamental human questions through the lenses of philosophy, literature, religion, politics, and theology. Peter Augustine Lawler and Dale McConkey have fashioned an interdisciplinary consideration of such p...

Brief description: Daniel J. Mahoney has been writing and drawing stories since he was a kid. When he's not creating books for young readers, he can be found riding his bike, chasing waterfalls with his hiking club, and zapping people with X-rays at the hospital where he works. He is the author and illustrator of We Don't Eat Our Neighbors and My Cat Is a Secret Agent. He grew up in Albany, New York, and currently resides on a cozy street in the country with his amazing daughter, Shay.

Review Quotes:

"Offers challenging and often brilliant examples of what moral and political reflection must be today, as the history of human striving for meaning seems to be finding its end in the satisfactions of technology....." --Ralph Hancock, Brigham Young University

"For the authors in this volume-as it was for Tocqueville and Nietzsche before them-a homogeneously democratic epoch would be one permeated by narcissistic self-satisfaction and moral degradation. Anyone troubled by these unintended byproducts of the democratic age-and hoping to find resources with which to resist them-will relish the serious and sober essays collected in this volume." --First Things

"The collection... describe[s] interesting new directions that liberated and pluralistic scholarship can take.... Individual essays... resonate deeply with readers' own academic projects.... There are many good reads here." --American Political Science Review

"With the Applications of Political Theory series, professors Peter Lawler and Dale McConkey offer a fine assorttment of essays in two complementary volumes, making a considerable contribution to that dialogue...Together, they constitute an impressive cross-section of research and reflection friendly to saving a place for religion in American politics." --Perspectives on Political Science

"Lively, thought-provoking essays on the relevance of Christianity and classical thought to the crisis of modernity and the challenges of postmodernism. The voices of Aristotle, Augustine, Aquinas, Tocqueville, Solzhenitsyn, Manent, O'Connor, Percy, Murray, and Strauss transcend both secular optimism and pessimism in their encounter with the American identity and Kojève's "end of history."" --Ann Hartle, Emory University

"Offers challenging and often brilliant examples of what moral and political reflection must be today, as the history of human striving for meaning seems
to be finding its end in the satisfactions of technology." --Ralph Hancock, Brigham Young University

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