
|
Subscribe to our newsletter and you'll continuously
be informed about our new books, series and journals.
You can customize this e-mail newsletter to your particular
needs and interests.
Newsletters include special discount codes.
To subscribe or change existing preferences press the subscribe button
|
|
|

|
|
Robert S. Hartman: Freedom to Live.
The Robert Hartman Story. Ellis, Arthur R. (Ed.)
Amsterdam/Atlanta, GA, 1994, 204 pp.
A volume in Hartman Institute Axiology Studies (HIAS, a special series within VIBS), Edited by Rem B. Edwards.
|
Series: Value Inquiry Book Series 7
Hartman Institute Axiology Studies
This book is both a personal and a philosophical autobiography of Robert S. Hartman, the creator of formal axiology. After experiencing first-hand the horrible effects of World War I and the beginnings of Nazism in Germany, Hartman wondered what could be done to organize goodness instead of badness - for a change. First, the concept of "good" must be defined. Next, different kinds of goodness, like intrinsic, extrinsic, and systemic, must be differentiated. Then this understanding must be used to comprehend and to change the world, including its economic, political, military, religious, educational, intellectual, and psychological dimensions. By telling his own story, Hartman gives his readers a glimpse of the form of the good and of a much better world.
|
|


|
Tijnmuiden 7
1046 AK Amsterdam
The Netherlands
T: +31-20-611 48 21
F: +31-20-447 29 79
248 East 44th Street - 2nd floor
New York, NY 10017
USA
T: 1-800-225-3998
F: 1-800-853-3881
Toll-free in the USA
info@rodopi.nl
|
|
|