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About the Author

Leon R. Kass is Addie Clark Harding Professor in the Committee on Social Thought and the College at the University of Chicago.
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Works by Leon Kass

The Beginning of Wisdom: Reading Genesis (2003) 389 copies, 4 reviews
Toward a More Natural Science (1985) 80 copies, 1 review
Founding God's Nation: Reading Exodus (2021) 49 copies, 1 review
The Ethics of Human Cloning (1998) 49 copies

Associated Works

Western Philosophy: An Anthology (1996) — Author, some editions — 218 copies, 1 review
Beyond Therapy: Biotechnology and the Pursuit of Happiness (2003) — Foreword — 91 copies, 2 reviews
The Best American Political Writing 2002 (2002) — Contributor — 27 copies
Philosophy Now: An Introductory Reader (1972) — Contributor — 26 copies
The Future Is Now: America Confronts the New Genetics (2002) — Contributor — 16 copies
Religion and the American Future (2008) — Contributor — 15 copies

Tagged

@1C1 (8) anthology (8) Bible (21) Biblical Studies (6) Bioethics (52) biology (7) cloning (15) Commentary (7) essays (5) ethics (30) fiction (6) food (12) Genesis (21) genetics (6) goodreads (5) Jewish (5) jme (9) Judaism (6) literature (8) marriage (12) Marriage and Family (5) non-fiction (25) Old Testament (14) philosophy (56) read (7) religion (22) science (18) Theology (9) to-read (22) ZZZ (5)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
Examining Genesis in a philosophical light, Kass presents it not as a story of what happened long ago, but as the enduring story of humanity itself.
(6) Well, now I know why it is students do not develop an appreciation for great literature by receiving instruction -- just wrings all the joy out of something. It is a departure for me to read a textbook of sorts; this collection was on the syllabus for a Medical Humanities class that looked interesting. But reading this cover to cover was a yawn - despite spreading it out in one or two passages at a time over many months.

Even the books I love seemed dull when presented in out of context show more fragments such as 'Anna Karenina' 'War and Peace,' Middlemarch,' and 'Kristin Lavransdatter.' I really didn't particularly agree with the commentary that preceded each passage and wasn't at all sure what the writers were getting at. I felt the commentary colored my thoughts and dictated to me what the original authors meant and derailed my engagement with the piece.

In any event, some excerpts were mind-numbingly dense and impenetrable. Some were short and not particularly effective in isolation at striking any cord of humanity. On the upside, some highlights that I had never encountered were 'Gullliver's Travels' Struldbruggs, Lori Moore's poignant and funny short story 'People Like That are the Only People Here,' and Walt Whitman's lovely 'I Sing the Body Electric.'

In the main, this cured me of the desire to re-live college as an English major. I am not sure I realized anything true about 'being human.' I think this is aimed at someone with less grey hair who has less life experience and less insight on humanity than I. No new territory for me and reading excerpts of great works with some learned person guiding your thinking is a pale and depressing subsitute for reading the real thing and letting it wash over you without instruction.
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I appreciated his insights and reflections. Also his holding his opinions firmly yet with a seeming open hand on many of the more difficult, ambiguous passages. A great book. I hope to incorporate his patient reflection as I read through the Bible. As a Christian I see the stories and insights leading to Christ and the Christian message.
½
Many great insights but unfortunately written in the redundacy-filled style of an undergrad writing a 10 page paper and whose ideas have tapped out at 7 pages.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
20
Also by
8
Members
1,329
Popularity
#19,359
Rating
4.0
Reviews
8
ISBNs
35
Languages
1

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