how to make a website for free
Hard Atheism and the Ethics of Desire: An Alternative to Morality

PDF Hard Atheism and the Ethics of Desire: An Alternative to Morality by Joel Marks in History

Description

About the book: An adventurous journey from the stone circle of Almendes in Portugal to the temples of Malta becomes a journey through a new hologram of history. Every event; every temple visit and also every difficulty is guided and thereby unexpected and unpredictable. Sabine Lichtenfels with her mediumistic talent shows simply and modestly what it means to travel in full trust in divine guidance. The temples of Malta act as antennae to the past for her and transmit descriptions and pictures of the culture that had once erected these buildings. This information gives a breathtaking view into a highly developed fulfilling and sensual life. And that at a time where we once thought that primitive people were running around with axes. At the center of this high archaic culture was care for all that lives. The strong current of Eros and the mutual joy between the genders was sacred to them. They knew neither private property nor separation. The body of the woman was like the body of the earth; nourishing and giving. Their religion was the celebration of life itself; from the first sunbeams in the morning until the sparking stars in the night. For thousands of years; their non-violent culture flourished; based on the friendship between the genders. For the author; this view into the past is simultaneously a start of a humane future. The temple of love is to be recreated in the light of modern knowledge; in practical life between men and women in model communities for a future without war.


#7384009 in Books 2016-12-16Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.27 x .56 x 5.83l; .0 #File Name: 3319437984195 pages


Review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. synthesis and expansionBy William IrwinIf you haven’t read Marks’s previous books; start with this one. Hard Atheism offers a synthesis and expansion of Marks’s arguments for amoralism; also known as moral antirealism; and for the philosophy of “desirism”. The book is quirky in its style; featuring lots of personal anecdotes and self-reflection. Hard Atheism should be of interest to scholars and yet be accessible to the general reader.

© Copyright 2025 Books History Library. All Rights Reserved.