Resourcing Hope for Ageing and Dying in a Broken World

Resourcing Hope for Ageing and Dying in a Broken World

Wayfaring through Despair

By Ashley Moyse

Anthem Religion and Society Series

For those captive to the broken world of late modernity, wherein ageing and dying persons become vulnerable to despair, this book not only offers a diagnostic of such despair but also resources the practices of a realistic, humanising hope that might enable a strength for person to journey with and for others, together, through such despair, now liberated to become hopeful wayfarers in living and dying.

Paperback, 162 Pages

ISBN:9781839991936

April 2024

£5.00, $35.00

  • About This Book
  • Reviews
  • Author Information
  • Series
  • Table of Contents
  • Links
  • Podcasts

About This Book

For those captive to the broken world of late modernity, wherein ageing and dying persons become vulnerable to despair, this book offers a diagnostic of such despair. It also resources the practices of a realistic, humanising hope that might enable a strength for person to journey with and for others, together, through such despair. Thus, by addressing the aetiology of despair experienced by people confronting ageing, frailty and dying, and drawing upon the writings of Gabriel Marcel, among others, Ashley Moyse reveals the problematic life of a broken world with its functionalising metaphors, instrumentalising reasoning and objectifying desires that offer no hope at all. It is a broken world where despair generates behaviours that anticipate suicide or other, often tragic, outcomes that impede or greatly curtail or even completely inhibit human flourishing. Resisting despair, but living through it, Moyse presents the activity of the moral life, demonstrating a way persons might be resourced through an intersubjective and reflective pedagogy, with its habits or practices that enable a humanising hope, liberating human beings to become those readied to confront the actualities of human living and dying, and encouraged to grow and develop as ‘wayfarers’, hopefully.

Reviews

Springer Nature Link

Moyse powerfully argues why medicine must expand its focus beyond maintaining a patient’s autonomy. He convincingly argues that we must develop our ability to be present and attend to the needs of others. [...] Chaplains, ethicists, and others will find much to ponder. —Religious Studies Review

Author Information

Ashley Moyse is Assistant Professor of Medical Ethics and McDonald Scholar in the Columbia Center for Clinical Medical Ethics at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons.

 

Series

Anthem Religion and Society Series

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements; Introduction. Diagnosing Despair. Resourcing Hope; Chapter 1. Pain, Suffering and the Broken World; Chapter 2. Ageing ‘As One More Opportunity to Fail’; Chapter 3. Dying Deceived by Despair in Disguise; Chapter 4. Wayfaring through Despair, Practicing Hope; Afterword by Lydia S. Dugdale; Bibliography; Index.

Links

No Podcasts for this title.
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