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The Tao of Right and Wrong
The Tao of Right and Wrong

The Tao of Right and Wrong

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What is just? What is right? What is wrong? What purposes, and what virtues, are worth pursuing? How can we weigh answers to these questions without lapsing into “That’s only your opinion”? In the tradition of C. S. Lewis’s , Dennis Danielson re-invokes Lewis’s use of the —borrowed from Eastern philosophy—as shorthand for the transcultural fund of ultimate postulates that form the very ground of moral judgment, codes of ethics, and standards of right and wrong. This book is a fresh twenty-first-century call for the virtuous cultivation of “humans with hearts,” for a rejection of moral nihilism, and for a life-affirming embrace of moral realism founded in the . “Dennis Danielson’s message in needs to be urgently heeded. Danielson shows how so-called ‘progressive values’ have been inculcated in young people, swamping the educational system with moral relativism—the philosophy that nothing is absolutely right or wrong, but rather that all depends on your personal preferences or values or the situation—and so abandoning the teaching of traditional wisdom consisting of long-standing, widely shared, principle-based moral truths that are of the essence of our humanness and humanity. This book should be on every teacher’s reading list.” , Professor of Bioethics, University of Notre Dame Australia “ is a remarkably compressed and equally lucid exposition of the truths that really count, and simultaneously a recall to the verities that inhabit the genuine, real, moral tradition. It concludes with an appendix, partly borrowed from C. S. Lewis, a mini-florilegium of sayings and axioms gleaned from ‘across cultures and across history’ wherein the range of sources actually underscores the universality of genuine moral wisdom. The debate in which this book engages is, in the full sense of the term, a fundamental one.” , Commentator for and formerly for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation “Dennis Danielson marks the seventy-fifth anniversary of C.S. Lewis’s classic work by updating it for our present situation and applying it to current concerns in a skilful and thought-provoking way. Timely, deft, impressive. Read it!” University of Oxford, co-editor of , Professor Emeritus of English at the University of British Columbia, is an intellectual historian who has written about literature, religion, and the history of science. He is a past recipient of his university’s Killam Prize for research in the humanities, and of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation’s Konrad Adenauer Research Award.
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