First impression: a complete load of shit.

At 05:29 PM 9/28/2006 -0400, Charles Brown wrote:


http://news.washcoll.edu/press_releases/2006/06/28_kevinbrien.php
Marx Meets Buddha as WC Philosophy Professor Explores the Spiritual
Dimensions of Humanistic Socialism
Kevin Brien
Marx, Reason, and the Art of Freedom

Chestertown, MD, June 28, 2006 - Karl Marx's materialistic philosophy of
history might seem to exclude all possibilities of a spiritual dimension to
human existence. But, according to Marx scholar Kevin Brien, chair and
professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion at Washington
College, the core of humanistic Marxism contains a latent spiritual view of
human existence. In the second edition of his book Marx, Reason, and the
Art of Freedom (Prometheus/Humanity Books, 2006), Brien analyzes not only
the concept of freedom as developed throughout the philosophical works of
Marx but also the convergence of humanistic Marxism and Buddhism through
their nontheistic view of human flourishing.

In his analysis of the problem of freedom from a humanistic-Marxist
perspective, Brien draws on the full chronological spectrum of Marx's
writings to reconstruct the mature Marx's view of freedom. While
recognizing that many students of Marx have noted two distinctly different
perspectives in early and late Marx, Brien interprets Marx's philosophy as
a coherent organic whole, demonstrating that Marx's thought is principally
and systematically an elaborated philosophical-scientific theory of freedom.

"In 1987 I published the first edition of this book because of my belief
that Marx's scientific/philosophical paradigm, when seen in the appropriate
way, stands as the most viable currently available perspective for
understanding human cultural evolution; and also because of my belief that
Marx's paradigm, when properly understood, provides extremely fruitful
guidance for nurturing a development toward a new plateau of human culture
and of human freedom," Brien writes. "In undertaking to publish this second
edition after the break up of the Soviet Union, and now well into the
twenty-first century, these beliefs still function as my basic motivation."

New to this second edition is Brien's presentation of a humanistic-Marxist
interpretation of spirituality and the viability of a nontheistic spiritual
dimension, a "liberation spirituality" that provides a moral ground for
common social action among adherents of different beliefs.

"It is my deep belief that a nondogmatic, nonsectarian, this-world oriented
attitude concerning the spiritual dimension holds great promise for
building such transcending holistic coalitions that could nurture
developments toward a new plateau of cultural evolution-while acknowledging
and even cultivating diversity," Brien says.

Brien received his Ph.D. from Boston University in 1978 and has taught in
the Department of Philosophy and Religion at Washington College since 1986.
His areas of specialization and interest include Eastern philosophy and
religion, philosophy of science, Marx, Nietzsche, and the history of
philosophy. He is currently working on a new book tentatively called Toward
a New Liberation Spirituality, aiming a critical synthesis of Marx,
Nietzsche, and Buddhism.



_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
[email protected]
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis


_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
[email protected]
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to