Surviving death /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Johnston, Mark, 1954- author.
Imprint:Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, ©2010.
Description:1 online resource (ix. 393 pages, 2 unnumbered pages of plates) : color illustrations
Language:English
Series:Carl G. Hempel Lecture Ser.
Carl G. Hempel Lecture Ser.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11245812
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780691130125
0691130124
9780691130132
0691130132
9781400834600
1400834600
1282936158
9781282936157
9786612936159
6612936150
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
English.
Print version record.
Summary:Johnston presents an argument for a form of immortality that divests the notion of any supernatural elements. The book is packed with illuminating philosophical reflection on the question of what we are, and what it is for us to persist over time.
Other form:Print version: Johnston, Mark, 1954- Surviving death. Princeton : Princeton University Press, ©2010 9780691130125
Standard no.:9786612936159
9780691130132
Description
Summary:

Why supernatural beliefs are at odds with a true understanding of the afterlife

In this extraordinary book, Mark Johnston sets out a new understanding of personal identity and the self, thereby providing a purely naturalistic account of surviving death.

Death threatens our sense of the importance of goodness. The threat can be met if there is, as Socrates said, "something in death that is better for the good than for the bad." Yet, as Johnston shows, all existing theological conceptions of the afterlife are either incoherent or at odds with the workings of nature. These supernaturalist pictures of the rewards for goodness also obscure a striking consilience between the philosophical study of the self and an account of goodness common to Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism, and Buddhism: the good person is one who has undergone a kind of death of the self and who lives a life transformed by entering imaginatively into the lives of others, anticipating their needs and true interests. As a caretaker of humanity who finds his or her own death comparatively unimportant, the good person can see through death.

But this is not all. Johnston's closely argued claims that there is no persisting self and that our identities are in a particular way "Protean" imply that the good survive death. Given the future-directed concern that defines true goodness, the good quite literally live on in the onward rush of humankind. Every time a baby is born a good person acquires a new face.

Physical Description:1 online resource (ix. 393 pages, 2 unnumbered pages of plates) : color illustrations
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9780691130125
0691130124
9780691130132
0691130132
9781400834600
1400834600
1282936158
9781282936157
9786612936159
6612936150