The Person and the Common Good

Jacques Maritain author John J Fitzgerald translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Notre Dame Press

Published:22nd Apr '94

Should be back in stock very soon

The Person and the Common Good cover

The Person and the Common Good, originally published in 1947, presents Jacques Maritain's clearest and most sustained treatment of the person. He asks whether the person is simply the self and nothing more. After more than half a century, Maritain's question still has great validity, given the current inordinate preoccupation with individualism.

Presenting with moving insight the relations between man, as a person and as an individual, and the society of which he is a part, Maritain's treatment of a lasting topic speaks to this generation as well as those to come.

He makes clear the personalism rooted in the doctrine of St. Thomas and separates the social philosophy centered in the dignity of the human person from every social philosophy centered in the primacy of the individual and the private good.

"Maritain insists clearly and forcefully that the common good of all and the personal good of each are strickly correlative, implying and serving each other. Neither is intelligible without the other. Therefore no community has a right to regard its members as mere parts or 'individuals'." —Journal of Philosophy

"Among the truths of which contemporary thought stands in particular need and from which it could draw substantial profiit, is the doctrine of the distinction between individuality and personality. The essential importance of this distinction is revealed in the principles of St. Thomas." —Review of Politics

ISBN: 9780268002046

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

277 pages