A common humanity : thinking about love and truth and justice
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Bibliographic Information
A common humanity : thinking about love and truth and justice
Routledge, 2000
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Note
Originally published: Melbourne : Text Pub., 1998
Bibliography : p. 286-289
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Holocaust and attempts to deny it, racism, murder, the case of Mary Bell. How can we include these and countless other examples of evil within our vision of a common humanity? These painful human incongruities are precisely what Raimond Gaita boldly harmonizes in his powerful new book, A Common Humanity.
Hatred with forgiveness, evil with love, suffering with compassion, and the mundane with the precious. Gaita asserts that our conception of humanity cannot be based upon the empty language of individual rights when it is our shared feelings of grief, hope, love, guilt, shame and remorse that offer a more potent foundation for common understanding. Drawing on the work of Hannah Arendt, Simon Weil, Primo Levi, George Orwell, Iris Murdoch and Sigmund Freud, Gaita creates a beautifully written and provocative new picture of our common humanity.
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Goodness beyond Virtue
- Chapter 3 Evil beyond Vice
- Chapter 4 Racism
- Chapter 5 Justice beyond Fairness
- Chapter 6 Guilt, Shame & Community
- Chapter 7 Genocide & 'The Stolen Generations'
- Chapter 8 Genocide & the Holocaust
- Chapter 9 Forms of the Unthinkable
- Chapter 10 Truth & the Responsibility of Intellectuals
- Chapter 11 Goodness & Truth
- Chapter 12 Truth As a Need of the Soul
- Chapter 13 A Common Humanity
by "Nielsen BookData"