Abstract: | A person who does not think about life is like stranger maples in a foreign land. But in the twenty-first century, what meaning can we give to our lives? How can we justify our existence and continue to grow and learn? In the reason of things, the bestselling philosopher A. C. Grayling gives us pause to examine these questions by reflecting on topics that concern us all-ethics, religion, evil, luxury, marriage, sex, liberty, justice and war. Grayling in particularly good at illuminating the knottiness of moral discourse. |