Can human life be meaningful? What does talk about lifeās meaning even mean? What is Godās role, if any, in a meaningful life? These three questions frame this one-of-a-kind debate between two philosophers who have spent most of their professional lives thinking and writing about the topic of lifeās meaning.
In this wide-ranging scholarly conversation, Professors Thaddeus Metz and Joshua W. Seachris develop and defend their own unique answers to these questions, while responding to each otherās objections in a lively dialog format. Seachris argues that the concept of lifeās meaning largely revolves around three interconnected ideasāmattering, purpose, and sense-making; that a meaningful human life involves sufficiently manifesting all three; and that God would importantly enhance the meaningfulness of life on each of these three fronts. Metz instead holds that talk of lifeās meaning is about a variety of properties such as meriting pride, transcending oneās animal self, making a contribution, and authoring a life-story. For him, many lives are meaningful insofar as they exercise intelligence in positive, robust, and developmental ways. Finally, Metz argues that God is unnecessary for an objective meaning that suits human nature.
Metz and Seachris develop and defend their own unique answers to these three questions, while responding to each otherās objections in a dialog format that is accessible to students thoughāgiven their new contributionsāwill be of great interest to scholars as well.
Key Features Offers an up-to-date scholarly conversation on lifeās meaning by two researchers at the forefront of research on the topic. Provides a wide-ranging, yet orderly discussion of the most important issues. Accessible for the student investigating the topic for the first time yet also valuable to the scholar working on lifeās meaning. Includes helpful pedagogical features, like: - Chapter outlines and introductions; - Annotated reading lists for both students and research-level readers; - A glossary; and - Clear examples, thought experiments, narratives, and cultural references, which enhance the bookās role in thinking about lifeās meaning and related topics.
What Makes Life Meaningful? - Thaddeus Metz & Joshua W. Seachris
Can human life be meaningful? What does talk about lifeās meaning even mean? What is Godās role, if any, in a meaningful life? These three questions frame this one-of-a-kind debate between two philosophers who have spent most of their professional lives thinking and writing about the topic of lifeās meaning.
In this wide-ranging scholarly conversation, Professors Thaddeus Metz and Joshua W. Seachris develop and defend their own unique answers to these questions, while responding to each otherās objections in a lively dialog format. Seachris argues that the concept of lifeās meaning largely revolves around three interconnected ideasāmattering, purpose, and sense-making; that a meaningful human life involves sufficiently manifesting all three; and that God would importantly enhance the meaningfulness of life on each of these three fronts. Metz instead holds that talk of lifeās meaning is about a variety of properties such as meriting pride, transcending oneās animal self, making a contribution, and authoring a life-story. For him, many lives are meaningful insofar as they exercise intelligence in positive, robust, and developmental ways. Finally, Metz argues that God is unnecessary for an objective meaning that suits human nature.
Metz and Seachris develop and defend their own unique answers to these three questions, while responding to each otherās objections in a dialog format that is accessible to students thoughāgiven their new contributionsāwill be of great interest to scholars as well.
Key Features Offers an up-to-date scholarly conversation on lifeās meaning by two researchers at the forefront of research on the topic. Provides a wide-ranging, yet orderly discussion of the most important issues. Accessible for the student investigating the topic for the first time yet also valuable to the scholar working on lifeās meaning. Includes helpful pedagogical features, like: - Chapter outlines and introductions; - Annotated reading lists for both students and research-level readers; - A glossary; and - Clear examples, thought experiments, narratives, and cultural references, which enhance the bookās role in thinking about lifeās meaning and related topics.