Looking In the Distance: The Human Search for MeaningSpirituality, like morality, has historically been tied to religion – and yet it is possible for one to exist without the other. In this meditative and highly personal account, Richard Holloway considers the nature of the spiritual, and what it means to live with the inevitability of death. Both celebration of the possibilities that life affords and an examination of how doubts and fears too often paralyse, especially as we age, Looking in the Distance is an inspiration, told with the compassion and good humour characteristic of its author. |
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... crafting of this text; and to Amy Purden for suggesting the Hafiz poem to me that seems to sum up so much of what the book is about. RICHARD HOLLOWAY EDINBURGH, 2004 Preface Negative Capability: that is when Acknowledgements.
... crafting of this text; and to Amy Purden for suggesting the Hafiz poem to me that seems to sum up so much of what the book is about. RICHARD HOLLOWAY EDINBURGH, 2004 Preface Negative Capability: that is when Acknowledgements.
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... suggests, the book had two aims. I set out to argue against the claim that, without religion, people would soon give up on ethics; that without God there could be no human goodness. And I sketched an outline of what a purely secular or ...
... suggests, the book had two aims. I set out to argue against the claim that, without religion, people would soon give up on ethics; that without God there could be no human goodness. And I sketched an outline of what a purely secular or ...
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A.C. Grayling A.S.J. Tessimond ancient Antonio Damasio Atomised Auchtermuchty become believe Bible Britain called Canongate chapter Christian story Church claim Classics cloning Collected Poems complex consent created culture dangerous death describe Donna Tartt dying earth Edinburgh embryos ethics experience explain Faber and Faber fact feel Final Century Friedrich Nietzsche genetic God’s Godless Morality Gospel Heinemann Helen Waddell human community human spirituality Ibid indifferent institutions Jan Morris Jesus John Updike kind lives London look Margaret Forster Martin Rees meaning Michel Miles Davis mind mourn mystery myth narrative nature never one’s ourselves paradigm Paul Celan Penguin person Quoted R.S. Thomas reality religion religious Richard Holloway scientific scientists secular sense sexual Simone Weil social society species T.S. Eliot tell things traditions tragic understand universe unto verse women words York