null

For Love of Wisdom

Essays on the Nature of Philosophy

$29.95

Paperback

In stock

 
(No reviews yet) Write a Review

Other Editions and Formats

Product Details

Product Code:
FLOWP
Format:
Paperback
ISBN/UPC:
9781586170875
Length:
0.69 (in)
Size (HxW):
9 x 6 (in)
Pages:
335
Publication date:
January 29, 2007
Weight:
16.5 oz
All Categories

Product Overview

An Ignatius Press Reprint

Ignatius Press Reprints are identical in content with the most recent print edition of the original title. In order to keep important titles available at reasonable prices, we reprint them digitally in small quantities. We use high quality, acid-free paper, but the books are not smyth-sewn as is customary with our offset press print editions.


 

In these elegant and engaging essays, the internationally acclaimed Thomist, Josef Pieper, defines and defends philosophy as the search for and love of wisdom. True philosophy is not the work of joyless academics pondering over esoteric writings that have no relation to real life. Rather, the philosophical act, in which all reasonable men can participate, begins in wonder at what is, and gratitude for what is given, and ends in love.

In his encyclical letter Fides et Ratio (On the Relationship between Faith and Reason), Pope John Paul II called for a revitalization of true philosophy, for man can find fulfillment “only in choosing to enter the truth, to make a home under the shade of Wisdom and dwell there.” Pieper’s essays make the same ardent and convincing plea.

Josef Pieper is renowned for having popularized the philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas, a brilliant student of St. Thomas who, in his own voluminous works, has made the deep thought of the "Angelic Doctor"; more accessible and understandable to the modern reader.

Editorial Reviews

“Pieper’s profound insights are impressive an even formidable”
New York Times

“Pieper has subjects involved in everyone’s life; he has theses that are so counter to the prevailing trends as to be sensational; and he has a style that is memorably clear and direct”.
Chicago Tribune

Reviews

(No reviews yet) Write a Review