Love, Knowledge, and Freedom in Pleasantville, Religious Scripture, and Wider Western Literature

Author:

Carr David1

Affiliation:

1. University of Edinburgh Scotland, UK Edinburgh

Abstract

Abstract Love has long been extolled as a route to human moral and spiritual progress and fulfilment, not only in much past religious literature and narrative but in the more recent work of writers such as the philosopher and novelist Iris Murdoch. In such texts, however, the sentiment (or virtue) of love is clearly more than just blind or brute passion and presupposes distinctive human capacities for knowledge and free agency. That said, the relationship between knowledge and (right or virtuous) agency seems highly problematic or ambivalent on many traditional (perhaps most notably Christian) religious conceptions. This paper addresses such issues and complexities via some exploration of Genesis and the modern movie Pleasantville—with further aid from literary works of Shakespeare, Blake, Heinlein, and others—to the end of a more realistic view of human love and its moral and spiritual implications.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Religious studies,History,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Cultural Studies

Reference23 articles.

1. Aristotle. Nicomachean Ethics. The Basic Works of Aristotle. Ed. R. Mckeon. New York: Random House, 1941. 927–1112.

2. Blake, William. “The clod and the pebble.” William Blake: The Complete Poems. Ed. Alicia Ostriker. Harmondsworth, United Kingdom: Penguin Books, 1977.

3. Blondell, Ruby. “Where is Socrates on the ladder of love?” Plato’s Symposium: Issues in Interpretation and Reception. Ed. J.H. Lesser, D. Nails and F. Sheffield. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 2007. 147–178.

4. Boyce, James. Born Bad: Original Sin and the Making of the Western World. Berkeley CA: Counterpoint Press, 2015.

5. Carr, David. “Love, truth and moral judgement.” Philosophy 94 (2019): 529–545.

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