Authors: Jacob Needleman
ISBN-13: 9781585422265, ISBN-10: 1585422266
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
Date Published: May 2003
Edition: Reprint
Jacob Needleman is a professor of philosophy at San Francisco State University, and the former director of the Center for the Study of New Religions at the Graduate Theological Union at Berkeley.
At the heart of The American Soul is a call to rediscover the timeless truths hidden within the founding vision of the American nation. Embedded in the ideals of democracy, individual liberty and freedom of conscience is a view of human nature that echoes essential aspects of the wisdom that has guided every great civilization of the world. Free of all religious and philosophical dogma, and liberated from all historical and political cliches, this uniquely American vision has the power to speak again to the modern world's need for meaning and community. .,."an amazing journey to the very heart of those...people who like to call themselves Americans." Ken Burns
San Francisco State philosophy professor and author Needleman (Money and the Meaning of Life) invites readers to contemplate the deeper spiritual meaning of the American legacy of "Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness." Finding a deep resonance between the founding principles of this country and the ancient spiritual quest for an inner liberation, Needleman proceeds to examine and "remythologize" the founders and some of their great deeds. Subjective rather than academic, at times lyrical, provocative, and profound, Needleman's new work infuses contemplation with a child's sense (a sense that most of us share) of boundless faith in a place "that accepted one's true inner self, one's inner good will, one's real wish to serve..." The reader is asked to consider Franklin's courageous experimentation ("...the man played and worked with lightening!"), Washington's restraint retiring from the army and later from the presidency rather than exploiting his matchless popularity and political power, Jefferson's brilliant articulation of the value of community, and the sheer gravity and awareness in Lincoln's face. Each man is presented as embodying a different facet of the inner freedom and integrity that is achieved only as one learns to live in accord with conscience that is, with a deeper self that is, Needleman says, allowed to develop in this country. While Needleman clearly finds much to love about America, he balances our light with our darkness, our genuine good will and spirituality with our great crimes of slavery and the genocidal abuse of the American Indian. Decidedly not for strict materialists or historical literalists, Needleman's latest work gives open-minded readers a new set of spiritual role models and much valuable food for thought at a crucial moment. (Feb.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Preamble | ||
I | The Idea of America | 1 |
1 | Our America | 3 |
II | In the Beginning | 29 |
2 | Remembering America | 31 |
3 | The Myth and the Character of George Washington | 75 |
4 | Thomas Jefferson: Democracy as the Communal Self | 139 |
5 | Individuality: A Meditation on the Face of Lincoln | 173 |
III | The Crimes of America | 189 |
6 | The American Indian | 193 |
7 | Slavery and the Story of America | 237 |
IV | The Two Democracies | 269 |
8 | The Wound and the Turning | 271 |
9 | Ephrata: In Search of the Second Democracy | 290 |
10 | Walt Whitman and the Meaning of America | 315 |
Conclusion: The America of Our Hopes | 329 | |
11 | The Guardian of the Door | 331 |
12 | Toward a Community of Conscience | 345 |
Coda | 355 | |
For Further Reading | 357 | |
Notes | 363 |