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The Seductiveness Of Virtue Abraham Joshua Heschel And John Paul Ii On Morality And Personal Fulfillment John J Fitzgerald

  • SKU: BELL-50221848
The Seductiveness Of Virtue Abraham Joshua Heschel And John Paul Ii On Morality And Personal Fulfillment John J Fitzgerald
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Seductiveness Of Virtue Abraham Joshua Heschel And John Paul Ii On Morality And Personal Fulfillment John J Fitzgerald instant download after payment.

Publisher: Bloomsbury T&T Clark
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.56 MB
Author: John J. Fitzgerald
ISBN: 9780567657008, 9780567669759, 0567657000, 0567669750
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

The Seductiveness Of Virtue Abraham Joshua Heschel And John Paul Ii On Morality And Personal Fulfillment John J Fitzgerald by John J. Fitzgerald 9780567657008, 9780567669759, 0567657000, 0567669750 instant download after payment.

John J. Fitzgerald addresses here one of life’s enduring questions - how to achieve personal fulfillment and more specifically whether we can do so through ethical conduct. He focuses on two significant twentieth-century theologians - Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel and Pope John Paul II - seeing both as fitting dialogue partners, given the former’s influence on the Second Vatican Council’s deliberations on the Jews, and the latter’s groundbreaking overtures to the Jews in the wake of his experiences in Poland before and during World War II.
Fitzgerald demonstrates that Heschel and John Paul II both suggest that doing good generally leads us to growth in various components of personal fulfillment, such as happiness, meaning in life, and freedom from selfish desires. There are, however, some key differences between the two theologians - John Paul II emphasizes more strongly the relationship between acting well and attaining eternal life, whereas Heschel wrestles more openly with the possibility that religious commitment ultimately involves anxiety and sadness. By examining historical and contemporary analyses, including the work of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama, the philosopher Peter Singer, and some present-day psychologists, Fitzgerald builds a narrative that shows the promise and limits of Heschel’s and John Paul II’s views.

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