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Need for Roots Prelude to a Declaration of Duties Towards Mankind

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ISBN-10: 0415271029

ISBN-13: 9780415271028

Edition: 2nd 2001 (Revised)

Authors: Simone Weil, T. S. Eliot

List price: $21.95
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Description:

Hailed by Andre Gide as the patron saint of all outsiders, Weil's short life was ample testimony to her beliefs. In The Need for Roots, Weil reflects on the importance of religious and political social structures in the life of the individual.
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Book details

List price: $21.95
Edition: 2nd
Copyright year: 2001
Publisher: Routledge
Publication date: 11/9/2001
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 320
Size: 5.20" wide x 7.80" long x 0.75" tall
Weight: 0.792
Language: English

Born in Paris, Weil came from a highly intellectual family. After a brilliant academic career at school and university, she taught philosophy interspersed with periods of hard manual labor on farms and in factories. Throughout her life she combined sophisticated and scholarly interests with an extreme moral intensity and identification with the poor and oppressed. A twentieth-century Pascal (see Vol. 4), this ardently spiritual woman was a social thinker, sensitive to the crises of modern humanity. Jewish by birth, Christian by vocation, and Greek by aesthetic choice, Weil has influenced religious thinking profoundly in the years since her death. "Humility is the root of love," she said as…    

T. S. Eliot is considered by many to be a literary genius and one of the most influential men of letters during the half-century after World War I. He was born on September 26, 1888, in St. Louis, Missouri. Eliot attended Harvard University, with time abroad pursuing graduate studies at the Sorbonne, Marburg, and Oxford. The outbreak of World War I prevented his return to the United States, and, persuaded by Ezra Pound to remain in England, he decided to settle there permanently. He published his influential early criticism, much of it written as occasional pieces for literary periodicals. He developed such doctrines as the "dissociation of sensibility" and the "objective correlative" and…    

Preface
Translator's Foreword
The Needs of the Soul
Order
Liberty
Obedience
Responsibility
Equality
Hierarchism
Honour
Punishment
Freedom of Opinion
Security
Risk
Private Property
Collective Property
Truth
Uprootedness
Uprootedness in the Towns
Uprootedness in the Countryside
Uprootedness and Nationhood
The Growing of Roots