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When liberals argue that a state which upholds individual rights and equality of opportunity is better than a totalitarian or caste society, they view this as a rationally defensible mor

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the clarity of the relevant perceptions of the apparent

causal agent, accompanied by a corresponding decrease in

the clarity of the relevant perceptions of the entity

appar-ently acted upon

Leibniz’s mature metaphysics includes a threefold

clas-sification of entities that must be accorded some degree of

reality: ideal entities, well-founded phenomena, and

actual existents, i.e monads with their perceptions and

appetites Material objects are examples of well-founded

phenomena, according to Leibniz, while space and time

are ideal entities In the following passage from another

letter to de Volder, Leibniz formulated the distinction

between actual and ideal entities:

in actual entities there is nothing but discrete quantity, namely,

the multitude of monads, i.e simple substances But

continu-ous quantity is something ideal, which pertains to possibles, and

to actuals, insofar as they are possible Indeed, a continuum

involves indeterminate parts, whereas, by contrast, there is

noth-ing indefinite in actual entities, in which every division that can be

made, is made Actual things are composed in the manner that a

number is composed of unities, ideal things are composed in the

manner that a number is composed of fractions The parts are

actual in the real whole, but not in the ideal By confusing ideal

things with real substances when we seek actual parts in the order

of possibles and indeterminate parts in the aggregate of actual

things, we entangle ourselves in the labyrinth of the continuum

and in inexplicable contradictions

Leibniz’s consideration of the labyrinth of the

con-tinuum was one source of his monadology Ultimately, he

reached the conclusion that whatever can be infinitely

divided without reaching entities that can not be further

divided is not a basic individual in an acceptable ontology

In part, Leibniz’s reasoning here turns on his beliefs that

divisible entities of the sort noted can not satisfy the

stand-ards for substantial unity required of basic individuals

The originality and complexity of Leibniz’s reasoning

concerning these topics is on display in his

correspond-ence with de Volder, and in his correspondcorrespond-ence with

Arnauld In the process of refining the metaphysical

con-siderations that shaped the monadology, Leibniz

formu-lated and defended the following doctrines: the *identity

of indiscernibles—the thesis that individual substances differ

with respect to their intrinsic, non-relational properties; the

theory of minute perceptions—that each created monad

has some perceptions of which it lacks awareness; as well as

the theses of universal expression, the pre-established

harmony, and spontaneity, previously mentioned

An important element in Leibniz’s treatment of entities

he regarded as ideal is his treatment of *space and *time,

which is formulated in his correspondence with Samuel

Clarke Leibniz set out to explicate the notion of place and

space in terms of the spatial relations among material

objects, thereby avoiding commitment to space as an

independent entity

Another route to Leibniz’s monadology may be traced

beginning from some of his conclusions concerning

cer-tain of the well-founded phenomena, in particular,

mater-ial objects He argued that a correct application of Galileo’s

discoveries concerning the acceleration of freely falling bodies to the phenomena of impact established that force is not to be identified with quantity of motion, i.e mass times velocity, as Descartes had held, but is to be measured by mass times the velocity squared From these physical results, Leibniz drew important metaphysical conclu-sions—that force, unlike quantity of motion, cannot be identified with some mode of extension and that, there-fore, Descartes was mistaken in identifying matter with extension and its modifications He concluded that each material substance must have an immaterial component, a substantial form, which accounts for its active force The labyrinth of the continuum, previously noted, is one of two labyrinths that, according to Leibniz, vex the human mind The second concerns the possibility of free choice The nub of this problem for Leibniz is to explain how things might have been otherwise than they are Leibniz was committed to the concept-containment account of truth, i.e that a proposition is true just in case the concept of its predicate is contained in the concept of its subject But that seems to imply that all true proposi-tions are conceptually true, and, hence, necessarily true, and that, therefore, things could not have been otherwise than they are Leibniz denied that all conceptually true propositions are necessarily true, employing the doctrine

of infinite analysis, affirming that in the case of contingent truths, the subject concept contains the predicate concept, but there is no finite analysis of the relevant concepts that establishes that fact By contrast, Leibniz argued that in the case of necessary truths there is always a finite analysis

of the relevant concepts that constitutes a proof of the proposition in question

Leibniz made important contributions to philosophical

theology The Theodicy contains his solution to the

prob-lem of *evil, i.e to the question how the facts concerning evil in this world can be consistent with the conception of God as omnipotent, morally perfect, and creator—a con-ception to which Leibniz was committed One basic ele-ment in his answer to this question is his thesis that this is the best possible world In outline, Leibniz reached this conclusion in the following manner He was totally com-mitted to the *principle of sufficient reason, i.e the thesis that for every state of affairs that obtains there must be a sufficient reason why it obtains Applied to God’s choice

of a possible world to create, the principle of sufficient rea-son implies that God must have a sufficient rearea-son for cre-ating just this world, according to Leibniz But, given God’s moral perfection, this reason must have to do with the value of the world selected Hence, the world selected must be the best possible

Leibniz also made what he took to be a significant con-tribution to the formulation of the *ontological argument for the existence of God He claimed that the ontological argument, as formulated by Descartes, for example, proved that a perfect being exists, with one crucial pro-viso, namely, the premiss that a perfect being is possible Leibniz believed that none of his predecessors had shown this premiss to be true, and so he set out to do so The basic

510 Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm

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idea of his purported proof is this A perfect being is a being

with every perfection A perfection is a simple, positive

property Therefore, there can be no demonstration that

there is a formal contradiction involved in supposing that

one and the same entity has all the perfections Since there

can be no demonstration of a formal contradiction, it must

be possible for one and the same being to have them all

Such a being would be a perfect being Hence, a perfect

being is possible

Although Leibniz was not as taken with

epistemo-logical problems as Descartes or the British Empiricists,

none the less he made significant contributions to the

the-ory of knowledge In his commentary on John Locke, the

New Essays on Human Understanding, Leibniz argued

force-fully for the thesis that the mind is furnished with innate

ideas Leibniz summarized his debate with Locke on this

point as follows:

Our differences are on matters of some importance It is a matter

of knowing if the soul in itself is entirely empty like a writing

tablet on which nothing has as yet been written (tabula rasa)

and if everything inscribed there comes solely from the senses

and experience, or if the soul contains originally the sources of

various concepts and doctrines that external objects merely

reveal on occasion

The claim that some concepts and doctrines are innate

to the mind is important for Leibniz’s metaphysics as well

as his theory of knowledge, because he held that some of

the central concepts of metaphysics, e.g the concepts of

self, substance, and causation, are innate

Throughout his career, Leibniz developed various

sys-tems of formal logic, most based on the concept

contain-ment account of truth, previously contain-mentioned Some of

those systems provide the elements of an approach to

for-mal logic that is a genuine alternative to Aristotelian logic

and contemporary quantification theory r.c.sle

The definitive edn of Leibniz’s work, still a long way from

com-pletion, will be G W Leibniz: Sämtliche Schriften und Briefe

(Darm-stadt, 1923– ) Series 2 and 6 are, respectively, the philosophical

correspondence and writings Currently, the most useful edn is

G W Leibniz: Die philosophischen Schriften, ed C J Gerhardt, 7

vols (Berlin, 1875–90)

The best source of bibliographic information concerning

Leib-niz’s work is Émile Ravier, Bibliographie des Œuvres de Leibniz

(Paris, 1937), as supplemented by Paul Schrecker, ‘Une

bibliogra-phie de Leibniz’, Revue philosophique de la France et de l’Étranger

(1938)

The best source of bibliographic information concerning the

secondary literature on Leibniz’s work is Kurt Muller and Albert

Heinekamp (eds.), Leibniz-Bibliographie: Die Literatur uber Leibniz

bis 1980 (Frankfurt am Main, 1984).

The most complete edn of Leibniz’s philosophical work in

English is Leroy E Loemker, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz:

Philosoph-ical Papers and Letters (Dordrecht, 1969) Also available are the

New Essays on Human Understanding, tr Peter Remnant and

Jonathan Bennett (Cambridge, 1981), and the Theodicy, ed Austin

Farrer, tr E M Huggard (New Haven, Conn., 1952) A useful

selection with introduction and notes is Leibniz: Philosophical

Texts, tr and ed R Woolhouse and R Francks (Oxford,

1998)

As a sample of the vast secondary literature on Leibniz, the

fol-lowing may be recommended: C D Broad, Leibniz: An Introduc-tion (Cambridge, 1975); Benson Mates, The Philosophy of Leibniz (Oxford, 1986); Nicholas Rescher, Leibniz: An Introduction to his Philosophy (Totowa, NJ, 1979); Catherine Wilson, Leibniz’s Meta-physics (Manchester, 1989); N Jolley (ed.), The Cambridge Compan-ion to Leibniz (Cambridge, 1994).

Leibniz’s law: see identity of indiscernibles.

lemma. A lemma is a proposition put forward in the course of an *argument, often accompanied by its own proof It thus differs from a premiss in that it need not occur at the start of the argument In discussions of know-ledge, the ‘No false lemmas’ principle is sometimes men-tioned: this is the principle that a belief will not count as knowledge if the chain of reasoning that leads to it

W Hodges, Logic, sect 11 (Harmondsworth, 1977).

Lenin, Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov (1870–1924) Lenin was the leader of the Bolshevik faction in Russian politics and architect of the 1917 Revolution Although thus not pri-marily interested in philosophy, his two major contribu-tions in this field were of considerable influence

The first of these, Materialism and Empirio-Criticism

(1909) was an extended polemic against his fellow Bolshe-vik Bogdanov’s espousal of Mach’s view that the world consisted entirely of sensations Lenin’s account was largely a simplified version of the philosophy found in Engels’s later writings It consisted in a fairly crude materi-alism whose central themes were the two doctrines of the external reality of the world and the ‘copy’ theory of knowledge Lenin was not so much interested here in the philosophical arguments as in maintaining his view that, under the circumstances, this was the only philosophy that would benefit the proletariat

After the 1914 débâcle, however, Lenin took a much less instrumental view of philosophy In order to reorientate his perspective in face of the catastrophe that had over-taken European socialism, Lenin spent an amazing amount of time studying Hegel in great detail The con-trast between *materialism and *idealism characteristic of his earlier work was now replaced by a contrast between dialectical and non-dialectical thinking Lenin emphasized

the influence of Hegel’s Logic on Marx and even went so far

as to claim that human consciousness not only reflected the objective world but created it Although only

pub-lished posthumously in 1929, the Philosophical Notebooks in

which this study was recorded did much to renew interest

in the Hegelian roots of Marxism d.mcl

*empirio-criticism

L Althusser, Lenin and Philosophy (London, 1972).

V Lenin, Materialism and Empirio-Criticism (Moscow, 1964).

—— Collected Works, xxxviii: Philosophical Notebooks (Moscow,

1967)

lesbian feminism Lesbian feminists are largely concerned with issues at the intersection of female identity and

lesbian feminism 511

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sexual–affectional orientation Issues which arise at this

intersection are distinct from those that arise around

sex–gender and sexual–affectional orientation in general

Most lesbian feminists hold that self-conscious lesbianism

threatens dominant political and social systems in a way

that other identities (e.g as woman or as gay man) do not

The reasoning is this: Patriarchal systems are founded on

valuing men above women Both heterosexuality and

male *homosexuality preserves this valuing of men above

women Only lesbian *feminism which explicitly values

women and is largely unconcerned with men really

chal-lenges this valuing For a woman to love another woman is

thus a political and revolutionary act Other philosophical

issues associated with lesbian feminism include: whether

lesbian identity is essential or socially constructed,

whether there is a distinctly lesbian ethics, whether lesbian

feminists should be separatists (withdraw as far as possible

from patriarchal political and social systems) c.mck

Marilyn Frye, The Politics of Reality (Trumansbrug, NY, 1983).

Adrienne Rich, On Lies, Secrets and Silences (New York, 1979).

Les´niewski, Stanislaw(1886–1939) Polish logician He

reacted to the logical *paradoxes by demanding extreme

rigour in logic For example, he maintained that a system

of logic should involve no assumptions about the world,

except what is involved in identifying a written formula

This led him to develop three unorthodox axiomatic

sys-tems of logic: protothetic, ontology, and mereology

Pro-tothetic is a system of propositional logic based on the

notion of equivalence, mereology axiomatizes the

part–whole relation, and ontology involves a controversial

attempt to interpret *quantifiers without assuming that

anything exists beyond written expressions Les´niewski

also proposed an unusually sophisticated theory of

*defin-itions His influence has largely been indirect, through his

students (notably Tarski, whose definition of truth owes

much to him) This may change if his writings become

Peter M Simons, ‘Les´niewski’s Logic and its Relation to Classical

and Free Logics’, in Georg Dorn and P Weingartner (eds.),

Foundations of Logic and Linguistics: Problems and their Solutions

(New York, 1985)

Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim (1729–81) German

philoso-pher and dramatist, who upheld the *Enlightenment

ideals of freedom and tolerance, but in aesthetics

antici-pated Romanticism In Laocoon: On the Limits of Painting

and Poetry (1766) he tried to distinguish the laws governing

the literary and the pictorial arts, and opposed

Winckel-mann’s classical aesthetics, in favour of expressive art free

of formal constraints In a series of papers, the Hamburg

Dramaturgy (1767–9), he discussed the true nature of

Aristotelian catharsis and the superiority of Shakespeare

to French tragedy His theological works, especially

The Education of the Human Race (1780), attacked religious

dogmatism in the name of true religion ‘What education

is to the individual man, revelation is to the whole human

race’: an age in which men will fulfil their duty for its

own sake will follow the present age of pleasure and ambi-tion His avowal of Spinozism, just before his death, stimulated the revival of Spinoza, previously treated as a

A Ugrinsky (ed.), Lessing and the Enlightenment (London, 1986).

Leucippus(5th century bc) The founder of *atomism Virtually nothing is known of his life, and his very exist-ence was disputed in antiquity, but his role as the origina-tor of atomism is firmly attested by Aristotle and Theophrastus, though the evidence does not allow any distinction between his doctrines and those of his more celebrated successor Democritus He wrote a

comprehen-sive account of the universe, the Great World-System The

single surviving quotation from his work (from a work

entitled On Mind, which may have been a part of the Great World-System) asserts universal *determinism: ‘Nothing

happens at random, but everything from a rational

D Furley, The Greek Cosmologists (Cambridge, 1987), ch 9.

Leviathan.L EVIATHAN or the Matter, Form, and Power of A

C OMMONWEALTH Ecclesiastical and Civil, Hobbes’s

master-piece on moral and political philosophy, was published in

1651 (Latin version 1668) The title comes from chapter 41

of the book of Job The leviathan is a sea monster who ‘is a king over all the children of pride’ (verse 34) That Hobbes

chose Leviathan as the title of his book shows that he

regarded pride, in particular the view that the individual citizen knows enough to challenge the laws of the sover-eign, as providing an explanation of why an artificial leviathan, the state, needs to have absolute power The book is divided into four parts: the first provides an account of persons prior to the state; the second shows how the state must be constructed to serve its purpose, lasting peace; the third shows how this is compatible with Christian Scripture; and the fourth is an attack on Roman Catholicism The importance of religion is shown by the fact that the third and fourth parts comprise half of

Levinas, Emmanuel (1906–1995) French philosopher influenced by *phenomenology and *Jewish philosophy Born in Lithuania, Levinas introduced phenomenology into France in the 1930s after studying with Husserl and Heidegger, thinkers to whom he owes a clear debt His

lec-tures (Time and the Other (1948) ) introduced themes such as

time, death, and relations with others which are expanded

in his major work, Totality and Infinity (1961) His main

con-cern is to delineate an ethical ‘face-to-face’ relation with the Other, which, while immediate and singular, is none the less transcendent Seeking such a possibility takes him to the ‘limits of phenomenology’, and to criticize many previ-ous philosophers for their preoccupations with ontology

In Otherwise than Being (1974) he seeks language forms

which might circumvent such preoccupations, and enable

an ethical exchange with the *Other Levinas also published

512 lesbian feminism

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*French philosophy, today.

Sean Hand (ed.), The Levinas Reader (Oxford, 1989).

Lévi-Strauss, Claude (1908– ) Anthropologist and

ethnographer; leading exponent of the method of

*struc-turalism as applied to myth, ritual, oral narrative, kinship

systems, and modes of symbolic representation His aim is

not so much to interpret particular instances, but rather to

reveal the underlying structure—the deep grammar of

mythical thought—which unites the otherwise endless

multiplicity of culture-specific meanings and forms Thus

an ancient Greek and a modern Amerindian or Eskimo

myth may well turn out, despite all their surface

differ-ences, to derive from the same generative matrix of

con-flicts posed and resolved For Lévi-Strauss, mythical

thought is a kind of ‘bricolage’, a logic that makes do with

all manner of found or improvised cultural material, but

which cannot be regarded as in any sense more ‘primitive’

than our own His work thus combines a rigorous

formal-ism with an immense range of sources—drawing upon

cultures past and present—and a style that on occasion

seeks to orchestrate these themes in a quasi-Wagnerian

Claude Lévi-Strauss, The Raw and the Cooked, tr J and D

Weight-man (New York, 1969)

—— The View from Afar, tr J Neugroschel and P Hoss (New

York, 1985)

Lévy-Bruhl, Lucien (1857–1939) Largely remembered for

his studies Primitive Mentality and How Natives Think.

Lévy-Bruhl argued that the mentality of so-called

primi-tive peoples was radically different from that of Western

rationality He characterized primitive experience as

‘mystical’ in the sense of being dominated by affectivity,

whereas scientific experience is largely cognitive

Further-more, the ‘pre-logical thought’ of primitive peoples is

bound, not so much by the law of non-contradiction, as by

participation, as when members of a totemic group

under-stand themselves to be identical with their totem

How-ever, in the Notebooks written during his last two years,

Lévy-Bruhl conceded that the isolation of a general

primi-tive mentality had misdirected him: mystical participation

is more easily observable among primitive peoples, but is

J Cazeneuve, Lucien Lévy-Bruhl (New York, 1972).

Lewis, Clarence Irving (1883–1964) American

philoso-pher whose early work focused on symbolic and modal

logic and who then went on to work in epistemology,

gen-eral value theory, social philosophy, and ethics He argued

that empirical knowledge depends upon both a sensuous

or subjective *‘given’ and an *a priori set of principles and

categories through which we interpret the given

Accord-ing to his ‘conceptualistic pragmatism’, however, the a

priori ‘has alternatives’; it is not a set of eternal or self-evident

truths or necessary structures of the mind, but a set of

conceptual schemes whose organization of our experience

is subject to modification on pragmatic grounds, subject to change, that is, when it does not conduce to the ‘long-run satisfaction’ of our human needs k.h

P A Schilpp, The Philosophy of C I Lewis (La Salle, Ill., 1966).

Lewis, David K.(1941–2001) One of the most important and influential figures in American philosophy in the late twentieth century Lewis studied at Harvard with Quine, and spent four years at UCLA (in the company of Mon-tague and Carnap) before moving to Princeton, where he taught for thirty years He was also a regular visitor to Aus-tralia, where he found, and helped to shape, a lively phil-osophical scene He contributed significantly to the philosophies of mind, language, and logic, but he is best known for his systematic metaphysical system dominated

by two ideas One is the thesis he calls ‘Humean superve-nience’: the claim that the world entirely consists of local physical matters of fact, and all other facts supervene on these facts (*Supervenience.) This thesis is Humean in its denial of necessary connections between matters of fact The other is his modal realism: other possible worlds and their inhabitants exist (*Possible worlds.) Lewis argues for his modal realism by appealing to its philosophical utility: real possible worlds are invoked to explain such diverse phenomena as causation, conditionals, the contents of propositional attitudes, and the nature of properties As Lewis says, his modal realism has met with many ‘incredu-lous stares’ but few convincing counter-arguments t.c

*modal realism

D K Lewis, Philosophical Papers, 2 vols (Oxford, 1986).

Lexicon, the Philosophical Originally compiled by Daniel Dennett and Joe Lambert, and later by Dennett alone, this collection of definitions converts proper names

of (mostly twentieth-century) philosophers into common nouns, verbs, adverbs, and adjectives Entry examples

fol-low braithwaite, n The interval of time between two

books ‘His second book followed his first after a long

braithwaite.’ carnap, n A formally defined symbol, oper-ator, special bit of notation grice, n Conceptual intricacy.

‘His examination of Hume is distinguished by erudition

and grice.’ Hence, griceful, adj., and griceless, adj., ‘An obvi-ous and griceless polemic’ hintikka, n A measure of belief,

the smallest logically discernible difference between beliefs; ‘He argued with me all night, but did not alter my

beliefs one hintikka.’ quine, v To deny resolutely the

exist-ence or importance of something real or significant

‘Some philosophers have quined classes, and some have even quined physical objects.’ Occasionally used intr., e.g., ‘You think I quine, sir I assure you I do not!’ The eighth edition of the Lexicon is available from the Ameri-can Philosophical Association d.h.s

lex talionis The law of retaliation, according to which deserved *punishment is neither more nor less than the harm done in a crime, and ideally mirrors the crime It

appears in the Code of Hammurabi (c.1700bc) but is best

lex talionis 513

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known in the biblical statement ‘life for life, eye for eye,

tooth for tooth wound for wound ’ (Exodus 21:

22–5) Commentators agree that the biblical lex talionis

was introduced as a moral upper bound on permissible

*revenge, i.e take in retaliation no more than an eye for an

eye, etc

Lex talionis, also referred to as jus talionis (the right of

retaliation), e.g by Kant, is most plausibly confined to

crimes against the person Yet even here adjustments

must be made; thus, the Code of Hammurabi provided

that the son who strikes his father is not to be struck in

return; he is to lose his hand As Blackstone pointed out in

his Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765–70), ‘there

are very many crimes, that will in no shape admit of these

penalties, without manifest absurdity and wickedness’

h.a.b

Marvin Henberg, Retribution: Evil for Evil in Ethics Law, and

Litera-ture (Philadelphia, 1990).

li :see Confucianism.

liar paradox Semantic paradox, known in antiquity,

focus of much recent work Jack says ‘I am now speaking

falsely’, referring to the words he is then uttering If Jack

speaks truly when he says he is speaking falsely, he is

speaking falsely If he is speaking falsely when this is what

he says is going on, he is speaking truly So what he says is

true if, and only if, it is false; which seems absurd One

response claims that Jack says nothing true and nothing

false But a variant makes trouble: Jill says ‘I am now not

speaking truly’ If Jill is not speaking truly when this is

what she says she is up to, she is speaking truly If she is

speaking truly, then she must be doing what she says, that

is, not speakingly truly So, it seems, what she says is true

if, and only if, it is not true r.m.s

*paradoxes

Mark Sainsbury, Paradoxes (New York, 1988), ch 5.

liberalism.One of the major political ideologies of the

modern world, liberalism is distinguished by the

import-ance it attaches to the civil and political *rights of

individ-uals Liberals demand a substantial realm of personal

*freedom—including freedom of conscience, speech,

association, occupation, and, more recently, sexuality—

which the state should not intrude upon, except to protect

others from harm Major philosophical exponents of

liber-alism include Locke, Kant, Constant, Humboldt, J S Mill,

Green, Hobhouse, and, in the post-war era, Berlin, Hart,

Rawls, and Dworkin

Liberalism first emerged as an important movement in

Europe in the sixteenth century Today, particularly after

the decline of *communism, it is the dominant ideology in

many parts of the world There are two familiar ways of

explaining the rise of liberalism On one view, liberalism

grew out of the recognition that *toleration was the only

alternative to the Wars of Religion After innumerable

wars, both Protestants and Catholics accepted that the

state could not impose a common faith, and that the only stable basis for a political regime was to separate Church and State Liberalism has simply extended this principle from the sphere of religion to other areas of social life where citizens have conflicting beliefs about the meaning

of life A liberal state does not seek to resolve these con-flicts, but rather provides a ‘neutral’ framework within which citizens can pursue their diverse conceptions of the good life Liberalism, on this view, is the only humane response to the inevitable pluralism and diversity of mod-ern societies

Liberalism’s critics, however, argue that liberalism emerged as the ideological justification for the rise of *cap-italism, and that its image of the autonomous individual is simply a glorification of the pursuit of self-interest in the market Liberalism replaced the web of mutual obliga-tions which bound people together in ethnic, religious, or other communities with a society predicated on competi-tion and atomistic *individualism

There is perhaps some truth in both of these explana-tions Liberalism was historically associated with capital-ism, although most liberals today accept that *justice requires regulating the market to ensure equality of opportunity Those who continue to defend free markets and absolute property rights, such as Hayek and Nozick, are now called classical liberals or *libertarians, as opposed to welfare liberals or liberal egalitarians, such as Rawls and Dworkin (In Europe, the term ‘liberal’ is more likely to refer to a defender of the free market; in North America, to a defender of the welfare state.)

A major challenge for liberal philosophers has been to explain why individual freedom should have priority over competing values such as community or *perfectionism Why should the state allow individuals to criticize and abandon the traditional customs of the community, or engage in degrading or worthless life styles?

It is often assumed that the defence of liberalism must ultimately rest on some form of *subjectivism or *scepti-cism about values If people’s values are merely subjective preferences, lacking any rational or objective basis, then there is no justification for the state to prefer some ways of life over others

Few liberals have endorsed this subjectivist argument, although it is commonly attributed to them by critics Sub-jectivism provides a weak defence of individual freedom For one thing, it conflicts with the way most people under-stand the value of their own lives, since we typically assume that some ways of leading our lives are intrinsically better than others Moreover, if subjectivism were true, it would leave liberal values equally without rational foun-dation When liberals argue that a state which upholds individual rights and equality of opportunity is better than

a totalitarian or caste society, they view this as a rationally defensible moral belief, not simply as their subjective pref-erence But if claims about rights and justice are rationally defensible, then so presumably are claims about the value

of different conceptions of the good As a result, most liberals have sought to defend freedom of choice without

514 lex talionis

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denying that the worth of different conceptions of the

good life can be rationally evaluated

There are a variety of non-sceptical arguments for

free-dom of choice within the liberal tradition *Utilitarian and

*pragmatist liberals offer various reasons why state

coer-cion and paternalism are counter-productive over the

long-term For example, they argue that truth emerges

from free debate with falsehood, and that valuable ways of

life emerge from initially unsuccessful experiments in

liv-ing Moreover, giving the state the power to decide which

ways of life are valuable and which are not increases the

potential for the abuse of state power, arbitrary

discrim-ination, tyranny, and civil strife The advocates of

different ways of life will end up fighting over which

con-ceptions of the good should be promoted by the state, and

which should be discouraged Given that the merits of

dif-ferent ways of life are controversial, liberalism’s neutrality

provides the only way for the proponents of conflicting

ways of life to live together

These considerations are not insignificant, but they

provide only contingent and indirect support for freedom

They point to various undesirable social consequences

that might accompany the restriction on individual

lib-erty, but they do not yet provide any reason for thinking

that individuals have an inherent right to a certain sphere

of liberty, or that there is any intrinsic injustice in limiting

people’s freedom

Many liberals have sought to find a more principled

argument for individual freedom Kantian liberals, for

example, argue that the capacity for rational *autonomy is

the highest capacity humans possess, and so is worthy of

inherent respect To restrict someone’s freedom of

choice, on this Kantian view, is to treat them as less than a

fully mature and responsible human being, and this is

wrong regardless of the desirable or undesirable social

consequences that might follow To respect someone

entails respecting her capacity to judge for herself which

customs, practices and traditions are worth maintaining

This Kantian view has been very influential in the

lib-eral tradition However, it rests on a controversial claim

about the nature of moral value and moral respect The

Kantian view is disputed by many cultural and religious

traditions that emphasize instead the value of piety,

defer-ence to authority, and respect for tradition Indeed, many

critics argue that using the state to promote the Kantian

ideal of rational autonomy is as ‘sectarian’ as using the

state to promote Protestantism, and as likely to lead to

civil strife Some groups, particularly conservative

reli-gious groups, will view the state promotion of Kantian

autonomy as a direct attack on their own way of life

Critics of the Kantian approach argue that liberals

should therefore avoid appealing to the value of

auton-omy, and instead defend liberalism simply as the only

viable basis for peaceful coexistence in culturally and

reli-giously plural societies These ‘modus vivendi’ liberals

argue that liberalism should be defended as guaranteeing

tolerance between different ways of life, not as promoting

the autonomy of individuals

Kantian liberals respond, however, that without appealing to the value of individual autonomy, there is no

reason why coexistence between groups should take the form of guaranteeing the rights of individuals Why not

just allow each group in society to organize itself as it sees

fit, even if this involves restricting the rights of its individ-ual members? Enforcing individindivid-ual rights sometimes means interfering with, rather than tolerating, various group practices, and this can only be justified (or so Kan-tians claim) by invoking the value of individual autonomy This internecine disagreement between Kantian

auton-omy-based liberals and modus vivendi, tolerance-based

liber-als remains unresolved (The two sides are liber-also sometimes described as ‘comprehensive’ versus ‘political’ liberals, or as

‘Enlightenment’ versus ‘Reformation’ liberals.) Even if one accepts the liberal commitment to individ-ual freedom, there are questions about its social and cul-tural pre-conditions The capacity to make choices in a rational and informed manner is not innate—it must be developed in the course of one’s upbringing and educa-tion Moreover, freedom of choice is only meaningful if individuals have an adequate range of options to choose from—that is, if diverse life-styles and customs exist in soci-ety Some *communitarian critics argue that liberalism has not attended to these wider social pre-conditions of *lib-erty Indeed, critics argue that the unfettered exercise of individual freedom of choice will undermine the forms of family and community life which help develop people’s capacity for choice and provide people with meaningful options On this view, liberalism is self-defeating—liberals privilege individual rights, even when this undermines the social conditions which make individual freedom valuable Liberals respond to this criticism by arguing that indi-vidual rights, far from dissolving valuable social groups and associations, provide the best protection for them Those groups which are truly worthy of people’s alle-giance will survive through the free assent and voluntary participation of their members Those groups which need state support to survive, because they cannot maintain or recruit members, are often not worthy of allegiance or support The example of religious toleration suggests that there is some merit to this liberal response Legal guaran-tees of individual freedom of conscience have provided ample protection for a wide range of religious groups, while preventing the dangers that often accompany state-sponsored religion Whether this example can be general-ized is open to debate

A similar question has been raised about the long-term political stability of a liberal society Non-liberal societies are typically held together by shared conceptions of the good, such as a common religion, or by common ethni-city Members of these societies are willing to make sacri-fices for each other because of their commonalities But what holds a society together when its members come from different ethnic and racial backgrounds and do not share a common conception of the good life?

Some liberals suggest that the tie that binds the citizens

of a liberal society is simply a shared commitment to

liberalism 515

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liberal principles of freedom and *equality It is debatable

whether this is a ‘thick’ enough bond to keep a

*multicul-tural society together After all, a liberal society makes

many demands of its members: they must be willing to

accept considerable sacrifices (e.g military service), to

take an interest in public affairs, and to exercise

self-restraint in their personal actions and political demands

Liberals have tended to focus on the rights of *citizenship,

but a liberal society would stop functioning if its citizens

did not also accept certain duties and exercise certain

virtues It seems likely that a sense of commonality is

needed for individuals to accept these sorts of duties

*Conservative critics have argued that the stability of

lib-eral societies is based on a pre-liblib-eral sense of shared

iden-tity Citizens of England, for example, do not see each other

primarily as individual rights-holders, but as fellow

mem-bers of the English *nation, with a shared history and

cul-ture This gives rise to a sense of solidarity which is prior to,

and deeper than, a shared commitment to liberalism It is

this national solidarity which explains why the English

work together, and make sacrifices for each other

Conser-vatives worry that this sense of being members of the same

‘people’ or culture or community is gradually being eroded

by the individualism of liberal rights, which treats people in

abstraction from their communal ties and responsibilities

Interestingly, many nineteenth-century liberals, agreed

that liberalism is viable only in countries with a sense of

common nationhood, a new shared by some recent

rists of ‘liberal nationalism’ Most post-war liberal

theo-rists, however, have rejected the idea that liberalism

should ally itself with nationalism, and have instead

asserted that a common commitment to liberal principles

is a sufficient basis for social unity even in multicultural

countries Habermas’s idea of ‘constitutional patriotism’

is one example of this view, explicitly offered as an

alter-native to nationalist theories of social cohesion

One difficulty with this view is that it provides no

guid-ance on how the boundaries of distinct political

commu-nities should be drawn Indeed, it provides no explanation

for why there should be distinct political communities at

all Why shouldn’t all societies that share liberal values

merge into a single state, aiming ultimately to create a

sin-gle world state? If we reject the nationalist belief that states

have the right and responsibility to express particular

national identities, languages, and cultures, why shouldn’t

liberals favour abolishing existing nation-states and

replacing them with a thoroughgoing *cosmopolitanism

of open borders within a single global state?

Few liberal theorists are willing to take this step

towards an unqualified liberal cosmopolitanism, and most

believe that nation-states remain the only viable forum for

the implementation of liberal-democratic values Yet

equally few liberals are willing to acknowledge that these

liberal nation-states depend for their viability not only on

adherence to liberal values, but also on the inculcation of

deeper feelings of national identity

Whether the cohesion of a liberal society depends on

some prior sense of identity remains an important topic

for debate Whatever the explanation, national liberal societies have in fact proven remarkably stable Dire warnings about liberalism’s inability to contain the cen-trifugal tendencies of individual freedom can be found in every generation for the last three centuries, yet it appears that liberal societies have managed to endure while vari-ous forms of monarchy, theocracy, authoritarianism, and communism have come and gone

Despite these disagreements about its philosophical foundations and sociological feasibility, the basic lan-guage of liberalism—individual rights, liberty, equality of opportunity—has become the dominant language of pub-lic discourse in most modern democracies w.k

*anti-communism; civil society; liberty and equality; utilitarianism; well-being

Ronald Dworkin, ‘Liberalism’, in A Matter of Principle

(Cam-bridge, Mass., 1985)

L T Hobhouse, Liberalism (Oxford, 1964).

J S Mill, Utilitarianism, On Liberty, Considerations on Representative Government, ed H B Acton (London, 1972).

John Rawls, Political Liberalism (New York, 1993).

Michael Sandel (ed.), Liberalism and its Critics (New York, 1984) Yael Tamir, Liberal Nationalism (Princeton, NJ, 1993).

libertarianism.The theory about freedom that despite what has happened in the past, and given the present state

of affairs and ourselves just as they are, we can choose or decide differently than we do—act so as to make the future different Libertarianism asserts the freedom of the

*will or *origination, and is contrasted with *determin-ism Contemporary libertarians may cite quantum mechanics as evidence that determinism is false Even if this is so, the random behaviour of atoms certainly does not by itself make for the freedom and moral

*freedom and determinism; determinism, scientific

C A Campbell, ‘Is “Freewill” a Pseudo-Problem?’, Mind (1951).

J C Eccles and K R Popper, The Self and its Brain (Berlin, 1977).

libertarianism, left-.‘Left-libertarianism’ is a new term for

an old conception of *justice, dating back to Grotius It combines the *libertarian assumption that each person pos-sesses a natural right of self-ownership over his person with the *egalitarian premiss that natural resources should be shared equally Right-wing libertarians argue that the right

of self-ownership entails the right to appropriate unequal parts of the external world, such as unequal amounts of land According to left-libertarians, however, the world’s natural resources were initially unowned, or belonged equally to all, and it is illegitimate for anyone to claim exclu-sive private ownership of these resources to the detriment

of others Such private appropriation is legitimate only if everyone can appropriate an equal amount, or if those who appropriate more are taxed to compensate those who are thereby excluded from what was once common property Historic proponents of this view include Thomas Paine, Herbert Spencer, and Henry George Recent exponents include Philippe Van Parijs and Hillel Steiner w.k

516 liberalism

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*libertarianism, political.

P Vallentyne and H Steiner (eds.), Left-Libertarianism and its

Crit-ics (Basingstoke, 2000).

libertarianism, political A theory grounded in the right

of free choice Libertarianism comes in at least two

vari-eties, both with roots in the writings of John Locke One

variety starts from the stipulation of particular *rights,

often by direct intuition The other grounds individual

rights in causal assumptions about what leads to *freedom

and productivity Some libertarians mix these elements,

arguing from intuition but hedging their discussions with

references to the effects of a system of rights Two issues,

one conceptual and one practical, drive much of the

dis-cussion of libertarianism Conceptually, there is a conflict

between individual interest and its collective provision—

it is odd that libertarian rights may work against our

inter-ests Practically, it seems virtually impossible that a state

could arise and survive by strictly libertarian principles in

*libertarianism, left-

Robert Nozick, Anarchy, State, and Utopia (New York, 1974).

libertinism. A sixteenth- and seventeenth-century,

mainly French and Italian, current which rejected

Christ-ian revelation and set up reason and nature alone as the

criteria of morality, law, and politics The term libertin was

first used by Calvin against religious dissenters who

wanted freedom of conscience in matters of faith and

morals Libertinism was then applied more widely to the

following positions: the rejection as invalid of theology

and metaphysics anchored to ‘divine’ revelation

(espe-cially the immortality of the soul, punishments and

rewards in the afterlife, teleology in nature, and a

provi-dential ordering of history); pluralism in matters of

reli-gion and ethics; a sceptical defence of doubt in

philosophical and religious matters; assertion of the

his-torical origin and consequent human fabrication of

reli-gions, creeds, and dogmas; *atheism or at least *deism;

and Epicureanism Major French figures include Pierre

Charron, Montaigne, François de La Mothe le Vayer, and

Pierre Gassendi In Italy, libertine thinkers like Pietro

Pomponazzi, Giulio Cesare Vanini, Bruno, and

Cam-panella follow a naturalistic interpretation of Aristotelian

psychology and physics A popular image of the allegedly

depraved libertine is preserved in the character of Don

Juan–Don Giovanni: sexually promiscuous, atheist,

R Pintard, Le Libertinage érudit dans la première moitié du XVII e

siè-cle (Geneva, 1983).

G Spini, Ricerca dei libertini (Florence, 1983).

liberty.What is political liberty? In the ancient world,

par-ticularly among the Greeks, to be free was to be able to

participate in the government of one’s city The laws were

valid only if one had had the right to take part in making

and unmaking them To be free was not to be forced to

obey laws made by others for one but not by one This kind

of *democracy entailed that government and laws could penetrate into every province of life Man was not free, nor did he claim freedom, from such supervision All democrats claimed was that every man was equally liable

to criticism, investigation, and if need be arraignment before the laws, or other arrangements, in the establishing and maintaining of which all the citizens had the right to participate

In the modern world, a new idea—most clearly formu-lated by Benjamin Constant—makes itself felt, namely that there is a province of life—private life—with which it

is thought undesirable, save in exceptional circumstances, for public authority to interfere The central question posed by the ancient world is ‘Who shall govern me?’ Some said a monarch, some said the best, or the richest, or the bravest, or the majority, or the law courts, or the unan-imous vote of all In the modern world, an equally impor-tant question is ‘How much government should there be?’ The ancient world assumed that life was one, and that laws and the government covered the whole of it—there was

no reason to protect any corner of it from such supervi-sion In the modern world, whether historically because of struggles of the Churches against intervention by the secu-lar State, or of the State against the Church, or as a result of the growth of private enterprise, industry, commerce, and its desire for protection against State interference, or for whatever reason, we proceed on the assumption that there is a frontier between public and private life; and that, however small the private sphere may be, within it I can do

as I please—live as I like, believe what I want, say what I please—provided this does not interfere with the similar rights of others, or undermine the order which makes this kind of arrangement possible This is the classical liberal view, in whole or part expressed in various declarations of the rights of man in America and France, and in the writ-ings of men like Locke, Voltaire, Tom Paine, Constant, and John Stuart Mill When we speak of civil liberties or civilized values, this is part of what is meant

The assumption that men need protection against each other and against the government is something which has never been fully accepted in any part of the world, and what I have called the ancient Greek or classical point of view comes back in the form of arguments such as this:

‘You say that an individual has the right to choose the kind

of life he or she prefers But does this apply to everyone? If the individual is ignorant, immature, uneducated, men-tally crippled, denied adequate opportunities of health and development, he or she will not know how to choose Such a person will never truly know what it is he or she really wants If there are others who understand what human nature is and what it craves, and if they do for peo-ple, perhaps by some measure of control, what they would be doing for themselves if they were wiser, better informed, maturer, more developed, are they curtailing the freedom of these others? They are interfering with people as they are, but only in order to enable them to do what they would do if they knew enough, or were always

liberty 517

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at their best, instead of yielding to irrational motives, or

behaving childishly, or allowing the animal side of their

nature the upper hand Is this then interference at all? If

parents or teachers compel unwilling children to go to

school or to work hard, in the name of what those children

must really want, even though they may not know it,

since that is what all men and women as such must want

because they are human, then are they curtailing the

lib-erty of the children? Surely not Teachers and parents are

bringing out their submerged or real selves, and catering

to their needs, as against the transient demands of the

more superficial self which greater maturity will slough

off like a skin.’

If you substitute for parents a church or a party or a

state, you get a theory on which much modern authority

is based We are told that to obey these institutions is but

to obey ourselves, and therefore no slavery, for these

insti-tutions embody ourselves at our best and wisest, and

self-restraint is not self-restraint, self-control is not slavery

The battle between these two views, in all kinds of

ver-sions, has been one of the cardinal political issues of

mod-ern times One side says that to put the bottle beyond the

dipsomaniac’s reach is not to curtail his liberties; if he is

prevented from drinking, even by force, he will be

health-ier and therefore better capable of playing his part as man

and citizen, will be more himself, and therefore freer, than

if he reaches the bottle and destroys his health and sanity

The fact that he does not know this is merely a symptom

of his disease, or ignorance of his own true wishes The

other side denies not that anti-social behaviour must be

restrained, or that there is a case for preventing men from

harming themselves or from harming the welfare of their

children or of others, but that such a restraint, though

jus-tified, is liberty Liberty may have to be curtailed to make

room for other good things, security or peace or health; or

liberty today may have to be curtailed to make possible

wider liberty tomorrow; but to curtail freedom is not to

provide it, and compulsion, no matter how well justified,

is compulsion and not liberty Freedom, such people say,

is only one value among many, and if it is an obstacle to

the securing of other equally important ends, or interferes

with other people’s opportunities of reaching these ends,

it must make way

To this the other side replies that this presupposes a

division of life into private and public—it assumes that

men may wish in their private lives to do what others may

not like, and therefore need protection from these

oth-ers—but that this view of human nature rests on a

funda-mental mistake The human being is one, and in the ideal

society, when everyone’s faculties are developed, nobody

will ever want to do anything that others may resent or

wish to stop The proper purpose of reformers and

revo-lutionaries is to knock down walls between men, bring

everything into the open, make men and women live

together without partitions, so that what one wants all

want The desire to be left alone, to be allowed to do what

one wishes without needing to account for it to some

tri-bunal—one’s family, or one’s employers, or one’s party,

or one’s government, or indeed the whole of one’s soci-ety—this desire is a symptom of maladjustment To ask for freedom from society is to ask for freedom from one-self This must be cured by altering property relations as socialists desire to do, or by eliminating critical reason as some religious sects and, for that matter, communist and fascist regimes seek to do

In one view—which might be called organic—all sepa-rateness is bad, and the notion of human rights which must not be trampled on is that of dams—walls demanded

by human beings to separate them from one another, needed perhaps in a bad society, but with no place in a justly organized world in which all human streams flow into one undivided human river On the second or liberal view, human rights, and the idea of a private sphere in which I am free from scrutiny, is indispensable to that minimum of independence which everyone needs if he is

to develop, each on his own lines; for variety is of the essence of the human race, not a passing condition Pro-ponents of this view think that destruction of such rights

in order to build one universal self-directing human soci-ety—of everyone marching towards the same rational ends—destroys that area for individual choice, however small, without which life does not seem worth living

In a crude and, some have maintained, a distorted form, totalitarian and authoritarian regimes have stood for one of these views: while liberal democracies incline to the other And, of course, varieties and combinations of these views, and compromises between them, are possible They are the two cardinal ideas that have faced one another and domi-nated the world since, say, the Renaissance i.b

*freedom through goodness and reason; political freedom

Isaiah Berlin, Four Essays on Liberty (London, 1969), esp ‘Two

Concepts of Liberty’

—— ‘Herzen and Bakunin on Individual Liberty’, in Russian Thinkers (London, 1978).

John Gray, Liberalism (Milton Keynes, 1986).

J S Mill, On Liberty (London, 1859).

David Miller (ed.), Liberty (Oxford, 1991).

John Rawls, Political Liberalism (New York, 1993).

liberty and equality Some philosophers have argued that these two values are bound to conflict with one another Given the differences in people’s abilities, they say, there will be an inevitable tendency for some to be more suc-cessful than others Inequalities can therefore be prevented only by the strict exercise of authority to limit the prosper-ity of the more successful To this others have replied that all members of society need to share equally in the mater-ial wealth and political power which are the pre-conditions

of effective freedom; liberty and equality are therefore not conflicting but complementary values r.j.n

*liberty; equality; political freedom; well-being

Richard Norman, Free and Equal (Oxford, 1987).

Lichtenberg, Georg Christoph (1742–99) German physicist whose fame rests, apart from an experiment in

518 liberty

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electricity, on aphorisms He was a man of the

Enlighten-ment: ‘All the mischief in the world may be put down to

the general, indiscriminate veneration of old laws, old

cus-toms and old religion.’ He straddles *Kantianism and

*scepticism: ‘If an angel were to tell us his philosophy, I

think many of his statements might sound like “2 × 2 =

13”.’ He doubted even Descartes’s *cogito: ‘It thinks, we

really ought to say, just as we say, it thunders To say cogito

is too much, if we translate this as “I think” ’; ‘I and myself

I feel myself—these are two distinct things Our false

phil-osophy is incorporated in our whole language; we cannot

reason without, so to speak, reasoning wrongly We

over-look the fact that speaking, no matter of what, is itself a

phil-osophy.’ Schopenhauer often quotes him, and Hegel, in his

Phenomenology of Spirit, cites his satirical critique of

Lavater’s theory of physiognomy (On Physiognomy

(1778) ) What he said of others applies to himself: ‘Earth

has greater need of their kind than Heaven.’ m.j.i

J P Stern, Lichtenberg: A Doctrine of Scattered Occasions

(Blooming-ton, Ind., 1959)

lie, noble: see noble lie.

Lieh Tzu.Daoist philosopher (440?–360 bc?) The Lieh Tzu

text (c.third century ad?) is polysemic in style: a collection

of narratives having multiple application—cosmological,

linguistic, personal, socio-political Developing the

philosophies of Lao Tzu and Chuang Tzu, it interprets the

processes of life and death with a yin-yang cosmology

Investigation of the way (tao) is not a theoretical

enter-prise, but a psycho-physical discipline resulting in an

embodied understanding of processes of transformation,

and in an exceptional skill in negotiating our life activities

s.c

The Book of Lieh-tzu: A Classic of Tao, tr A C Graham (New York,

1990)

life.This, the distinguishing feature of organisms, is best

thought of as involving some kind of complex

organiza-tion, giving an ability to use energy sources for

self-maintenance and reproduction Efforts to find some

dis-tinctive substance characterizing life have proven as futile

as they have been heroic The one thing which is clear is

that any analysis of life must accept and appreciate that

there will be many borderline instances, like viruses

Incon-venient as this may be for the lexicographer, this is precisely

what *evolution theory would lead us to expect m.r

*vitalism

J B S Haldane, ‘What is Life?’; repr in M Ruse, Philosophy of

Biology (New York, 1989).

life, form of: see form of life.

life, the good.Perhaps the most fundamental question in

ethics is that posed by Socrates: How should one live? But

this question covers not just the ‘moral’ aspects of our

con-duct, such as the observance of duties, or our contribution

to the general welfare, but also those other more personal

and individual aspects of a life which may make it worth-while, or give it meaning Aristotle’s theory of virtue

aimed to lay down the ingredients of eudaimonia (or

human fulfilment), and though this included many ele-ments of what we would now call morality, it was also concerned with the good life for humans in the sense of a flourishing or successful life Later *Stoic and *Christian systems of ethics continued this tradition, though often in

a more ‘inner-oriented’ way: they gave particular promi-nence to what we might now call ‘spiritual’ practices, the cultivation of disciplines aimed at deepening our self-awareness, and enabling us to live harmonious and ordered lives

Several modern philosophers have been interested in these more personal and individual aspects of what makes

a life worthwhile, and have begun to reconsider notions that were prominent in the ethical writings of earlier ages—the importance of character, self-reflection, the nature of the self , and the relationship between the intel-lect and the emotions The stress on the ‘interior’ dimen-sion connects up with the ancient theme of self-awareness

as basic to the good life, as in the Delphic motto, ‘Know thyself ’; the ‘descent into the inner self ’ was also a fundamental theme of St Augustine’s famous ethical and

religious work, the Confessions More recently,

psychoana-lytic writers have underlined the importance of uncover-ing the hidden drives and projections that may distort our perceptions and choices, and this has influenced philo-sophical work on self-integration as fundamental to the good life There are also important philosophical ques-tions to be asked about the relaques-tionship between these broadly ethical concerns and other quite distinct ingredi-ents of good human lives, such as creativity and artistic achievement, the pursuit of which may often appear to conflict with personal equilibrium or commitments to others Finally, a good human life is often supposed to be

one that has meaning; it may be asked whether this simply

refers to the fact that a life contains various individually worthwhile ingredients, or whether it implies some

John Cottingham, Philosophy and the Good Life (Cambridge,

1998)

Charles Guignon (ed.), The Good Life (Indianapolis, 1999) Pierre Hadot, Philosophy as a Way of Life (Oxford, 1995).

John Kekes, Moral Wisdom and Good Lives (Ithaca, NY, 1995) Alexander Nehamas, The Art of Living (Berkeley, Calif., 1998) Charles Taylor, Sources of the Self (Cambridge, Mass., 1989).

life, the meaning of ‘What is the meaning of life?’ is one

of those Big Questions about Ultimate Things that recent philosophers have so often been accused of neglecting It may invite the retort that the meaning of our lives is what

we care to give them; we cannot expect meanings to be handed to us on a plate, and even if they were, what use would they be to us? God may have his purposes in creat-ing me, but why should I adopt them? First I must be con-vinced that they are good purposes (we can ignore the effects of the threat of hell-fire on non-conformists), and if

life, the meaning of 519

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