'Revaluations and Transvaluations' has something of a Nietzschean ring to it, but is really quite distinct from anything he wrote, as it revaluates certain prior contentions of John O'Loughlin's philosophy in the light of new insights, and couples this to an extension of his habitual transvaluating of traditional - not excepting Christian - positions, with remarkably original conclusions and suggestions about the desirability of transcending the axial relativity that currently divides societies and peoples, precluding the possibility of brotherly redemption through the continuance of predatory exploitation. The cover shows one of the author's abstract paintings whose abstraction is, in this context, perhaps less than complete!
'Revaluations and Transvaluations' has something of a Nietzschean ring to it, but is really quite distinct from anything he wrote, as it revaluates certain prior contentions of John O'Loughlin's philosophy in the light of new insights, and couples this to an extension of his habitual transvaluating of traditional - not excepting Christian - positions, with remarkably original conclusions and suggestions about the desirability of transcending the axial relativity that currently divides societies and peoples, precluding the possibility of brotherly redemption through the continuance of predatory exploitation. The cover shows one of the author's abstract paintings whose abstraction is, in this context, perhaps less than complete!