Description
What is evil? What are its forms? How is it motivated? These are questions of the greatest human significance and Raatzsch's treatment of them is sensitive, imaginative, and broadly based. This book brings together different lines of argument from epistemology, moral philosophy, and philosophy of mind in a highly compact and supercharged, yet fully comprehensible form. The result packs an enormous intellectual punch. -- Raymond Geuss, University of Cambridge This original, deeply felt, clearly written, and well-argued book combines Shakespearean analysis, moral philosophy, psychology, and philosophy of literature--all in a succinct, unified, and impressive way. -- Richard Eldridge, Swarthmore College
About the Author
Richard Raatzsch holds the chair for practical philosophy at the European Business School in Wiesbaden, Germany.
Reviews
"What is evil? What are its forms? How is it motivated? These are questions of the greatest human significance and Raatzsch's treatment of them is sensitive, imaginative, and broadly based. This book brings together different lines of argument from epistemology, moral philosophy, and philosophy of mind in a highly compact and supercharged, yet fully comprehensible form. The result packs an enormous intellectual punch."-Raymond Geuss, University of Cambridge
"This original, deeply felt, clearly written, and well-argued book combines Shakespearean analysis, moral philosophy, psychology, and philosophy of literature-all in a succinct, unified, and impressive way."-Richard Eldridge, Swarthmore College
Book Information
ISBN 9780691137339
Author Richard Raatzsch
Format Hardback
Page Count 128
Imprint Princeton University Press
Publisher Princeton University Press
Weight(grams) 28g