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Drawing on the riches of the Western tradition, Anthony T. Kronman defends a humane conservativism for our enlightened age
In this passionate and searching book, Anthony Kronman offers a third way-beyond atheism and religion-to the God of the modern world We live in an age of disenchantment. The number of self-professed "e;atheists"e; continues to grow. Yet many still feel an intense spiritual longing for a connection to what Aristotle called the "e;eternal and divine."e; For those who do, but demand a God that is compatible with their modern ideals, a new theology is required. This is what Anthony Kronman offers here, in a book that leads its readers away from the inscrutable Creator of the Abrahamic religions toward a God whose inexhaustible and everlasting presence is that of the world itself. Kronman defends an ancient conception of God, deepened and transformed by Christian belief-the born-again paganism on which modern science, art, and politics all vitally depend. Brilliantly surveying centuries of Western thought-from Plato to Augustine, Aquinas, and Kant, from Spinoza to Nietzsche, Darwin, and Freud-Kronman recovers and reclaims the God we need today.
In this stirring analysis, Anthony Kronman describes a spiritual crisis affecting the American legal profession. He attributes it to the collapse of what he calls the ideal of the lawyer-statesman: a set of values that prizes good judgment above technical competence and that encourages a public-spirited devotion to the law.
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