Preface PART I Identity and the Good 1. Inescapable Frameworks 2. The Self in Moral Space 3. Ethics of Inarticulacy 4. Moral Sources PART II Inwardness 5. Moral Topography 6. Plato's Self-Mastery 7. "In Interiore Homine" 8. Descartes's Disengaged Reason 9. Locke's Punctual Self 10. Exploring "l'Humaine Condition" 11. Inner Nature 12. A Digression on Historical Explanation PART III The Affirmation of Ordinary Life 13. "God Loveth Adverbs" 14. Rationalized Christianity 15. Moral Sentiments 16. The Providential Order 17. The Culture of Modernity PART IV The Voice of Nature 18. Fractured Horizons 19. Radical Enlightenment 20. Nature as Source 21. The Expressivist Turn PART V Subtler Languages 22. Our Victorian Contemporaries 23. Visions of the Post-Romantic Age 24. Epiphanies of Modernism 25. Conclusion: The Conflicts of Modernity Notes Index
Surely one of the most important philosophical works of the last quarter of a century. -- Jerome Bruner
Charles Taylor is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Philosophy at McGill University. Author of The Language Animal, Sources of the Self, The Ethics of Authenticity, and A Secular Age, he has received many honors, including the Templeton Prize, the Berggruen Prize, and membership in the Order of Canada.
Taylor has taken on the most delicate and exacting of philosophical
questions, the question of who we are and how we should live…and he
has made this an adventure of self-discovery for his reader. To
have accomplished so much is an important philosophical
achievement.
*New Republic*
Sources of the Self is in every sense a large book: in length and
in the range of what it covers, but above all in the generosity and
breadth of its sympathies and its interest in humanity…Few books on
such large subjects are so engaging.
*New York Review of Books*
A magnificent account, full, fair, well read, well written,
complicated and high spirited—a credit, one might say, to the
modern self that is capable of plumbing the depths of its own
heritage in such a generous way.
*Times Literary Supplement*
For sociologists, there is no more important philosopher writing in
the world today than Charles Taylor.
*Contemporary Sociology*
Undoubtedly one of the most significant works in moral philosophy
and the history of ideas to appear in recent decades.
*Theology Today*
Surely one of the most important philosophical works of the last
quarter of a century.
*Jerome Bruner*
Taylor has taken on the most delicate and exacting of philosophical
questions, the question of who we are and how we should live...and
he has made this an adventure of self-discovery for his reader. To
have accomplished so much is an important philosophical
achievement. -- Martha Nussbaum * New Republic *
Sources of the Self is in every sense a large book: in
length and in the range of what it covers, but above all in the
generosity and breadth of its sympathies and its interest in
humanity... Few books on such large subjects are so engaging. --
Bernard Williams * New York Review of Books *
A magnificent account, full, fair, well read, well written,
complicated and high spirited-a credit, one might say, to the
modern self that is capable of plumbing the depths of its own
heritage in such a generous way. -- Jeremy Waldron * Times Literary
Supplement *
For sociologists, there is no more important philosopher writing in
the world today than Charles Taylor. -- Alan Wolfe * Contemporary
Sociology *
Undoubtedly one of the most significant works in moral philosophy
and the history of ideas to appear in recent decades. -- Frances S.
Adeney * Theology Today *
Surely one of the most important philosophical works of the last
quarter of a century. -- Jerome Bruner
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