9781946928245-1946928240-Heroes, Legends, Champions: Why Heroism Matters

Heroes, Legends, Champions: Why Heroism Matters

ISBN-13: 9781946928245
ISBN-10: 1946928240
Author: Andrew Bernstein
Publication date: 2020
Publisher: Union Square Publishing, Inc.
Format: Paperback 180 pages
Category: Philosophy
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781946928245
ISBN-10: 1946928240
Author: Andrew Bernstein
Publication date: 2020
Publisher: Union Square Publishing, Inc.
Format: Paperback 180 pages
Category: Philosophy

Summary

Heroes, Legends, Champions: Why Heroism Matters (ISBN-13: 9781946928245 and ISBN-10: 1946928240), written by authors Andrew Bernstein, was published by Union Square Publishing, Inc. in 2020. With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other Philosophy books. You can easily purchase or rent Heroes, Legends, Champions: Why Heroism Matters (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Philosophy books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

This is not a self-help book. Its purpose is to not to show us how to apply the lessons of a hero's life in our own. Rather, it is a theoretical book, explaining what heroes are and why mankind needs them. Before we can emulate heroes, we must properly identify them, we must understand who and what they are....And what they are not. This is a matter of life and death. Some persons, for example, at various times have considered as heroes Adolf Hitler, Josef Stalin, and Osama bin Laden. If we are to promote human life, it is necessary for us to clearly understand that and why mass murderers are definitively excluded from the echelon of heroes.

Chapters One, Two, and Three focus on the nature and definition of a hero, and provide a method for distinguishing a hero from non-heroes. Chapter Four raises the question of whether, under appropriate circumstances, everyman and everywoman can rise to heroic heights--and answers in the affirmative. Chapters Five, Six, and Seven dispute the time-honored notion that heroism involves self-sacrifice and demonstrate, rather, that heroism, properly understood, involves actions self-fulfilling; heroism and self-sacrifice are, in fact, moral antipodes. Chapter Eight discusses an appropriate response to morally flawed heroes--and Chapter Nine explains the errors of the modern antihero mentality. Finally, Chapter Ten shows the life-giving importance of hero worship. The two appendices validate philosophic principles that underlie the theory of heroes elucidated here: That human life is the standard of moral value and that human beings possess free will.

This book does not purport to be an exhaustive analysis of a hero's nature. Presumably, there is more to be said. But it is a provocative first step toward understanding the nature of heroes, one that will hopefully spark a lively 21st century debate of this important subject.

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