Showing posts with label Great Courses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Courses. Show all posts

2023/07/07

Quest for Meaning: Values, Ethics, and the Modern Experience by The Great Courses, Robert H. Kane - Lecture - Audible.com.au

Quest for Meaning: Values, Ethics, and the Modern Experience by The Great Courses, Robert H. Kane - Lecture - Audible.com.au

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Quest for Meaning: Values, Ethics, and the Modern Experience
By: The Great Courses, Robert H. Kane
Narrated by: Robert H. Kane
Series: The Great Courses: Modern Philosophy
Length: 12 hrs and 13 mins
Lecture
Release date: 08-07-2013
Language: English
Publisher: The Great Courses
4.7 out of 5 stars4.7 (16 ratings)
====
Publisher's Summary


Is there an ethics that we can all agree on without stifling pluralism and freedom? What would such an ethics look like? Most important, how should you, as a thoughtful person, find your way among the moral puzzles of the modern world and its cacophony of voices and opinions? These are just some of the engaging and perplexing questions you'll tackle as you join Professor Kane for this thought-provoking, 24-lecture examination of the problems surrounding ethics in the modern world.

The contemporary issues you'll consider include conflicts between public and private morality, the degree to which the law should enforce morality, the teaching of values in the schools, the role of religion in public life, the limits of liberty and privacy, individualism versus community, and the loss of shared values and the resulting discontent about politics and public discourse. Professor Kane's approach is as searching and comprehensive as any you could ask for. His lectures range over a rich array of literary, religious, and philosophical sources representing thousands of years of civilization. Most intriguingly, they spur you to ponder the possibility of recovering the ancient quest for wisdom and virtue in a way that respects the insights of modern thought and the achievements of modern pluralism. Whatever your thinking on such questions, whatever your own personal question for true meaning, you can rest assured that it will be immeasurably enriched by the harvest of reflection you glean from these compelling lectures.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.
©1999 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)1999 The Great Courses
===
David Jackson
22-05-2017

Food For Thought

An excellent overview and critique of moral philosophy, with a dignified and practical approach to seeking objective truth in a pluralist society.
====

Quest for Meaning: Values, Ethics, and the Modern Experience

Robert H. Kane, Ph.D. Professor, The University of Texas at Austin

Course No. 455

48 reviews
92% would recommend


Professor
Course Overview
Reviews (48)
Questions (2) and Answers (3)



Robert H. Kane, Ph.D.

InstitutionThe University of Texas at Austin

Alma materYale UniversityLearn More About This ProfessorCourse Overview


What are true human values? What is worthy of our highest honor and love? What purposes should order our existence? Is there any objective way to tell right from wrong? If life indeed has a meaning, can it be known and stated? What form would that knowledge and statement take?

These are fundamental questions. And most of us have surely asked them of ourselves in one way or another.

Such introspection has been going on for millennia, as Professor Robert H. Kane explains. And the devoted search for answers to these questions—for wisdom about the human condition—has shaped cultures around the globe.

Yet today, the very possibility of such wisdom is being challenged.A Challenge from Postmodern Thinkers

"Postmodern" thinkers assert that we can no longer seriously pursue questions of purpose and objective meaning.

Others may not go quite as far, but few would deny that a sense of profound uncertainty about basic human values haunts the modern age:Our world appears to be a place of waning moral innocence.
Discord and confusion over both beliefs and behavior seem to be on the rise.
Fewer and fewer convictions are held in common.
Our public discourse suffers increasing fragmentation as subjectivism and relativism gain ground.

How and why have we come to this?

Is the postmodernist challenge correct? Do questions about objective values mark the limits of a dream that is now all dreamed out? Are we hopelessly trapped within our own partial and relative perspectives, doomed never to discover what is authentically true and good?

Or is it still possible to aspire toward objective standards of meaning in a way that takes into account the realities of pluralism?

And even if the need for a common ground is granted, must we not ask whose morality will be represented? Is there an ethics that we can all agree on without stifling pluralism and freedom? What would such an ethics look like?What Should Guide Your Own Thinking?

Most important, how should you, as a thoughtful person, find your way among the moral puzzles of the modern world and its cacophony of voices and opinions? What criteria should guide your thinking about ethics and your stands on issues of the day?

These are some of the questions you'll tackle as you join Professor Kane in this thought-provoking examination of the problems surrounding ethics in the modern world.

The contemporary issues you'll consider include:conflicts between public and private morality
the degree to which the law should enforce morality
the teaching of values in the schools
the role of religion in public life
the limits of liberty and privacy
individualism versus community
the loss of shared values and the resulting discontent about politics and public discourse.

Professor Kane's approach is as searching and comprehensive as any you could ask for.

His lectures range over a rich array of literary, religious, and philosophical sources representing thousands of years of civilization.Discover the Riches of the Axial Period

You begin with the Axial Period (c. 800-300 B.C.) which the philosopher Karl Jaspers identified as the seedtime of many of the world's great religious and wisdom traditions.

Its many bequests to us include:the Hindu Upanishads
the teachings of Buddha, Zoroaster, and the biblical prophets
the thought of Confucius and Mencius
the founding of philosophic rationalism in the Athens of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.

Professor Kane explains that modern thought has completely separated fact from value, and examines the consequences of this divorce. Modern science has especially contributed to this dissolution because it seeks explanations in causes, not intentions.

This threatened the older wisdom traditions and left modern thinkers with the challenge of finding a ground for ethics that could not be reduced to individual preference or social convention.

These thinkers included such influential modern philosophers as Descartes, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Hume, Kant, and John Stuart Mill, as well as more recent figures like John Rawls.

They rose to the challenge in a variety of complex and sophisticated ways, seeking a basis for ethics in common human feeling, reason, utility, or the notion of a social contract.An Indispensable Companion to Contemporary Ethical Debate

These ideas all remain influential today, and are the subject of current debates that Professor Kane explores with great subtlety and insight.

For that reason alone, this course is indispensable to anyone who is serious about understanding the shape and origins of our current ethical situation.

Reflecting on Plato's prescient criticisms of democracy in the Republic, Professor Kane also asks how our society will fare amid this growing moral debate.

Viewed against the larger backdrop of human history and current world events, freedom and democracy appear as exceptional achievements, forged in an era of much greater moral consensus than we know today.

Can democracy's continued health be taken for granted if procedures alone hold it together while citizens increasingly disagree about basic questions of what is right and wrong, permissible and impermissible?Rediscovering the Quest for Meaning

Most intriguingly, Professor Kane spurs you to ponder the possibility of recovering the ancient quest for wisdom and virtue in a way that respects the insights of modern thought and the achievements of modern pluralism.

This discussion is structured around a fascinating contemporary parable about a gathering of representatives from many different cultures and belief systems at a remote monastery high in the Himalayas.Could these delegates agree on any common approaches to the search for meaning without compromising their distinct beliefs and truth claims?
What might their dialogue be like?
Could it bear fruit?
If so, what might those fruits be?

Does the vision sketched in this parable suggest a viable way of proceeding? Can thoroughgoing pluralism coexist with deeply held convictions about the best way of life? Do our current contentions over ethics mean that we are living through a transition to some new Axial Period?

Whatever your thinking on such questions, you can rest assured that it will be immeasurably enriched by the harvest of reflection you glean from Professor Kane's compelling lectures.ide Full Description

24 Lectures

Average 31 minutes each
1Values and Modernity

2
An Ancient Quest, A Modern Challenge

3
Pluralism, Religion, and Alien Cultures

4
Are Values Subjective?

5
From Experience to Worth

6
Hume and the Challenge of Relativism

7
Cultural Diversity, Human Nature, and the Social Sciences

8
Kant’s Appeal to Reason

9
Bentham, Mill, and the Appeal to Utility

10
Social-Contract Theories (Part I)

11
Social-Contract Theories (Part II)

12
Some Critiques of the Modern Project

13
Retrieving the Quest for Wisdom

14
Wisdom, Ancient and Modern

15
Dilemmas of Might and Right

16
Public and Private Morality (Part I)

17
Public and Private Morality (Part II)

18
Plato on the State, the Soul, and Democracy

19
Democracy and Its Discontents

20
The Parable of the Retreat

21
Searches in the Realm of Aspiration

22
Love and Glory, the Same Old Story

23
The Mosaic of Value

24
Meaning and Belief in a Pluralist Age

===




===
The Quest for Meaning

Robert H. Kane
3.92
105 ratings16 reviews

What are true human values? What is worthy of our highest honor and love? What purposes should order our existence? Is there any objective way to tell right from wrong? If life indeed has a meaning, can it be known and stated? What form would that knowledge and statement take? These are fundamental questions. And most of us have surely asked them of ourselves in one way or another.

Such introspection has been going on for millennia, as Professor Robert H. Kane explains. And the devoted search for answers to these questions—for wisdom about the human condition—has shaped cultures around the globe. Yet today, the very possibility of such wisdom is being challenged.

A Challenge from Postmodern Thinkers

"Postmodern" thinkers assert that we can no longer seriously pursue questions of purpose and objective meaning. Others may not go quite as far, but few would deny that a sense of profound uncertainty about basic human values haunts the modern age:

Our world appears to be a place of waning moral innocence.
Discord and confusion over both beliefs and behavior seem to be on the rise.
Fewer and fewer convictions are held in common.
Our public discourse suffers increasing fragmentation as subjectivism and relativism gain ground.
How and why have we come to this?

Is the postmodernist challenge correct? Do questions about objective values mark the limits of a dream that is now all dreamed out? Are we hopelessly trapped within our own partial and relative perspectives, doomed never to discover what is authentically true and good? Or is it still possible to aspire toward objective standards of meaning in a way that takes into account the realities of pluralism?

And even if the need for a common ground is granted, must we not ask whose morality will be represented? Is there an ethics that we can all agree on without stifling pluralism and freedom? What would such an ethics look like?

What Should Guide Your Own Thinking?

Most important, how should you, as a thoughtful person, find your way among the moral puzzles of the modern world and its cacophony of voices and opinions? What criteria should guide your thinking about ethics and your stands on issues of the day?

These are some of the questions you'll tackle as you join Professor Kane in this thought-provoking examination of the problems surrounding ethics in the modern world. The contemporary issues you'll consider include:

conflicts between public and private morality
the degree to which the law should enforce morality
the teaching of values in the schools
the role of religion in public life
the limits of liberty and privacy
individualism versus community
the loss of shared values and the resulting discontent about politics and public discourse.

Professor Kane's approach is as searching and comprehensive as any you could ask for. His lectures range over a rich array of literary, religious, and philosophical sources representing thousands of years of civilization.

Discover the Riches of the Axial Period

You begin with the Axial Period (c. 800-300 B.C.) which the philosopher Karl Jaspers identified as the seedtime of many of the world's great religious and wisdom traditions. Its many bequests to us include:

the Hindu Upanishads
the teachings of Buddha, Zoroaster, and the biblical prophets
the thought of Confucius and Mencius
the founding of philosophic rationalism in the Athens of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.
Professor Kane explains that modern thought has completely separated fact from value, and examines the consequences of this divorce. Modern science has especially contributed to this dissolution because it seeks explanations in causes, not intentions.

This threatened the older wisdom traditions and left modern thinkers with the challenge of finding a ground for ethics that could not be reduced to individual preference or social convention. These thinkers included such influential modern philosophers as Descartes, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Hume, Kant, and John Stuart Mill, as well as more recent figures like John Rawls. They rose to the challenge in a variety of complex and sophisticated ways, seeking a basis for ethics in common human feeling, reason, utility, or the notion of a social contract.

An Indispensable Companion to Contemporary Ethical Debate

These ideas all remain influential today, and are the subject of current debates that Professor Kane explores with great subtlety and insight. For that reason alone, this course is indispensable to anyone who is serious about understanding the shape and origins of our current ethical situation. Reflecting on Plato's prescient criticisms of democracy in the Republic, Professor Kane also asks how our society will fare amid this growing moral debate. Viewed against the larger backdrop of human history and current world events, freedom and democracy appear as exceptional achievements, forged in an era of much greater moral consensus than we know today. Can democracy's continued health be taken for granted if procedures alone hold it together while citizens increasingly disagree about basic questions of what is right and wrong, permissible and impermissible?

Rediscovering the Quest for Meaning

Most intriguingly, Professor Kane spurs you to ponder the possibility of recovering the ancient quest for wisdom and virtue in a way that respects the insights of modern thought and the achievements of modern pluralism. This discussion is structured around a fascinating contemporary parable about a gathering of representatives from many different cultures and belief systems at a remote monastery high in the Himalayas.

Could these delegates agree on any common approaches to the search for meaning without compromising their distinct beliefs and truth claims? What might their dialogue be like? Could it bear fruit? If so, what might those fruits be? Does the vision sketched in this parable suggest a viable way of proceeding? Can thoroughgoing pluralism coexist with deeply held convictions about the best way of life? Do our current contentions over ethics mean that we are living through a transition to some new Axial Period?

Whatever your thinking on such questions, you can rest assured that it will be immeasurably enriched by the harvest of reflection you glean from Professor Kane's compelling lectures.
==

First published January 1, 1999
===

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3.92
105 ratings16 reviews
===
Bob Nichols
894 reviews
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January 21, 2015
Kane argues that modernity has eroded meaning. In prior times, we had certainty regarding objective, absolute truth. Now we have subjectivity and relativism and this is a problem. We’ve “sundered” fact from value and live valueless lives, stripped of meaning.

Kane is excellent in his examination of various philosophical traditions that have attempted to place value (and meaning) on an objective foundation. In this regard, he looks at Spinoza’s feeling-emotion tradition, Hume’s appeal to human nature, Hobbes and Rawls’ social contract theories, Bentham and Mill’s utilitarian theory, and Kant’s reasoned ethics. Kane then attempts to seam together modern-day thinking with the “wisdom of the ancients.” Here he pulls in MacIntyre’s “After Virtue” with its emphasis on “excellence” and Plato’s views on wisdom, truth, knowledge and the Good. He suggests that there is ample evidence that universal (hence, absolute, objective) values exist and that they are seen in the various formulations of the Golden Rule, the Mosaic commandments and in the Jeffersonian “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” In these, we have, he asserts, evidence of objective truth and objective value – about the way things are and the way things ought to be. Kane sets up “The parable of the retreat” in which dogmatists and relativists remove themselves, leaving the discussion to those who are open about finding new grounds for objective truth and value. Kane focuses on the need for love, which includes respect for others, and on our need for glory, which is about MacIntyre’s excellence. This is the least interesting part of these lectures and is not convincing.

Kane repeats a common assertion that Darwinian survival and reproductive goals don’t provide much meaning for who we are. But, when Moses said that “Thou shall not kill,” or lie or steal, why did he say that? Could it be that he saw the disorder and disunity that this would create, compromising the freedom (and interests of) for all, as Hobbes later observed? Interestingly, Kane doesn’t mention the other commandments that do not serve his purposes so well (e.g., “You shall have no other gods before Me,” You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain,” Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy”), but these might illustrate our biologically-driven tribalism. Could it be that the many expressions of the golden rule are universal because they are embedded in our nature as free, biological beings: If each is to be free, then this means that we must respect the freedom of others to avoid the Hobbesian “war of all against all.” In Kane’s reference to the Jeffersonian mantra of life, liberty and happiness, where did these values come from? Life is survival. Liberty is our need to be free to do what we need to do for our survival and happiness. It’s interesting that this freedom to serve the body and its needs is precisely the opposite of what Plato’s truth is about, though this need for freedom that is embedded in our biology may very well be the objective value that Kane is looking for in these lectures. And, by tying our freedom to the freedom of others, we also have the motivation to follow a golden-rule like standard as it’s in our interest to respect the freedom of others.

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Fountain Of Chris
52 reviews
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October 14, 2022
One of the OG Great Courses lecturers. I miss when they would intersperse jokes in their courses. This one is worth a re-listen someday.

==
Jun
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October 18, 2022
"If there is no God, anything is permitted." Through Ivan Karamazov, Dostoevsky challenged the atheists' grounding of ethics. This challenge has been haunting the modern era, and I view this lecture series as an attempt of responding to this central question of the modern human. Divided into three parts, the first part of this course traces intellectual roots of the Western civilization to the Axial Period to describe how the sunderings of modernity -- of scientific explanation from purpose, of fact from value, and of theoretical from practical inquiry -- create modern moral confusion by introducing pluralism and uncertainty. The main responses to such moral confusion, i.e. subjectivism (mainly positivism and existentialism) and relativism, are also introduced. The second part describes the project of modernity to address the problem of relativism -- sentimentalist, rationalist, utilitarian, contractarian alternatives in modern ethics -- as well as their criticisms. The third part preaches a pluralism different from postmodernism: the aspiration, or the search, of objective truth as well as of objective value or worth (love and glory), by considering all points of view. Using the framework of moral sphere developed by himself, Professor Kane claimed that this openness to all would not lead to indifference, but rather to determining which is more worthy and to achieving a mosaic of value. In detailing this aspiration and its challenges, a series of moral and social issues are discussed, from traditional commandments, pacifism, the demarcation of public morality and private morality by Liberty-Limiting Principles (including Harm Principle, Offense Principle, Legal Moralism Principle, and Paternalism Principle), to Plato's political and social criticisms of democracy in and their contemporary responses, as well as plurality and secularization as challenges to religion. Most of the lectures themselves are clear and interesting and great learning experiences, but part three is not very well logically structured and it is sometimes not clear what I'm learning this for.

==
David
426 reviews

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September 4, 2022
Prof Kane says that the main job of all teaching is to bring order out of chaos. And he did some of this in his lessons on ethics, morality, and values—but not entirely. Although, who really could?

For me, the most interesting of Kane’s discussions is that one of the major objectives among ethical theorists (amateurs and professionals) is universalization. There appears to be an innate desire to universalize moral principles by deriving objective moral standards that apply to everyone, everywhere, all the time. It seems to me that this translates to a desire for moral absolutism. Kane uses the example of quantum theory – if it turns out to prove true, it will be true for all people, whether they agree with it or not. Some theorists seem to be enamored with this idea and use the term “vulgar relativism” as a pejorative name for what is really cultural relativism.

Kane asks the question, “How can we get to some universal ethical values without appealing to religious authority or final causes in nature?” He calls this the Project of Modernity in Ethics and identifies four trends in modern ethical theory that search for some sort of universality: The Sentimentalist Option holds that ethics derive from common feelings and sentiments that all humans share. The Rationalist Option contends that there is a common form of reasoning from which ethical principles are derived that all humans could arrive at irrespective of any cultural differences. There is also the Utilitarian Option which attaches to the principle of the greatest good for the greatest number. Finally, the Contractarian Option points to the social contract as the fount of ethics.

This is a helpful way of categorizing the methods used to universalize ethics, but each of these has its own set of problems, which for me, renders them unsatisfactory. Perhaps an alternative name for the Project of Modernity in Ethics is the Project of Barking Up the Wrong Tree.

At the end of the day, I find this lecture series helpful, but there is still a lot of chaos in the study of ethics and morality.

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Don Heiman
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February 2, 2023
In 2013 The Teaching Company’s Great Courses released University of Texas Philosophy Professor Robert Kane’s 24 lecture course “Quest for Meaning: Values, Ethics, and the Modern Experience.” This 12 hour course discuses the conflicts between public and private moral values, school education teachings, shared community values, and religious ideologies from the time of Platonic thought (axial age) to our present time (postmodern age). Kane’s lectures reflect the wisdom of Plato, Saint Augustine, Aristotle, Kant, Kari Jaspers, Claude Strauss, and many more renown philosophy experts. These thought leaders explore cultural anthropology, different human reason motifs, common values of goodness, and the social proclivities that are used by communities to overcome individual and social evils. Kane also explains how values are objective and worthy in the conflict between relativism and collective wisdom. He concludes his course with overviews of the principles that anchor social contracts, universal ethical value sets, and the “human duty to do good.” His Quest for Meaning lectures are very insightful and highly relevant to social principles of love and glory. (L)

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Theo
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February 19, 2019
This was a Great Courses series that I listened to on Audible. The courses are in easy to listen to 'lectures' (around 40 minutes in length) and the download also comes with a course guide.

The course is structured into three parts:
1) The history of how the Western civilisation experienced a loss of moral innocence and how this led to contemporary confusion over values (Lectures 1-5);
2) How philosophy has attempted to respond to this confusion of values (Lectures 6-12), also called the 'Modern Project', which covers relativism, cultural diversity, human nature, appeal to reason, appeal to utility, and scoial contracts; and
3) Explores ways to renew the 'ancient qust for wisdom and meaning' (lectures 13-24), which covers public and private morality, wisdom, Plato, democracy, religion and morals in a pluralist age.

Personally, I admit I did not fully appreciate the full lecture series and am still re-reading and re-listening to better understand the content; and this in itself is a great indicator of the work doing it's job of making one think about the meaning of life.
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Timo
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November 27, 2018
I'd have given this lecture series 4 stars...but the Lecturer went off the rails in the second half with his "objective subjectivity" claims. He breezed past really troubling areas in his theory as though he'd proven them beyond doubt.

That said, I really liked his style, and I thought the first half, the overview of values and ethics, was outstanding. So, I'd recommend it for that. AND had I been able to interact with the professor and discuss his ideas in person, I'm sure I'd find it a profitable and engaging experience. But presented in 12 lectures as though he'd established it was difficult to stick with. But I did. :)
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Mehrsa
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April 30, 2019
Excellent audiobooks that covers the history of the philosophical tradition, specifically as it relates to morality. He goes from the early axial era to modern day, but without much discussion of non-western traditions.

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Zeyad Waleed
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June 30, 2023
Enjoyed it!

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Groot
226 reviews
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March 3, 2016
This series of lectures on the philosophical outlook on values, ethics and morals is the best work in philosophy that I've come across. It is clear, comprehensible and interesting even in a topic I've always found soporific, self-indulgent and often risible. I'm listening to it again, and I almost never do this.

This is from some years ago (1999), but it remains relevant. For an example, it helps to understand the odd and alarming changes in politics today, through an understanding of practice and culture, especially what impels Trumpism. (The term "practice" here comes from philosophy and anthropology, and is similar to the sense of the practice of medicine, say, but extends further to religious, alimentary and all other cultural realms. It is how we practice our lives, with implicit focus on habits, customs, rituals, training, specific knowledge and the other necessities of correctly carrying out a practice.)

In the first part of the 20th century, there was an enthusiasm for relativism, moral and cultural, along with the rise of the blank slate theory of no human nature, and the belief in the perfectibility of mankind through socialism and progressivism. Anthropology, in particular, reveled in how different cultures were so very different.

One of the most enthusiastic of the molders of humanity, the National Socialists of Germany, caused a kerfuffle, however, what with World War II, the holocaust, and their concentration camps. The Nuremberg Trials, in particular, forced many to articulate rationales for condemning those who were, after all, following orders, yet committed atrocities.

It turns out that the search for an overarching system of ethics that allow us to rise above crass relativism (the technical term) has been the focus of Philosophical Ethics for some centuries now. There are four main approaches.

The first is known as the Sentimentalist approach, with its best known adherents being Hume, Adam Smith, and Confucius. It bases its approach on promoting the best sentiments of mankind, such as generosity, desire for honor, and the approval of others, etc., and for suppression of the bad sentiments via rigorous moral education.

The second is known as the Rationalist approach, with Kant as its voice. It seeks to base a universal ethics on an understanding of Practical Reason (in contrast with the Pure or Theoretical Reason of science). Through use of categorical imperatives, it seeks universal ethical principles that must never by violated, such as the dictum that lying is always wrong.

The third is the Utilitarian approach, and is the best known, with proponents such as Bentham and Mill. They use utility, a sort of currency of happiness, to measure and compare outcomes, with a focus on the greatest good for the greatest number. In contrast with the Rationalists, they are consequentialists, flexible in their basic ethical principles.

The fourth approach is the Contractarian, looking at social contracts, and includes Plato, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, and Rawles. They seek to come up with rules almost from a game theoretic approach.

But I would say that Trumpism stems from another, fifth, approach, and many of Trump's enthusiasts will recognize its appeal. This is the Communitarian approach, which does not accede to the rejection by the other approaches of what they find most important. The game theory of Utilitarians, the veil of ignorance of the Contractarians, the categorical insistence of the Rationalists, even the optimism of the Sentimentalists, all try to reduce humans to stick figures which are interchangeable with any other human.

But what of our culture, our music, our families, our religion, and all else we treasure most? The Communitarian does not say that one culture is better than any other, but it does allow the people in a culture to declare their own preference for their own culture, and have that be a legitimate philosophical tenet. It does not say that one race is superior, but it encourages the building of a race's culture by allowing, even promoting, freedom of association.
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Top review from the United States
JustinHoca
VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 stars Great overview of the history of philosophy and its application in ethics
Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2015
I checked out this course because we're at a time when ISIL is beheading people who don't share their view of the truth and using rape and torture as a form of prayer while at the same time, biologist/atheist Richard Dawkins and others are writing that we can be certain that there is no God-- also a clear and exclusive truth claim. Both ISIL and Dawkins believe wholeheartedly that they are correct and all others are wrong, either infidels or idiots. As someone with a Christian worldview, I can respect others' rights ultimately because the Bible, on which I place great authority, says that all men are created in God's image. But to make the case that everyone should respect life like I do would require appeal to some sort of universally-held views.

Over the past few years I've read some books by the New Atheists like Dawkins, Harris, and Hitchens along with several other professing atheist physicists and biochemists who are searching for the beginning of the universe or life. I have yet to hear any of them respond with logical consistency to the question of on what basis they make their moral judgments about life if there is no such thing as universal truth, a soul, consequences, etc? If we are just a random collection of molecules who will be spread across the universe, and morality and human rights simply stories we tell ourselves to help us survive in the evolutionary process, then why is my choosing to scatter your (or anyone else's) atoms before you would choose to do so considered any worse than me burning firewood? Tim Keller (The Reason for God) writes that he's never met a moral relativist who is logically consistent.

Dr. Kane's series is his attempt to get at the question given our modern postmodern context. (Dr. Kane's own work, The Significance of Free Will, apparently utilizes physical science and philosophy to defend the incompatibility of free will and determinism.) His walk through the history of philosophy lowers my estimation of Durant's The History of Philosophy, which I recently reviewed. He does a much better job than Durant of showing the practical implications of each philosopher's work (admitting there are differences in the philosophers covered by the two authors). I highly recommend this series as informative and thought-provoking, but with a caveat-- it is deeply unsatisfying in its conclusion. Spoiler alert: His basic conclusion is that we need to keep an open mind and be less confident about what each of us sees as Truth while all striving to find common ground in the hope that we can all agree on at least a few things. Dr. Kane seems to say that if everyone approaches things with an "open mind" it will be enough to eliminate the problem of everyone arguing for his particular truth view. But what happens if we reach a conclusion about the Bible being valid through open-minded investigation? There are certainly some life-long Christian apologists with PhDs in philosophy and other fields who argue they reached their conclusion through open-minded investigation. So, I find the author's comments of "quest" ultimately unsatisfying. 4.5 stars out of 5. If interested in the full review, read below.

Prime Video: Yoga for a Healthy Mind and Body

Prime Video: Yoga for a Healthy Mind and Body


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Yoga for a Healthy Mind and Body
Season 1
Today, millions of people practice yoga, from young to old, from the hyper-athletic to those dealing with chronic diseases. Yoga for a Healthy Mind and Body, taught by acclaimed yoga teacher Dr. Heidi Sormaz, are the ideal first step for a newcomer and a fascinating journey of discovery for those who already practice.
2020
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Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
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S1 E1 - Western Yoga

June 1, 2020
34min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Explore the roots of hatha yoga, the form of yoga widely practiced in the West. Focus on the three principles of hatha yoga - breath exercises, physical postures (called asanas), and meditation - which promote a healthy mind and body. Get started with some simple yoga exercises.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E2 - Yoga Begins with the Breath

26 min left
June 1, 2020
27min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
The tension we accumulate every day tightens the muscles in the upper body, making it hard to breathe. Practice a mini yoga class that highlights mindful breathing to relieve this stress. Then add three new asanas to your yoga routine: warrior 2, bound angle, and downward facing dog.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E3 - Yoga and Pain Relief

June 1, 2020
27min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Consider some key tools used in yoga to address physical pain: attention to breath and sensation, release of chronic muscle contractions, and healthier movement patterns. Practice asanas for each of these pain reduction techniques - including a chest opener, yoga pushup, plank, and staff pose.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E4 - Yoga for a Healthy Heart

June 1, 2020
29min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Yoga can lead to a healthier heart by providing a transition from a more sedentary lifestyle to a more active one. Trace the steps that will help you gradually build your yoga practice. Learn two new breathing exercises together with asanas that include warrior 1, knee-to-chest, and bridge.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E5 - Yoga and Addictive Behavior

June 1, 2020
34min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Discover how yoga and attention to the body's sensations can aid in breaking the vicious cycle of addictive behaviors. Perform patterned breathing, side bends, cat/cow, downward dog, lunges, forward fold, and reclined twist. End with savasana, the traditional closing posture in a yoga practice.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E6 - Yoga for Depression and Anxiety

June 1, 2020
29min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Examine how mindful, moving yoga can help interrupt the physical and psychological habits that lead to depression. Focus on sun salutations, a series of movements and poses linked by one breath per move. Perform the classic sun salutation, and then Surya namaskar A and B.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E7 - Iyengar Yoga

June 1, 2020
31min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
In the first of several different styles of yoga, experience a beginner sequence of Iyengar yoga. Named for pioneer yoga teacher B. K. S. Iyengar, this practice makes extensive use of props. Practice nine essential asanas, with optional props such as a wall, chair, strap, and blocks.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E8 - Power Yoga

June 1, 2020
29min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Transition to a more aerobic form of yoga - power vinyasa - in which a sequence of poses is strung together at an energetic pace. This is the form of yoga taught in many health clubs and gyms. Try a challenging flow, modifying the poses where appropriate for your level of fitness.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E9 - Yin Yoga

June 1, 2020
27min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Yin yoga is a complementary practice to a yang form, such as power yoga. The goal is very simple: Assume a shape with your body, relax with gravity, and rest in stillness. Unwind with yin poses that gently stretch your connective tissues, including tendons, ligaments, and fascia.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E10 - Anusara Yoga

June 1, 2020
32min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Explore the spiritual dimension of yoga through an Anusara practice, which combines the Iyengar system of alignment with elements of Hindu spirituality. After a Sanskrit invocation, follow a sequence of asanas that emphasizes awareness of energy flow and muscle action in your body.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E11 - Forrest Yoga

June 1, 2020
34min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Developed by American yoga teacher Ana Forrest, Forrest yoga is known for helping people deal with emotional issues, trauma, and addiction by creating a calm and untroubled internal state. Discover a new way of tuning into your feelings, using many techniques and postures you have already learned.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E12 - Everyday Yoga

June 1, 2020
34min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Draw on the poses and routines presented so far to develop a personalized yoga routine that will work for you in the everyday realities of 21st-century life. Keep sight of three principles: Breathe deliberately, move in non-habitual ways, and pursue mindful awareness.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
===


** The Science of Mindfulness (Transcript) by Ronald D. Siegel - Ebook | Scribd primevideo

The Science of Mindfulness (Transcript) by Ronald D. Siegel - Ebook | Scribd
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Ebook
544 pages
16 hours
The Science of Mindfulness (Transcript)
By 
Ronald D. Siegel

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
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6 ratings
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About this ebook
The Science of Mindfulness is the companion book to the audio/video series of the same name. It contains a full transcript of the series as well as the complete course guidebook which includes lecture notes, bibliography, and more.

About this series:

As a parent, you can't make friends for your children, nor can you prevent them from ever feeling hurt or upset. But with the right guidance, you can support them in learning how to solve problems, cope with feelings, and build satisfying relationships. Raising Emotionally and Socially Healthy Kids gives you access to the same practical advice and actionable plans that Dr. Kennedy-Moore - an in-demand psychologist and author who serves on the advisory board for Parents magazine - shares with clients in her Princeton, New Jersey, practice. Drawing from the her extensive clinical experience - as well as personal experience as a mother of four - these 12 lectures provide a deeper understanding of your child's development and ways to address common stumbling blocks with compassion. In the first half, you'll focus on emotional intelligence and the pivotal role parents can play in helping children understand and cope with their feelings. You'll discover strategies for managing early-childhood meltdowns; simple techniques to inspire cooperation; constructive ways to deal with back-talk, aggression, and unkind behavior; methods to help children cope with anxiety; and more. In the latter half, you'll turn to social intelligence and the challenges children face in making friends, plus practical ways you can guide them through the process. Here, you'll explore how you can support your child in getting along with others; being a good sport; handling conflicts; dealing with bullying; and coping with gossip and cliques. You'll conclude with a candid discussion of friendship in the digital age, looking at video game playing and the relatively new but troubling phenomena of cyberbullying and "Facebook depression".
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Psychology
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S1 E1 - Why Mindfulness Matters

June 1, 2020
34min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Begin by exploring the nature of mindfulness practice as a means of developing awareness with acceptance of our present experience. Review its remarkable range of psychological and physical benefits, dispel common misconceptions, and uncover the three core skills it employs as part of an empirically-supported path to well-being.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E2 - Our Troublesome Brains

June 1, 2020
31min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Here, discover how our brains are actually predisposed, evolutionarily, to psychological distress. Learn about the human "negativity bias," and how our tendency to both anticipate and try to avoid pain leads to problems. Consider what mindfulness teaches us about the mind, and what challenges might arise in practicing mindfulness - beginning with awareness of breath.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E3 - Informal, Formal, and Intensive Practices

June 1, 2020
31min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Grasp how mindfulness, like physical fitness, must be developed through regular and sustained practice. Investigate ways of cultivating mindfulness during daily activities such as bathing or driving, and understand the significant benefits of formal meditative practice and intensive retreats. Learn also about walking and eating meditation.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E4 - Who Am I? The Perils of Self

June 1, 2020
31min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Now grapple with one of the most fundamental and challenging insights that come from mindfulness practice. With reference to both cognitive science and traditional Buddhist thought, observe how the human mind creates the illusory sense of a "separate" self, and how this conception of separateness is itself the cause of suffering.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E5 - Mindfulness or Psychotherapy?

June 1, 2020
32min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Delve into the implications of mindfulness practice for psychological well-being. Learn how mindfulness practice works toward many of the same goals as psychotherapy. Explore how the ultimate aim of traditional mindfulness practice diverges from earlier Western psychology in proposing a more radical path to psychological, emotional, and spiritual freedom.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E6 - Attention and Empathy in Relationships

June 1, 2020
32min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
See how mindfulness practices train us to embrace our moment-to-moment experience. Learn how this capacity allows us to be with discomfort and to freely tolerate all emotional states, and how this can positively affect our relationships through cultivating empathy, open-mindedness, and mental flexibility.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E7 - The Science of Compassion and Self-Compassion

June 1, 2020
31min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
"Compassion" is empathy for suffering that includes a desire to alleviate it. Learn how compassion for oneself is associated with virtually every desirable psychological outcome. Learn steps and exercises to cultivate compassion both for yourself and others, and review studies on the benefits of developing compassion.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E8 - Tailoring Practices to Fit Changing Needs

June 1, 2020
32min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
In choosing mindfulness practices for your own life, consider seven different criteria or questions to ask, such as which mindfulness skills to emphasize; whether to favor secular or religious approaches; and when to do practices that cultivate a sense of safety as opposed to those that work with difficult psychological material.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E9 - Modifying Our Brain Function and Structure

June 1, 2020
31min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Take a thorough look at mindfulness and brain function. Review studies that show how mindfulness practice activates areas of the brain that regulate emotions, integrate thoughts and feelings, increase empathy, and facilitate learning and memory, while also retaining more brain matter and staving off aspects of cognitive decline typically associated with aging.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E10 - Solitude - An Antidote to Loneliness

June 1, 2020
31min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Explore how mindfulness and compassion practices deepen connection and communication with others, and also cultivate an awareness of "interbeing" - our connection to the larger world. Review data showing how mindfulness skills enhance relationships, and see how mindfulness fosters the ability to be alone, a capacity essential for intimacy.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E11 - Connecting with Children and Adolescents

June 1, 2020
30min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Mindfulness practice offers distinct benefits for caregivers of young people. Observe how mindfulness training helps us enter a child's world through developing spontaneity and sensitivity, as well as fostering effective responses to misbehavior. Also learn mindfulness techniques that children and young people can use themselves.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E12 - Seeing Sadness and Depression in a New Light

June 1, 2020
32min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Grasp how depression involves shutting down and turning away from pain, and how mindfulness practice turns our attention to the experience at hand, thus challenging the depressive stance. Observe how mindfulness changes our relationship to thoughts, moods, and feelings, allowing us to see them as transient events.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E13 - Befriending Fear, Worry, and Anxiety

June 1, 2020
32min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Investigate the nature of anxiety and fear, seeing their roots in fantasies about the future. Consider how we typically cope with worry and anxiety by distracting ourselves, and how mindfulness training can free us from anxiety through directly facing our fears while grounded in the present moment.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E14 - Transforming Chronic Pain

June 1, 2020
32min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Review substantial evidence that the vast majority of chronic back pain is actually stress-related, and learn about the effects of negative emotions on the body. Discover how mindfulness practice offers an effective approach to dealing with physical pain, through changing our relationship to both the symptom and to pain-related thinking.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E15 - Placebos, Illness, and the Power of Belief

June 1, 2020
31min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Explore the extraordinary power of the mind to affect our subjective experience of the body. Review astonishing data on the effectiveness of placebos in medical treatment, and learn how mindfulness practice can aid in treating conditions such as insomnia, sexual dysfunction, gastrointestinal problems, and illness anxiety.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E16 - Interrupting Addiction and Troublesome Habits

June 1, 2020
33min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Investigate the nature of compulsive behaviors and the psychological patterns that keep them in place. Observe how mindful awareness can dismantle these patterns, allowing us to be with changing waves of feelings and urges without having to act on them. Learn about effective mindfulness-based programs for a range of problematic behaviors.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E17 - Overcoming Traumas Large and Small

June 1, 2020
32min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Study how trauma affects the mind, and how the tendency to suppress traumatic experiences leads to painful symptoms and unhealthy behavior. Grasp the ways in which mindfulness techniques can be highly effective for processing and integrating avoided feelings, and learn four practical steps for working with traumatic material.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E18 - Groundbreaking Mindfulness Programs

June 1, 2020
30min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
We are now seeing the wide-scale adoption of mindfulness practices into many healthcare settings. Study the approaches and benefits of pioneering programs such as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy, and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and learn additional techniques that can deepen any mindfulness practice.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E19 - The Neurobiology of Self-Preoccupation

June 1, 2020
31min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Science is now able to measure brain activity related to self-referential thinking - self-focused thought patterns that tend to correlate with distress. Examine findings from recent studies showing that experienced meditators can quickly step out of the self-preoccupied thought stream, with significant benefits for their ability to deal with pain and to cultivate wellness.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E20 - Growing Up Isn't Easy - Facing Impermanence

June 1, 2020
29min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Mindfulness traditions teach us that facing impermanence can be extraordinarily liberating. Assess your readiness, and consider how mindfulness practices offer a different way of relating to the realities of aging, sickness, and death itself, and how cultivating deep attention to the present moment allows us to freely enjoy all the stages of life.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E21 - Toward a Science of Wisdom

June 1, 2020
31min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Today, scientific psychologists are beginning to grapple with the question of what wisdom is and how it may be developed. Examine current experimental models for studying wisdom, and discover the key elements of wisdom they identify. Review eight ways that mindfulness practices can help us to develop wisdom.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E22 - The Promise of Enlightenment

June 1, 2020
32min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
The ultimate goal of traditional mindfulness practice is a psychological transformation known as "enlightenment." Grasp the nature of this awakening in practical terms and learn about various pitfalls and challenges people encounter along the path, including spiritual materialism, foundations for awareness, and interpersonal contexts.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E23 - Mindful Ethics as a Path to Freedom

June 1, 2020
32min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Recent research suggests a bilateral relationship between ethics and well-being. Consider five ethical precepts, and use them as tools of inquiry to observe which actions lead to suffering for ourselves and others. Learn how to develop an empirically derived ethical code - one not received as doctrine, but based in personal experience.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E24 - The New Science of Happiness

June 1, 2020
40min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Finally, learn about the new field of positive psychology, and how mindfulness practices foster empirically-supported paths to happiness. Consider the many things that we mistakenly assume will produce happiness, and the alternative of a reliable avenue to well-being, grounded in attention to the present moment, engagement in life, gratitude, and connectedness to others.
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E25 - Bonus Meditation: Breath Awareness Practice

June 1, 2020
28min
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Bonus Meditation
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E26 - Bonus Meditation: Loving Kindness Practice

June 1, 2020
22min
PG
Bonus Meditation
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E27 - Bonus Meditation: Mountain Meditation

June 1, 2020
8min
PG
Bonus Meditation
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E28 - Bonus Meditation: Breathing Together

June 1, 2020
21min
PG
Bonus Meditation
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription
S1 E29 - Bonus Meditation: Stepping Into Fear

June 1, 2020
12min
PG
Bonus Meditation
Included with your The Great Courses Signature Collection subscription



The Great Courses Building Your Resilience PDF | PDF | Autonomic Nervous System | Nervous System

The Great Courses Building Your Resilience PDF | PDF | Autonomic Nervous System | Nervous System: The Great Courses Building Your Resilience PDF

Great Minds of the Eastern Intellectual Tradition by Grant Hardy, The Great Courses - Lecture - Audible.com.au

Great Minds of the Eastern Intellectual Tradition by Grant Hardy, The Great Courses - Lecture - Audible.com.au

transcript
https://www.scribd.com/document/186376938/Great-Minds-of-the-Eastern-Intellectual-Tradition

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Great Minds of the Eastern Intellectual Tradition
By: Grant Hardy, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Grant Hardy
Series: The Great Courses: Intellectual History
Length: 18 hrs and 36 mins
Lecture
Release date: 08-07-2013
Language: English
Publisher: The Great Courses
4.9 out of 5 stars4.9 (38 ratings)
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Publisher's Summary


Western philosophy is a vast intellectual tradition, the product of thousands of years of revolutionary thought built up by a rich collection of brilliant minds. But to understand the Western intellectual tradition is to get only half the story. The Eastern intellectual tradition has made just as important a contribution - and is also the product of thousands of years of cumulative thought by a distinct group of brilliant thinkers.Their ideas demonstrate wholly different ways of approaching and solving the same fundamental issues that concerned the West's greatest thinkers, such as the existence of God, the meaning of life and the nature of truth and reality.



This epic and comprehensive 36-lecture examination of the East's most influential philosophers and thinkers - from a much-honored teacher and scholar - offers a thought-provoking look at the surprising connections and differences between East and West. By introducing you to the people-including The Buddha, Ashoka, Prince Shotoku, Confucius, and Gandhi - responsible for molding Asian philosophy and for giving birth to a wide variety of spiritual and ideological systems, it will strengthen your knowledge of cultures that play increasingly important roles in our globalized 21st-century world.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.
©2011 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2011 The Great Courses



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Anonymous User
19-06-2022

Wonderful insight into eastern philosophies

Wonderful! I found it challenging early on, but grew to love this enriching and stimulating course. It has increased my understanding of world history, introduced me to Confucian teachings and the Tao de Ching which I now love, and encouraged me to learn more about a number of other amazing minds from history and their teachings.


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Owen
13-08-2021

A great introduction to Eastern thinking

This will give you a great introduction to many of the most important thinkers of history. There are a lot of names and ideas to take in, but it's incredibly enthusiastically read by Grant Hardy, who has impressively deep knowledge and who has organised and ordered everything very well.
It might open you up to read further on several topics or people.
Well worth it!


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osaya
14-04-2021

definitely recommended

A sweeping introduction to a broad array of intellectual traditions across Asia, which is worth listening to over and over again. The narrator/author comes across not only as knowledgeable, but genuinely passionate about sharing this journey with everyone. The narrator comes across as very personable--it feels more like having a conversation under a Bodhi tree than listening to a lecture in a large hall. Content-wise, I came in expecting a straight philosophical perspective, but it was more a blend of history, religion, and philosophy--which is more congruent with the theme that is being discussed. Definitely would recommend. Would love a "part two" someday.


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Sam B
18-02-2021

Fascinating overview of Eastern thought

I only knew bits and pieces about the history and philosophy of India, China, Japan and Korea until I listened to Hardy's lectures. There's a lot of ground to cover but I now feel like I have a decent overview from which I can explore further. Highly recommended.


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Anonymous User
09-02-2021

Fantastic overview of Eastern thought

Sublime and masterfully written. One would consider themselves lucky to hear only a tenth of the insights Grant shares with us.


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Aviram V.
27-11-2020

Great minds expertly presented

Amazing course. Long but consider the breadth of the content, I'd say it was one of the best philosophical introductions I've heard or read.


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Anonymous User
28-10-2020

Fantastic intellectual ideas, thoroughly enjoyable lectures

Loved every lecture, this covered thinkers across India, China, Japan and Korea. The lecturer was engaging, polite and easy to listen to and each lecture hit the right note. In particular I enjoyed the way the lecturer linked the ideas throughout the series, demonstrating how earlier ideas progressed and influenced future thought.


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Della Scala
18-02-2020

Lively, witty course.

An entertaining, accessible course on Eastern Philosophy. But why is it filed under "Religion" and not "Philosophy" by Audible?


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Mark Henwood
17-10-2019

Excellent

Worth listening to more than once... I wish I had listened before living in China, and it made me want to go back...


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Karwin Go-Perez
26-11-2018

A clean and surprisingly detailed sweep

Dr. Hardy knows the material in a way that is natural. His passion shows in how he lectures. It flows like a conversation, teasing out the religious, artistic, political and deeply philosophic. I deepened my knowledge on people and philosophy.

I absolutely recommend this book to anyone with even a passing interest in eastern thought


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