Beschreibung:
A candid and personal insight into the life and work of the philosopher and writer Roger Scruton, by his intellectual biographer Mark Dooley.This book reveals what life was like for Roger Scruton growing up in High Wycombe, how he survived Cambridge and how he came to hold his conservative outlook. It tells of Scruton's rise to prominence while writing for The Times and sheds light on his campaign on behalf of underground dissidents in Eastern Europe.Ranging across topics as diverse as the current state of British philosophy, music, religion, and illuminating what lay behind Scruton's abandonment of academia for his new life on a Wiltshire farm, Conversations with Roger Scruton is an intimate portrait of a writer who has felt philosophy as a vocation and whose defence of unfashionable causes has brought him a wide readership in Britain and around the world.
Preface1 Childhood and Cambridge2 Becoming a Philosopher3 Becoming a Conservative at Birkbeck4 Some Thoughts on British Philosophy5 Eastern Europe6 Why Architecture?7 Why Sex?8 Leaving Birkbeck for Boston9 Farming and Family10 Sinful Pleasures11 Rediscovering Religion12 Living as a Writer13 Making Music14 AcceptanceAfterwordNotesIndex