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A Common Humanity: Thinking About Love & Truth & Justice

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title A Common Humanity: Thinking About Love & Truth & Justice
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Raimond Gaita
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:304
Dimensions(mm): Height 198,Width 129
Category/GenreEthics and moral philosophy
ISBN/Barcode 9781876485412
ClassificationsDewey:300
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Text Publishing
Imprint The Text Publishing Company
Publication Date 3 April 2000
Publication Country Australia

Description

Our sense of the preciousness of other people is connected with their power to affect us in ways we cannot fathom and in ways against which we can protect ourselves only at the cost of becoming shallow. There is nothing reasonable in the fact that another person's absence can make our lives seem empty. The power of human beings to affect one another in ways beyond reason and beyond merit has offended rationalists and moralists since the dawn of thought, but it is partly what yields to us that sense of human individuality which we express when we say that human beings are unique and irreplaceable. Such attachments, and the joy and the grief which they may cause, condition our sense of preciousness of human beings. Love is the most important of them.

Author Biography

Authors Bio, not available

Reviews

`As Gaita himself counsels in the book, some of the essays need to be read slowly and more than once to grasp their meaning. Rather than this being a chore, it's a deeply rewarding experience. Gaita's writing is lucid and uncluttered by sentimentality, but still it manages to be both warm and inclusive.' * Adelaide Advertiser * `Interestingly, I think the essays achieve a greater degree of poetry than the first book. This second one needs to be read at a slower pace and is all the more rewarding for that ... the writing continually transcends the original account ... This extraordinary book set me reflecting upon my own residency in the world - my own decency, condescension, loves and truths.' * Weekend Herald (NZ) * `"An Unassuageable Longing" explains Christine and makes her real: she is finally chronicled with love and rigour, as was Romulus ... In a book full of extraordinary revelations, this chapter will stay long in the reader's memory.' * Age * `It is a towering piece, intimate and rational, a love song, an elegy ... This is a moving book.' * Courier Mail * `It is impossible not to be moved by this achingly raw remembrance and grateful for the stunning candour of its author.' * Sunday Age * `Somehow, what was true of Romulus, of the light his goodness cast upon the world a light that made it possible for his son Raimond to survive childhood without bitterness, to love without shame or condescension his sick mother who had abandoned him this light binds together and gleams out of the book as well. There are moments you can find them, captured in passing, in After Romulus when the light settles for a second and you can see it at work.' * Weekend Australian * `In After Romulus Raimond Gaita invites us into the far reaches of his considerable mind and the deep places of his soul. This will be felt as a privilege by most readers, as it should. And it is, as it turns out, not just a sequel, but an extension of all that was good in his initial story. It is a book to stretch the mind and enlarge the heart.' * Canberra Times * `This is the kind of writing that is so brave it makes you flinch, so profound it makes you examine yourself, and so moving it makes you see life afresh. I was entranced as usual by Rai Gaita's limpid style, and his signature combination of philosophical intellect and warm heart.' * Anna Funder * `There are times when the reader is right there beside Gaita, delighting in the stinging descriptions of his childhood at Frogmore and sympathising with the heartache that confronted him so early in life.' * Sun Herald * `Raimond Gaita's After Romulus is an eloquent meditation on love, friendship, philosophy and loss. Gaita's tragic loss of his mother at an early age reminds us of Emily Dickinson's `The craving is upon the child like a claw it cannot remove'. The reader is compelled to admiration by this brave book.' * Alex Miller,Sydney Morning Herald's best books 2011 * `This exceptional book inspired me to reflect on my own place in the world.' * The Week *