Spirituality, Diversion, and Decadence: The Contemporary Predicament

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SUNY Press, 1 ene 1992 - 350 páginas
This book presents a philosophical rethinking of the meaning and nature of spiritual discipline. It offers a new way of describing and justifying practices like praying, meditating, fasting, and yoga, and it provides an innovative case for their contemporary importance.

Spiritual discipline is especially effective at combatting Pascalian diversion, the pursuit of activities that occupy the mind just enough to avoid thinking about important things; and Nietzschean decadence, the proclivity for extirpating instinctive drives instead of satisfying or sublimating them. In addition to overcoming diversion and decadence in contemporary consumerist culture, VanNess recommends spiritual discipline as a means of political resistance to powerful institutions which seek to exercise social control in democratic societies by promulgating addictive patterns of consumption.

Finally, he argues that regimens of spiritual discipline can serve healthful and liberating purposes, and generally promote fullness of life, only insofar as they are shaped by an ethos of intellectual criticism and aesthetic experimentation.

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Índice

Categoreal Themes and their Practical Applications
3
19
13
Nietzsches Negation
203
A Novel Response
233
Beyond Diversion and Decadence
273
Notes
281
Select Bibliography
311
Index
335
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Sobre el autor (1992)

Peter H. VanNess is Assistant Professor of Philosophy of Religion at Union Theological Siminary in New York City.

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