On Human Wisdom

Living, Dying and Loving

by Patrick H. Dust

 

Book Details

This volume is an examination of human wisdom in a variety of contexts dealing with memory, free will the human heart, mortality, the self in love, and contemporary American politics. It contains reflections that arise at the intersection of five domains of knowledge: literature, philosophy, psychology, recent neuroscience, and pop culture (music and film). More than six decades of reading, thinking, and living culminate here in a belief that change and learning are the beating heart of human existence and an agnosticism with an upside. The ability to doubt received knowledge, while critical, is only one component of wisdom. The truly wise person has also learned to be cautiously skeptical about skepticism itself. In this way the person not only avoids premature closure on possibilities that might become real but may become more tolerant of other, competing views, as long as these are not dogmatic or hurtful. When circumstances require it, humans can live in a cognitive gap and still be wise.

 

About the Author

Patrick H. Dust

Patrick H. Dust is a PhD in the Humanities (Literature and Philosophy) and a Professor Emeritus at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota. An advocate for the promise of interdisciplinary studies, he views the humanities and science as siblings who can complement one another in a practical, mutually beneficial relationship. He lives in the beautiful Sonoran desert of Southern Arizona.

Also by Patrick H. Dust

Finished Business