Five Moral PiecesHarcourt, 2001 - 111 síður Embracing the web of multiculturalism that has become a fact of contemporary life from New York to New Delhi, Eco argues that we are more connected to people of other traditions and customs than ever before, making tolerance the ultimate value in today's world. What good, he asks in a talk delivered during the Gulf War, does war do in a world where the flow of goods, services, and information is unstoppable and the enemy is always behind the lines? What makes news today, who decides how it will be presented, and how does the way it is disseminated contribute to the widespread disillusionment with politics in general? In the most personal of the essays, Eco recalls experiencing liberation from fascism in Italy as a boy, and examines the various historical forms of fascism, always with an eye toward such ugly manifestations today. And finally, in an intensely personal open letter to an Italian cardinal, Eco reflects on a question underlying all the reflections in the book: What does it mean to be moral or ethical when one doesn't believe in God? Thoughtful and subtle as well as pragmatic and relevant, these essays present one of the world's most important thinkers at the height of his critical powers. |
From inside the book
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Síða 35
Umberto Eco. there news of all the cases of this type ? If it were only a matter of four cases , the matter would be ... Umberto Bossi , who claims that the league “ ce l'ha duro " ( literally , has a hard cock ) . language within the ...
Umberto Eco. there news of all the cases of this type ? If it were only a matter of four cases , the matter would be ... Umberto Bossi , who claims that the league “ ce l'ha duro " ( literally , has a hard cock ) . language within the ...
Síða 50
... Umberto Bossi had chosen this path when he forbade his group in par- liament to talk to journalists . A losing strategy , be- cause it exposed him to attacks from the press ? A winning strategy , because it won him at least two days of ...
... Umberto Bossi had chosen this path when he forbade his group in par- liament to talk to journalists . A losing strategy , be- cause it exposed him to attacks from the press ? A winning strategy , because it won him at least two days of ...
Efni
Reflections on War | 1 |
When the Other Appears on the Scene | 19 |
Migration Tolerance and the Intolerable 89 | 89 |
Höfundarréttur | |
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Common terms and phrases
American become believe Captain Muddy Carlo Maria Martini Catholic century Cicciolina citizens clash common Communist Corriere critical cult culture dailies death decision doctrine elite enemy Erich Priebke Espresso ethic Eugenio Scalfari European fact Falangists feel form of intolerance freedom fundamentalism fundamentalist hang happened human ideology immigration intellectual function interview intoler Italian Fascism Italian press Italy Italy's journalists Julius Evola La Repubblica language laws liberation longer mass media means ment messages migration modern movement Mussolini Nazi Nazism newspaper newspeak Northern League papers party play polemic politicians Priebke principles problem racism readers regime reply responsibility Rome rules Silvio Berlusconi someone story taboo television things tion tive tolerance topic totalitarian ture typical Umberto Bossi UMBERTO ECO uncontrolled intolerance Ur-Fascism warfare weeklies world of politics