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Commitment / Piers Benn.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Art of living series (Acumen Publishing)Publication details: Durham : Acumen Pub., 2011.Description: 1 online resource (ix, 156 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781844654710
  • 1844654710
  • 9781317488279
  • 131748827X
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 179.9 22
LOC classification:
  • BF619 .B46 2011eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction : the problems -- Love -- Work -- Faith, chance and the ethics of belief -- Boredom and acedia -- Commitment, life and meaning.
Summary: What does it mean when you say you are "committed" to something, whether it's to a partner, a vocation, a political belief or a religion? On what basis do we make commitments? Do they matter? Or are we better off avoiding them?Summary: Drawing on his own struggles with commitment, the philosopher Piers Benn explores the notion of commitment and tries to unpick what it is and why it might be valuable to a life lived well. He focuses on the commitments we have to one another - contractual, erotic, parental - the commitments we have with respect to work and vocation, and those we have to political and religious creeds or ways of life. He explores the many obstacles to commitment, in particular boredom and acedia - the failure to take an interest in the world, or to care about anything much.Summary: Although Benn shows commitment to be a central ingredient in the meaning of life, he suggests it is better to risk a sense of lack of meaning and some unhappiness than to make false or frivolous commitments. The tension between the urge to commit and grounds for resisting is a theme running throughout the book.Summary: As community values and the idea of a common good have been replaced with the rootless goals of individuals and corporate entities, marriage has been superseded by "partnerhood", and commitment to a career has been undermined by the disappearance of the job for life, are we in an age, as some social commentators have claimed, where there is a crisis of commitment? Piers Benn brings a much-needed clarity to the subject and offers some welcome advice to all those who have wrestled with the failure, falsehood or futility of their commitments. --Book Jacket.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 153-154) and index.

Introduction : the problems -- Love -- Work -- Faith, chance and the ethics of belief -- Boredom and acedia -- Commitment, life and meaning.

What does it mean when you say you are "committed" to something, whether it's to a partner, a vocation, a political belief or a religion? On what basis do we make commitments? Do they matter? Or are we better off avoiding them?

Drawing on his own struggles with commitment, the philosopher Piers Benn explores the notion of commitment and tries to unpick what it is and why it might be valuable to a life lived well. He focuses on the commitments we have to one another - contractual, erotic, parental - the commitments we have with respect to work and vocation, and those we have to political and religious creeds or ways of life. He explores the many obstacles to commitment, in particular boredom and acedia - the failure to take an interest in the world, or to care about anything much.

Although Benn shows commitment to be a central ingredient in the meaning of life, he suggests it is better to risk a sense of lack of meaning and some unhappiness than to make false or frivolous commitments. The tension between the urge to commit and grounds for resisting is a theme running throughout the book.

As community values and the idea of a common good have been replaced with the rootless goals of individuals and corporate entities, marriage has been superseded by "partnerhood", and commitment to a career has been undermined by the disappearance of the job for life, are we in an age, as some social commentators have claimed, where there is a crisis of commitment? Piers Benn brings a much-needed clarity to the subject and offers some welcome advice to all those who have wrestled with the failure, falsehood or futility of their commitments. --Book Jacket.

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