1st Edition

Is Nothing Sacred?

Edited By Ben Rogers Copyright 2004
158 Pages
by Routledge

160 Pages
by Routledge

160 Pages
by Routledge

We call many things sacred, from cows, churches and paintings to flags and burial grounds. Is it still meaningful to talk of things being sacred, or is the idea merely a relic of a bygone religious age? Does everything - and every life - have its price? Is Nothing Sacred? is a stimulating and wide-ranging debate about some of the major moral dilemmas facing us today, such as the value of... Read more
Introduction, Ben Rogers; Chapter 1 Nature, Science, and the Sacred, Richard Norman; Chapter 2 Is Nature Sacred?, Alan Holland; Chapter 3 Is Art Sacred?, Nigel Warburton; Chapter 4 Art and the Limitations of Experience, Matthew Kieran; Chapter 5 Is Life Sacred?, Suzanne Uniacke; Chapter 6 The Sacred and the Profane, Simona Giordano, John Harris; Chapter 7 Is Liberty Sacred?, Alan Haworth; Chapter 8 The Limits of Liberty, Michael Clark; Chapter 9 The Idea of the Sacred, Piers Benn; Chapter 10 Salvaging the Sacred, Simon Blackburn; Chapter 11 The Sacred and the Scientist, Richard Dawkins; Chapter 12 The Concept of the Sacred, Ronald Dworkin;

Biography

Ben Rogers is based at the Institute for Public Policy Research in London. He is the author of Beef and Liberty: Beef, Bull and English Patriots (2003), A J Ayer: A Life (1999) and Pascal (1998).

'A collection that demands to be read by anyone with an interest in philosophy, even (perhaps especially) if they have a faith' – David Self, Times Educational Supplement

'Outstanding' – Bel Mooney, The Times

'This is a collection that demands to be read by anyone with an interest in philosophy.' – Times Education Supplement