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On the very idea of spiritual values
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2010
Extract
It is unusual for an academic philosopher in the Anglo-American tradition to discuss the subject of spirituality. Not so long ago this fact might have been attributed to a general view of philosophy as the practice of conceptual analysis and the theory of logic. However in a period when the discipline has developed to a point where almost every aspect of human life has been made the subject of some department of ‘applied philosophy’ it could hardly be said that the subject of spirituality, in so far as discussion of it may have normative implications, lies outside the sphere of reasonable philosohical enquiry. Yet it is almost entirely neglected.
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References
1 A. Flew, ‘What is “Spirituality”?’ in Brown, L., Farr, B. and Hoffmann, R. (ed.), Modern Spiritualities: An Inquiry (New York: Promethius Books, 1997).Google Scholar
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8 I use the analogy of participation in the life of a family rather than that of a parent given that in Christian mystical theology partaking in the life of God involves entering into the mutual Divine life of three persons.
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