About This Book
A series of reflective essays proposes a renewed statement of life's chief purpose in an era when traditional religious authorities no longer provide unquestioned guidance. It surveys spiritual ancestry—including Puritan, medieval Christian, Judaic, and classical moral resources—and extracts from exemplary lives and personal experience a set of practical moral laws. Emphasizing fidelity, truth-seeking, courage, love, reverence, self-discipline, and sympathetic service, the essays consider how these virtues govern conduct amid suffering, duty, and ordinary joys. Presented as historical sketches, notebook reflections, and ethical argument, the work maps how individuals may cultivate an inwardly coherent ideal of goodness and happiness.
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