Against Health

Against Health
Title Against Health PDF eBook
Author Jonathan Metzl
Publisher NYU Press
Pages 228
Release 2010-11-23
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0814795935

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Looks at the cultural meanings of health, exploring it's ideologies, arguing that obtaining health is difficult because of cultural conventions, and offering ways to develop healthier options for one's body.

Behaving Badly

Behaving Badly
Title Behaving Badly PDF eBook
Author Eden Collinsworth
Publisher Anchor
Pages 274
Release 2018-03-06
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 1101970812

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A PopSugar Best Book of the Year To call these unsettling times is an understatement: our political leaders are less and less respectable; in business, cheating, lying, and stealing are hazily defined; and in daily life, technology permits us to act in ways inconceivable without it. Yet somehow, people still draw lines between what is acceptable and what is not. In Behaving Badly, Eden Collinsworth speaks with a wide range of figures—from experts to everyday people—to parse out the parameters of modern morality. In her quest, she squares off with, among others, a neuroscientist who explains why we’re not necessarily designed to be good; a CEO fired for blowing the whistle on his multinational corporation; and the cheerfully unrepen­tant founder of a website facilitating affairs for married people. Fearless, timely, and always thought-provoking, Behaving Badly takes us on an unforgettable journey through the treacherous territory of right and wrong.

A New Morality from Science: Beyondism

A New Morality from Science: Beyondism
Title A New Morality from Science: Beyondism PDF eBook
Author Raymond Bernard Cattell
Publisher Pergamon
Pages 512
Release 1972
Genre Philosophy
ISBN

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The Book of the New Moral World

The Book of the New Moral World
Title The Book of the New Moral World PDF eBook
Author Robert Owen
Publisher
Pages 78
Release 1840
Genre Communism
ISBN

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God and Morality

God and Morality
Title God and Morality PDF eBook
Author R. Keith Loftin
Publisher InterVarsity Press
Pages 193
Release 2012-08-28
Genre Religion
ISBN 0830863451

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Is morality dependent upon belief in God? Is there more than one way for Christians to understand the nature of morality? Is there any agreement between Christians and atheists or agnostics on this heated issue? In God and Morality: Four Views four distinguished voices in moral philosophy ariticulate and defend their place in the current debate between naturalism and theism. Christian philosophers, Keith Yandell and Mark Linville and two self-identified atheist/agnostics, Evan Fales and Michael Ruse clearly and honestly represent their differing views on the nature of morality. Important differences as well as areas of overlap emerge as each contributor states their case, receives criticism from the others and responds. Of particular value for use as an academic text, these four essays and responses, covering the naturalist moral non-realist, naturalist moral realist, moral essentialist and moral particularist views, will foster critical thinking and contribute to the development of a well-informed position on this very important issue.

The Origins of Christian Morality

The Origins of Christian Morality
Title The Origins of Christian Morality PDF eBook
Author Wayne A. Meeks
Publisher Yale University Press
Pages 294
Release 1993-01-01
Genre Religion
ISBN 9780300065138

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By the time Christianity became a political and cultural force in the Roman Empire, it had come to embody a new moral vision. This wise and eloquent book describes the formative years--from the crucifixion of Jesus to the end of the second century of the common era--when Christian beliefs and practices shaped their unique moral order. Wayne A. Meeks examines the surviving documents from Christianity's beginnings (some of which became the New Testament) and shows that they are largely concerned with the way converts to the movement should behave. Meeks finds that for these Christians, the formation of morals means the formation of community; the documents are addressed not to individuals but to groups, and they have among their primary aims the maintenance and growth of these groups. Meeks paints a picture of the process of socialization that produced the early forms of Christian morality, discussing many factors that made the Christians feel that they were a single and "chosen" people. He describes, for example, the impact of conversion; the rapid spread of Christian household cult-associations in the cities of the Roman Empire; the language of Christian moral discourse as revealed in letters, testaments, and "moral stories"; the rituals, meetings, and institutionalization of charity; the Christians' feelings about celibacy, sex, and gender roles; and their sense of the end-time and final judgment. In each of these areas Meeks seeks to determine what is distinctive about the Christian viewpoint and what is similar to the moral components of Greco-Roman or Jewish thought.

Soul, Self, and Society

Soul, Self, and Society
Title Soul, Self, and Society PDF eBook
Author Edward L. Rubin
Publisher Oxford University Press, USA
Pages 505
Release 2015
Genre History
ISBN 0199348650

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Morality is not declining in the modern world. Instead, a new morality is replacing the previous one. Centered on individual self-fulfillment, and linked to administrative government, it permits things the old morality forbid, like sex for pleasure, but forbids things the old morality allowed, like intolerance and equality of opportunity.