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In den WarenkorbHardback. Zustand: Good. Presenting: Belief Change and Forms of Life (1986, Macmillan) by D. Z. Phillips ? philosophy with its sleeves rolled up, peering into prayer, doubt, and the ordinary sentences we use to hold a life together. ISBN: 0333389603 . Condition: Good , and gloriously ex-library from St Paul?s Girls? School , complete with inner tickets, stamps, and that faintly scholastic aura of essays just handed in. It?s the only volume here that can produce its own borrowing history as evidence. This is Phillips in his Wittgensteinian workshop, asking why ?belief? behaves badly when we treat it like a theorem, and beautifully when we treat it like part of a form of life ? the patterns of practice, feeling, and talk that make sense of what we mean. He?s suspicious of grand systems that vacuum-pack religion, and equally impatient with debunkers who try to evict it with a crowbar. Instead, he examines how conversion, loss of faith, and the everyday maintenance of trust show up in our language: in promises kept, meals blessed, grief spoken, silence chosen. Less ?prove this? than ?notice that.? Chapters move like thoughtful tutorials: belief as lived grammar rather than secret doctrine; change as relearning a language you already speak ; arguments that misfire because the contestants are playing different games with the same words. Phillips keeps dragging the discussion from cloudbank to kitchen table, showing how pieties and polemics both go astray when they ignore how people actually use words like faith , guilt , forgiveness , hope . It?s precise without being pinched; humane without going misty. From the outside: tidy mid-?80s Macmillan poise?sensible boards or sturdy paperback (printings vary), an unflappable spine, and pages with that soft ivory tone that flatters marginal thinking. Our Good (ex-library) means honest shelf rub, a protective plastic whisper if present, and those inner tickets and due-date slips that function as scholastic provenance. Think ?minor institutional tattoos?: stamps, catalogue codes, maybe a faint shadow where a pocket once lived. Text is clean, binding steady, and the whole book radiates ?I have survived both teenagers and metaphysics.? Inside, the prose is classic Phillips: courteous, exact, gently polemical. He prefers examples to exclamation marks. He?ll analyze a prayer before breakfast with the same care some writers lavish on ontological proofs?and you may end up trusting his results more. Expect cameo appearances from Wittgenstein (forms of life, language-games), sidelong looks at ethics smuggled into metaphysics , and a recurring conviction that description often outperforms explanation when the subject is people. Why this copy? Because Crappy Old Books specialises in the noble paradox: decidedly un -crappy philosophy with just enough lived-in history to prove it worked for its keep. The St Paul?s library traces give it charm and context?evidence of arguments rehearsed, essays sharpened, and at least one epiphany had on a Tuesday. Ideal for: Readers who like their philosophy to check the temperature of the room before redefining God. Theologians allergic to bluster and skeptics allergic to straw men. Teachers who want examples their students can actually live with. Anyone who?s ever thought, ?Maybe the problem isn?t belief, it?s the awkward way we?re talking about it.? Potential side effects: improved tolerance for other people?s sentences, sudden suspicion of capital-letter Arguments, and an urge to replace ?prove? with ?show? in polite company. May cause you to rescue prayer from both pedants and pyrotechnicians. In short: a clear, careful, quietly corrective book about how beliefs change because people do?and how our words should keep up. Belief Change and Forms of Life offers a humane map of the territory where faith, doubt, and daily practice actually meet?brought to you by Crappy Old Books , where the name is self-deprecation and the stock has impeccable library manners.
Anbieter: Antiquariat BehnkeBuch, Neu Kaliß, Deutschland
Verbandsmitglied: GIAQ
22*14,5 cm. OPappband, OSchu. 138 Seiten Umschlag berieben, bestossen, nachgedunkelt und fleckig. Sonst gut. L10-1 ISBN 0333389603 Wichtiger Hinweis: Aufgrund der EPR-Regelung zur Zeit KEIN Versand in EU-Länder. Due to EPR, there is currently no delivery to EU-countries. Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 500.