The Soul of the World | |
Author: | Roger Scruton |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Subject: | The sacred |
Publisher: | Princeton University Press |
Pub Date: | 2014 |
Media Type: | Print (Hardcover and Paperback) |
Pages: | 216 |
Isbn: | 9780691161570 |
The Soul of the World is a 2014 book by the English philosopher Roger Scruton.
The author argues for the reality of a transcendent dimension, and maintains that the experience of the sacred plays a decisive role even in a secular society. Scruton supports the concept of "cognitive dualism", which means that a human can be explained both as a physical organism, and as a subjective person who relates to the world through concepts which do not belong in physical sciences, and without which it would not be possible to understand human life. Scruton discusses the meaning of the sacred, evaluating and criticizing theories such as those of Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, as put forward in works such as Totem and Taboo (1913), and the anthropologist René Girard, as put forward in works such as Violence and the Sacred (1972).[1]
The Soul of the World was first published by Princeton University Press in 2014.[2]
Marcus Tanner reviewed the book in The Independent:
Lest any vicar feel tempted to pick up this book in search of inspiration for Sunday sermons, it should be pointed out that Scruton doesn't have much to say specifically about God or Christianity, except at the end. What he mostly defends in these essays is a thinking person's right to say no to a boiled-down Darwinism that reduces all relationships to contracts and all human behaviour and emotions to biological selection and adaptation. ... Scruton argues persuasively that much of what passes for scientific fact today is just the latest fashion in physics. But one wonders who would find this eloquent plea on behalf of the right to interpret things in various ways objectionable.[3]
The book was also reviewed in The New Criterion,[4] The Oxonian Review[5] Prospect,[6] The Financial Times,[7] The Times Literary Supplement[8]