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Contesting The Moral High Ground Popular Moralists In Midtwentiethcentury Britain Paul T Phillips

  • SKU: BELL-5769180
Contesting The Moral High Ground Popular Moralists In Midtwentiethcentury Britain Paul T Phillips
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Contesting The Moral High Ground Popular Moralists In Midtwentiethcentury Britain Paul T Phillips instant download after payment.

Publisher: McGill-Queen’s University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 7.33 MB
Pages: 244
Author: Paul T. Phillips
ISBN: 9780773541115, 077354111X
Language: English
Year: 2013

Product desciption

Contesting The Moral High Ground Popular Moralists In Midtwentiethcentury Britain Paul T Phillips by Paul T. Phillips 9780773541115, 077354111X instant download after payment.

In mid-twentieth century Britain, four intellectuals - Julian Huxley, Bertrand Russell, Malcolm Muggeridge, and Barbara Ward - held sway over popular conceptions of morality. While Huxley and Russell championed ideas informed by agnosticism and atheism, Muggeridge and Ward were adherents to Christianity. In Contesting the Moral High Ground, Paul Phillips reveals how this fundamental dichotomy was representative of British society at the time, and how many of the ideologies promoted by these four moralists are still present today. As world-class public figures in an open forum of debate, Huxley, Russell, Muggeridge, and Ward all achieved considerable public attention, particularly during the turbulent 1960s. Phillips captures the rebellious spirit of the time, detailing how these thinkers exploited the popular media to disseminate ideas on prevailing social issues - from justice and world peace to protection of the environment. Phillips skilfully traces the foundations of their thought to their earlier careers and social movements of previous generations, and shows how many of their approaches were adopted by a host of present-day groups from the Christian Right and Left to the New Atheists and environmentalists. A significant contribution to British intellectual history, Contesting the Moral High Ground provides new insights into the moral philosophies of four of Britain's most influential minds in the twentieth century.

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