Tag: Bart D. Ehrman
Where Marx was right, and wrong
by Amod Lele on May.23, 2010, under Buddhism, Christianity, Family, German Tradition, Hope, Social Science, Work
I grew up exposed to a great deal of Marxist thought, and thought I had mostly left it behind. But in the past year or so I’ve been at something of a crossroads, reconsidering my work life as I teeter between academic and non-academic work, and I have repeatedly returned to one insight of Marx’s that now strikes me as completely true: the theory of alienation. The work we do for pay is not our own. It is never our own, by definition; it is the work we do for someone else (whether employer or customer) and it is done on that someone else’s terms.
It would be nice to think that the academy was some sort of exception to this rule; but it’s anything but. (continue reading…)
Gandhi as lord, liar or lunatic
by Amod Lele on Jun.10, 2009, under Christianity, God, M.T.S.R., Modern Hinduism
Cross-cultural philosophers often wish to treat Jesus of Nazareth as a great philosopher, whose life and thought we can learn from – but one who is fully human, no more divine than the rest of us.
C.S. Lewis hated this move, thought it was intellectually sloppy. (continue reading…)
