1st Edition

Dialogues on the Meaning of Life

By Michael Hauskeller Copyright 2026
212 Pages
by Routledge

212 Pages
by Routledge

212 Pages
by Routledge

What does it mean to live a meaningful life? Can life be meaningful at all, and if it can, what exactly makes it so? This new volume in the Philosophical Dialogues on Contemporary Issues series addresses these questions through fictional dialogues that relate the theoretical problems that philosophers tend to focus on to the lives of ordinary people, the concerns they have, and the problems... Read more

Introduction

Prologue

1. First Dialogue

2. Second Dialogue

3. Third Dialogue

4. Fourth Dialogue

5. Fifth Dialogue

6. Sixth Dialogue

7. Seventh Dialogue

Further Reading

Biography

Michael Hauskeller is a German-British philosopher and Professor at the University of Liverpool. He has published on a wide range of subjects. His books include Mythologies of Transhumanism (2016), The Meaning of Life and Death (2019), The Things that Really Matter. Philosophical Conversations on the Cornerstones of Life (2022), and Meaning in Life: A Subjectivist Account (2025).

Iddo Landau is the author of the Foreword and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Haifa, Israel.

“If you want to know what philosophers have been saying recently about what makes life meaningful, but don’t want to trawl though acres of dull academic prose in obscure publications, then this is the book for you. Hauskeller has successfully adapted philosophy’s most influential and engaging format, the Platonic dialogue, to take you on a journey around Liverpool with a Scouse version of Socrates, as he tries to get answers out of a motley crew that includes a nihilist, a transhumanist, a vicar and an antitheist.”

James TartagliaProfessor of Philosophy at the Slovak Academy of Sciences.