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Life, Death, and Meaning

Key Philosophical Readings on the Big Questions

Life, Death, and Meaning( )
Editor: Benatar, David
Contribution by: Boden, Margaret A.
Feldman, Fred
Fischer, John Martin
Hare, Richard
Hume, David
Joske, W. D.
Kant, Immanuel
Kaufman, Frederick
Lenman, James
Leslie, John
Luper, Steven
Nagel, Thomas
Nozick, Robert
Overall, Christine
Parfit, Derek
Pitcher, George
Rosenbaum, Stephen E.
Schmidtz, David
Schopenhauer, Arthur
Suits, David B.
Taylor, Richard
Waller, Bruce N.
Williams, Bernard
Wolf, Susan
Vice, Samantha
ISBN:978-1-4422-5833-4
Publication Date:Mar 2016
Publisher:Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Incorporated
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:AUD $192.00
Book Description:

Life, Death, and Meaning is designed to introduce students to the key existential questions of philosophy.

Book Details
Pages:484
Detailed Subjects: Philosophy / General
Social Science / Death & Dying
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):15.011 x 23.012 x 2.489 cm
Book Weight:0.636 Kilograms
Author Biography
(Editor)
David Hume was born in Edinburgh to a minor Scottish noble family, raised at the estate of Ninewells, and attended the University of Edinburgh for two years until he was 15. Although his family wished him to study law, he found himself unsuited to this. He studied at home, tried business briefly, and after receiving a small inheritance traveled to France, settling at La Fleche, where Descartes had gone to school. There he completed his first and major philosophical work, A Treatise of Human Nature (1739--40), published in three volumes. Hume claimed on the title page that he was introducing the experimental method of reasoning into moral subjects, and further that he was offering a new way of seeing the limits of human knowledge. Although his work was largely ignored, Hume gained from it a reputation as a philosophical skeptic and an opponent of traditional religion. (In later years he was called "the great infidel.") This reputation led to his being rejected for professorships at both Edinburgh and Glasgow.

To earn his living he served variously as the secretary to General St. Clair, as the attendant to the mad Marquis of Annandale, and as the keeper of the Advocates Library in Edinburgh. While holding these positions, he wrote and published a new version of his philosophy, the two Enquiries, and many essays on social, political, moral, and literary subjects. He also began his six-volume History of England from the Roman Invasion to the Glorious Revolution (1754--62), the work that made him most famous in his lifetime.

Hume retired from public life and settled in Edinburgh, where he was the leading figure in Scottish letters and a good friend to many of the leading intellectuals of the time, including Adam Smith and Benjamin Franklin. During this period, he completed the Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, which he had been working on for more than 25 years. Hume first worked on the Dialogues in the middle of his career, but put them aside as too



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