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On solitude, conscience, love and our inner and outer lives

Part of the Reading Augustine series
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Ron Haflidson places the theology of Augustine in conversation with contemporary authors, who warn of the dangers of abandoning solitude for constant (often technological) connection.

Haflidson addresses an essential question that has previously been neglected: What difference does it make to the practice of solitude if one believes that even in the absence of any human company, God is always intimately present?

For Augustine, solitude is a moral necessity: he recommends that we regularly retreat from the crowd into the depths of our conscience, where we can dwell alone in the company of God, and enter into dialogue before and with God about who we are and how we love.

Throughout this book, Haflidson pairs close readings of Augustine with those of noted cartographers of our inner lives, literary greats including Jane Austen, George Eliot, Marilynne Robinson and George Saunders.

This book explores what undiscovered possibilities may lie in solitude.

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Product Details
Bloomsbury Academic
0567682684 / 9780567682680
Hardback
155.92
25/07/2019
United Kingdom
English
160 pages
24 cm