Description

Book Synopsis
Gerontologists, philosophers, and students will find Baars' discussion to be a powerful, perceptive conversation starter.

Trade Review
Any college-level collection strong in aging and social insights on the process will find this a thought-provoking discussion. Midwest Book Review This is a vision infused with hope and potential, and in this lies the art of living meaningfully. The last chapters in which Baars describes the rich possibilities of individual story and proposes an alternative idea of aging well are worth the trip. Choice Recognizing life's finitude, honoring one's own personal story, nurturing intergenerational relationships, and seeking to live wisely are among the important ingredients for living the art of aging. Simply raising these issues and helping the reader to understand their importance are reasons enough to encounter this intense yet highly intelligent book. -- E. Michael Brady Educational Gerontology Aging and the Art of Living revitalizes the origins of philosophy which began with the search for the good life... This well-written and clearly organized book weaves poetic insights with precise reflections on topics that include living in time, wisdom, and the meaning of aging. This book makes significant and unique contributions to gerontology by challenging assumptions, articulating alternative perspectives, and inspiring new possibilities for aging and living fully. -- Debra Sheets Canadian Journal on Aging This publication -- which contains an endless wealth of spurs to thought and engagement -- should initiate a long and important conversation in which we learn to treat and to experience ageing more critically, much more creatively and with greater enjoyment. -- Ricca Edmondson Ageing and Society Jan Baars is the premier philosopher of aging, working in Europe and the United States today. Actually, to call him a philosopher of aging is to diminish the range of his thought and his accomplishments. -- Thomas R. Cole The Gerontologist

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
The Chronocratic Emperor Has No Clothes
Overview
1. Chronometric Regimes: The Life Course, Aging, and Time
Introduction
1.1. Historical Backgrounds of the Chronometric Life Course
A Biographical Sandglass
Age in Social Legislation
Late Modern Systemic Worlds and Life Worlds
1.2. Chronometric Life Courses: Beyond Standardization and De-standardization
The Continuing Importance of Chronometric Age
Chronometric Regimes
1.3. Care and Its Chronometric Regimes
Chronometric Care and Its Acceleration
Time-efficient Lives
1.4. Chronometric Aging: Exactly Arbitrary
Intrinsic Time and Intrinsic Malleability
The Heisenberg Principle of Aging
Conclusions
2. Exclusion, Activism, and Eternal Youth
Introduction
2.1. From Natural Passivity to Activating Activities for Older People
From "Idleness with Dignity" to Being as Being Busy
Stay Active: "Use It or Lose It"
2.2. The Emergence of an Anti-aging Culture
"Don't Call 'em Old, Call 'em Consumers!"
"Take Years Off Your Looks and Add Them to Your Life"
2.3. The Much-desired Long and Invulnerable Life: Magic and Magic Technology
A Fundamental Vulnerability
Conclusions
3. A Passion for Wisdom and the Emergence of an Art of Aging
Introduction
3.1. Early Greek Thought about the Life Course
Solon's Untraditional Views
3.2. The Search for Wisdom and the Emergence of an Art of Life
Plato's Academy
Aristotle's Lyceum
The Garden of Epicurus
The Stoics
Wisdom, Aging, and Old Age
3.3. Cicero and the Stoic Art of Living in Old Age
Cicero
Cato Maior de Senectute: On Old Age
Cicero's Defense of Old Age against Four Complaints
A Statesman's View of Old Age
Conclusions
4. Modern Science, the Discovery of a Personal History,and Aging Authentically
Introduction
4.1. Aging in a World of Meaningful Repetition
4.2. (Ir)reversible Time and the Senescing of Organisms
Does Nature Repeat Itself Eternally?
Nature Changes and Time Is Irreversible
Senescing, Irreversible Time, and the Organism
4.3. The Idealization of Science and the Epistemological Reduction of Time
4.4. The Struggle for a Fuller Experience of Time
Augustine: A Threefold Present
Bergson: Time as Creativity
Husserl: The Phenomenological Experience of Time
Heidegger: Authentic Temporal Being in the Face of Death
Time Is Lived in Constitutive Life Worlds
Conclusions
5. Aging and Narrative Identities
Introduction
5.1. Embedding Aging in Narratives
Narratives and Narrative Identity
Narrative Integration as a "Good Life"
Life Plans
"Real Stories" and Textual Issues
5.2. Modest Necessity of Stories
Changes, Themes, and Phases
Stories: Intertwining the Past, the Present, and the Future
Institutional Narrative Practices
Narratives if the Life World and the Systemic World
Conclusions
6. Perspectives—Toward an Art of Aging
Introduction
6.1. Interhuman Vulnerability and the Dignity of "Unsuccessful" Aging
The Vulnerability of the Interhuman Condition
Aging and Increasing Vulnerability
The Dignity of "Unsuccessful" Aging
Autonomy and Structural Paternalism
6.2. Toward an Art of Aging: Beyond Conventional Wisdom
Older and Wiser?
6.3. Toward an Art of Aging: Living in Different Times
A Multi-layered Present
Kairos: A Sensitivity for Changing Temporal Qualities
Activism and Receptivity
Memories Have Their Own Times
Actions Constitute Time
Life Events and Life's Periods
The Times of Life Are Finite
A Last Question about the Beginning of Time
6.4. Toward an Art of Aging: Beyond Longer Lives
Aging as Finitization: A Deepening of Unique Lives
Unique Lives: Empirical and Ethical
Contingent and Existential Limitations
Why Do We Age? How Can Aging Be Meaningful?
Is It Good to Live Longer?
References
Index

Aging and the Art of Living

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A Hardback by Jan Baars

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    View other formats and editions of Aging and the Art of Living by Jan Baars

    Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
    Publication Date: 1/26/2012 12:11:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9781421406466, 978-1421406466
    ISBN10: 1421406462
    Also in:
    Physiology

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Gerontologists, philosophers, and students will find Baars' discussion to be a powerful, perceptive conversation starter.

    Trade Review
    Any college-level collection strong in aging and social insights on the process will find this a thought-provoking discussion. Midwest Book Review This is a vision infused with hope and potential, and in this lies the art of living meaningfully. The last chapters in which Baars describes the rich possibilities of individual story and proposes an alternative idea of aging well are worth the trip. Choice Recognizing life's finitude, honoring one's own personal story, nurturing intergenerational relationships, and seeking to live wisely are among the important ingredients for living the art of aging. Simply raising these issues and helping the reader to understand their importance are reasons enough to encounter this intense yet highly intelligent book. -- E. Michael Brady Educational Gerontology Aging and the Art of Living revitalizes the origins of philosophy which began with the search for the good life... This well-written and clearly organized book weaves poetic insights with precise reflections on topics that include living in time, wisdom, and the meaning of aging. This book makes significant and unique contributions to gerontology by challenging assumptions, articulating alternative perspectives, and inspiring new possibilities for aging and living fully. -- Debra Sheets Canadian Journal on Aging This publication -- which contains an endless wealth of spurs to thought and engagement -- should initiate a long and important conversation in which we learn to treat and to experience ageing more critically, much more creatively and with greater enjoyment. -- Ricca Edmondson Ageing and Society Jan Baars is the premier philosopher of aging, working in Europe and the United States today. Actually, to call him a philosopher of aging is to diminish the range of his thought and his accomplishments. -- Thomas R. Cole The Gerontologist

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgments
    Introduction
    The Chronocratic Emperor Has No Clothes
    Overview
    1. Chronometric Regimes: The Life Course, Aging, and Time
    Introduction
    1.1. Historical Backgrounds of the Chronometric Life Course
    A Biographical Sandglass
    Age in Social Legislation
    Late Modern Systemic Worlds and Life Worlds
    1.2. Chronometric Life Courses: Beyond Standardization and De-standardization
    The Continuing Importance of Chronometric Age
    Chronometric Regimes
    1.3. Care and Its Chronometric Regimes
    Chronometric Care and Its Acceleration
    Time-efficient Lives
    1.4. Chronometric Aging: Exactly Arbitrary
    Intrinsic Time and Intrinsic Malleability
    The Heisenberg Principle of Aging
    Conclusions
    2. Exclusion, Activism, and Eternal Youth
    Introduction
    2.1. From Natural Passivity to Activating Activities for Older People
    From "Idleness with Dignity" to Being as Being Busy
    Stay Active: "Use It or Lose It"
    2.2. The Emergence of an Anti-aging Culture
    "Don't Call 'em Old, Call 'em Consumers!"
    "Take Years Off Your Looks and Add Them to Your Life"
    2.3. The Much-desired Long and Invulnerable Life: Magic and Magic Technology
    A Fundamental Vulnerability
    Conclusions
    3. A Passion for Wisdom and the Emergence of an Art of Aging
    Introduction
    3.1. Early Greek Thought about the Life Course
    Solon's Untraditional Views
    3.2. The Search for Wisdom and the Emergence of an Art of Life
    Plato's Academy
    Aristotle's Lyceum
    The Garden of Epicurus
    The Stoics
    Wisdom, Aging, and Old Age
    3.3. Cicero and the Stoic Art of Living in Old Age
    Cicero
    Cato Maior de Senectute: On Old Age
    Cicero's Defense of Old Age against Four Complaints
    A Statesman's View of Old Age
    Conclusions
    4. Modern Science, the Discovery of a Personal History,and Aging Authentically
    Introduction
    4.1. Aging in a World of Meaningful Repetition
    4.2. (Ir)reversible Time and the Senescing of Organisms
    Does Nature Repeat Itself Eternally?
    Nature Changes and Time Is Irreversible
    Senescing, Irreversible Time, and the Organism
    4.3. The Idealization of Science and the Epistemological Reduction of Time
    4.4. The Struggle for a Fuller Experience of Time
    Augustine: A Threefold Present
    Bergson: Time as Creativity
    Husserl: The Phenomenological Experience of Time
    Heidegger: Authentic Temporal Being in the Face of Death
    Time Is Lived in Constitutive Life Worlds
    Conclusions
    5. Aging and Narrative Identities
    Introduction
    5.1. Embedding Aging in Narratives
    Narratives and Narrative Identity
    Narrative Integration as a "Good Life"
    Life Plans
    "Real Stories" and Textual Issues
    5.2. Modest Necessity of Stories
    Changes, Themes, and Phases
    Stories: Intertwining the Past, the Present, and the Future
    Institutional Narrative Practices
    Narratives if the Life World and the Systemic World
    Conclusions
    6. Perspectives—Toward an Art of Aging
    Introduction
    6.1. Interhuman Vulnerability and the Dignity of "Unsuccessful" Aging
    The Vulnerability of the Interhuman Condition
    Aging and Increasing Vulnerability
    The Dignity of "Unsuccessful" Aging
    Autonomy and Structural Paternalism
    6.2. Toward an Art of Aging: Beyond Conventional Wisdom
    Older and Wiser?
    6.3. Toward an Art of Aging: Living in Different Times
    A Multi-layered Present
    Kairos: A Sensitivity for Changing Temporal Qualities
    Activism and Receptivity
    Memories Have Their Own Times
    Actions Constitute Time
    Life Events and Life's Periods
    The Times of Life Are Finite
    A Last Question about the Beginning of Time
    6.4. Toward an Art of Aging: Beyond Longer Lives
    Aging as Finitization: A Deepening of Unique Lives
    Unique Lives: Empirical and Ethical
    Contingent and Existential Limitations
    Why Do We Age? How Can Aging Be Meaningful?
    Is It Good to Live Longer?
    References
    Index

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