How we came to seek absolute good in religion and nature—and why
that quest often leads us astray People have long looked to nature and
the divine as paths to the good. In this panoramic meditation on the
harmonious life, Michael Mayerfeld Bell traces how these two paths
came to be seen as separate from human ways, and how many of today’s
conflicts can be traced back thousands of years to this ancient
divide. Taking readers on a spellbinding journey through history and
across the globe, Bell begins with the pagan view, which sees nature
and the divine as entangled with the human—and not necessarily good.
But the emergence of urban societies gave rise to new moral concerns
about the political character of human life. Wealth and inequality
grew, and urban people sought to justify their passions. In the face
of such concerns, nature and the divine came to be partitioned from
the human, and therefore seen to be good—but they also became
absolute and divisive. Bell charts the unfolding of this new moral
imagination in the rise of Buddhism, Christianity, Daoism, Hinduism,
Jainism, and many other traditions that emerged with bourgeois life.
He follows developments in moral thought, from the religions of the
ancient Sumerians, Greeks, and Hebrews to the science and
environmentalism of today, along the way visiting with contemporary
indigenous people in South Africa, Costa Rica, and the United States.
City of the Good urges us to embrace the plurality of our
traditions—from the pagan to the bourgeois—and to guard against
absolutism and remain open to difference and its endless creativity.
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Nature, Religion, and the Ancient Search for What Is Right
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781400887934
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter