A Question of Values

Six Ways We Make the Personal Choices that Shape Our Lives

By Hunter Lewis; Foreword by M. Scott Peck

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"This is a groundbreaking. . . enlightening, thought-provoking and remarkably well-written book. . . . [It] points us toward greater wholeness and integrity."

—M. Scott Peck

Summary

What are values? Do they truly exist? How do Americans formulate them? In this erudite and provocative book, Hunter Lewis explores the often conflicting value systems that compete for attention in American life. He constructs a framework by which six different American value systems—based on authority, logic, experience, emotion, intuition, and science—are defined and compared, thereby shedding new light on how we come to believe what we believe.

Wide-ranging, yet always accessible, A Question of Values provides seventy-one case studies of specific or composite value systems—Protestant fundamentalism, the Judaism of Golda Meir, the "detached action" of Mohandas Gandhi, and those of Spinoza, Mortimer Adler, Mikhail Gorbachev, Tennessee Williams, Thomas Merton, Sigmund Freud, Eudora Welty, Ronald Reagan, and Henry Kissinger, among many others.

"Confronted with the unexpectedness, diversity, and argumentativeness of American values, with the apparent lack of any real agreement or uniformity in our personal beliefs, the beliefs that guide our everyday speech and conduct and make us what we are, how should we respond?" Lewis asks. He then shows us a way to clear our mental clutter, to decide what our basic moral alternatives are, and "how each thinker or would- be prophet that we meet, either directly or through books and film, relates to these basic alternatives."

Not only does Lewis illuminate our own values and those of others, he also helps us sort through a variety of social issues—for example, the way values should or should not be taught in the classroom, or the general problem of moral education in American schools and colleges. Lewis makes brilliant sense of the moral and ethical confusion of our times and discovers for us that "values are not the muddle they sometimes seem. There are some basic choices. . . . Our challenge as Americans and as human beings is to identify these options, and then to choose among them, not blindly but with a discerning eye, and thus to answer the recurring biblical question: 'What manner of men shall we be?'"

About the Author

Hunter Lewis is the author of six books in the related fields of economics and values, as well as numerous magazine, newspaper, and online articles. His much-praised book Are the Rich Necessary? was called "highly provocative and highly pleasurable" by the New York Times, "great reading" by Publishers Weekly, and "worth reading aloud on a family vacation" by Barron's.

A graduate of Harvard University, Lewis co-founded Cambridge Associates, LLC, a global investment firm whose clients include leading research universities, charitable organizations, and families. He has served on boards and committees of fifteen not-for-profit organizations, including environmental, teaching, research, and cultural organizations, as well as the World Bank.


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