
What do I need to be good?How can I truly be happy?To whom or to what dare I give myultimate loyalty, my deepest love,my full and total service? Out of allthis moral discourse and analysis,what can I find and use to make a life,and not just a living?-from the IntroductionAfter more than thirty years as minister at Harvard University, Peter J. Gomes has given his share of advice to the best and the brightest as they set sail into the world. Yet he has found that even these highly privileged students often run aground on the harsh realities of a life based in values that lead to ruin. The Good Life is his distillation of years of observation and insight into what is wrong and how we can all set our minds and hearts on higher things.Gomes begins with the contemporary crisis of moral education in higher learning and subverts the prevalent assertion that the youth of today's colleges and universities are spoiled and lacking in the capacity and desire to become good people and good citizens. Impressed by the sharp moral curiosity of young people today, as well as their strong desire to know, to be, and to do good, Gomes sets out to reclaim the tradition of virtue he believes can make this the greatest generation.In this search for a new nobility, he distinguishes between the plausible lies that our culture tells us about the good life and the fantastic truths that alone can bring true and abiding happiness, working through each of the unquestioned values of modern life. Along the way he redefines the central elementsof the pursuit of the good life (failure, success, discipline, and freedom), then offers a new presentation of the four cardinal virtues (prudence, justice, temperance, and fortitude), and finally concludes with a passionate argument for the three theological virtues of faith, hope, and love.A challenge to educators, civic leaders, parents, and the youth who hold our collective future, The Good Life is a timely and important book about the recovery of moral kn
How can individuals navigate modern cultural pressures to cultivate a life defined by virtue, purpose, and enduring happiness? Peter J. Gomes, drawing on his extensive tenure as the minister at Harvard University, argues that contemporary society suffers from a crisis of moral education that prioritizes material success over character. He proposes a framework for reclaiming traditional virtues, suggesting that true nobility is found by rejecting cultural falsehoods in favor of established ethical and theological principles.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Readers frequently note the accessible yet intellectually rigorous nature of the prose, which bridges the gap between academic moral philosophy and practical pastoral guidance. Experts often highlight this work as a significant contribution to contemporary discourse on character formation and the role of traditional values in modern education.
Page Count:
384
Publication Date:
2002-04-01
Publisher:
HarperOne
ISBN-10:
0060000759
ISBN-13:
9780060000752
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