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Full Description
Explores the factors that make for a meaningful life.
Addressing the question of what makes life meaningful, Jerome Eckstein explores the ways in which we can heighten or diminish the quality of our life experience. He focuses on two contrasting attitudes toward life experiences: "interested" (goal-oriented) and "intraested" (non-goal-oriented, i.e., something directed only at itself) and shows that both attitudes are important and necessary in order to make life meaningful. Philosophy, psychology, religion, myth, poetry, and music are all brought to bear on such specific life-meaning issues as work, play, love, art, neurosis, and happiness, and in a touching epilogue, Eckstein discusses his own life meanings in terms of metaphysical loneliness, laughter, and dignity.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Intraestedness and Meanings of Life
2. Excursus to Objectivity and Postmodernism
3. Suicide and Meanings of Life
4. Uncertainty, Religion, and Meanings of Life
5. Wholeness: Primordial and Vicarial
6. Epilogue
Notes
Index