Description

Book Synopsis
In our ever more secular times—is providence lost? Perhaps, but as Lloyd makes clear, providence still exerts a powerful influence on our thought and in our lives. This book traces a succession of transformations in the concept of providence through the history of Western philosophy.

Trade Review
In a wonderfully clear treatment, Lloyd filters changing understandings of freedom, responsibility, and necessity through the lens of providence. Showing just how much hinges on the presence or absence of notions of fate and providence, she is able to engage the question of how moral responsibility—for example, under conditions of uncertainty—has borne a complex relationship to the understanding of freedom of action. She stresses the role of the imagination and the passions in understanding such freedom, but above all she makes it clear in what way the abandonment of the notion of providence in the modern era is a distinctive feature of modernity, most notably in its understanding of the temporality of action. Nevertheless, as she shows, the exclusion of providence also puts us closer to the concerns of classical Greek ethics than to our more immediate sources of moral theory. -- Stephen Gaukroger, author of The Emergence of a Scientific Culture
In this elegant, erudite study, Genevieve Lloyd traces the intricate workings of providence in the shifting social imaginaries of the Western world, from the philosophy and literature of ancient Greece through the great philosophies of early modernity to "our time." She gestures toward a certain solace to be drawn from renewed assumption of responsibility in an era preoccupied with evading or managing the forces of chance and necessity, with which earlier philosophers and other thinkers sought reconciliation. -- Lorraine Code, York University
What is providence, anyway, in the modern world? And what is man's place in relation to it? Such are the questions that Genevieve Lloyd takes up in Providence Lost, a provocative and closely argued work of intellectual history and philosophical polemic. -- Daniel J. Mahoney * Wall Street Journal *
Providence Lost attends closely to the genre of the writings with which it is concerned, and is itself an exemplar of inquiry in practical philosophy...Genevieve Lloyd has written a wonderfully clear account of the deep connections of providence with central aspects of human life in our cultural history. She is also a perceptive guide to ways of drawing on these sources in responding to current concerns about freedom and necessity in conditions of uncertainty. -- Paul Crittenden * Australian Book Review *

Table of Contents
* Introduction * Euripides, Philosopher of the Stage * The World of Men and Gods * Agreeing with Nature: Fate and Providence in Stoic Ethics * Augustine: Divine Justice and the "Ordering" of Evil * The Philosopher and the Princess: Descartes and the Philosophical Life * Living with Necessity: Spinoza and the Philosophical Life * Designer Worlds * Providence as Progress * Providence Lost * Notes * Acknowledgments * Further Reading * Index

Providence Lost

    Product form

    £33.11

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £38.95 – you save £5.84 (14%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 20 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Genevieve Lloyd

    1 in stock


      View other formats and editions of Providence Lost by Genevieve Lloyd

      Publisher: Harvard University Press
      Publication Date: 11/1/2008 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780674031531, 978-0674031531
      ISBN10: 0674031539
      Also in:
      Philosophy

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In our ever more secular times—is providence lost? Perhaps, but as Lloyd makes clear, providence still exerts a powerful influence on our thought and in our lives. This book traces a succession of transformations in the concept of providence through the history of Western philosophy.

      Trade Review
      In a wonderfully clear treatment, Lloyd filters changing understandings of freedom, responsibility, and necessity through the lens of providence. Showing just how much hinges on the presence or absence of notions of fate and providence, she is able to engage the question of how moral responsibility—for example, under conditions of uncertainty—has borne a complex relationship to the understanding of freedom of action. She stresses the role of the imagination and the passions in understanding such freedom, but above all she makes it clear in what way the abandonment of the notion of providence in the modern era is a distinctive feature of modernity, most notably in its understanding of the temporality of action. Nevertheless, as she shows, the exclusion of providence also puts us closer to the concerns of classical Greek ethics than to our more immediate sources of moral theory. -- Stephen Gaukroger, author of The Emergence of a Scientific Culture
      In this elegant, erudite study, Genevieve Lloyd traces the intricate workings of providence in the shifting social imaginaries of the Western world, from the philosophy and literature of ancient Greece through the great philosophies of early modernity to "our time." She gestures toward a certain solace to be drawn from renewed assumption of responsibility in an era preoccupied with evading or managing the forces of chance and necessity, with which earlier philosophers and other thinkers sought reconciliation. -- Lorraine Code, York University
      What is providence, anyway, in the modern world? And what is man's place in relation to it? Such are the questions that Genevieve Lloyd takes up in Providence Lost, a provocative and closely argued work of intellectual history and philosophical polemic. -- Daniel J. Mahoney * Wall Street Journal *
      Providence Lost attends closely to the genre of the writings with which it is concerned, and is itself an exemplar of inquiry in practical philosophy...Genevieve Lloyd has written a wonderfully clear account of the deep connections of providence with central aspects of human life in our cultural history. She is also a perceptive guide to ways of drawing on these sources in responding to current concerns about freedom and necessity in conditions of uncertainty. -- Paul Crittenden * Australian Book Review *

      Table of Contents
      * Introduction * Euripides, Philosopher of the Stage * The World of Men and Gods * Agreeing with Nature: Fate and Providence in Stoic Ethics * Augustine: Divine Justice and the "Ordering" of Evil * The Philosopher and the Princess: Descartes and the Philosophical Life * Living with Necessity: Spinoza and the Philosophical Life * Designer Worlds * Providence as Progress * Providence Lost * Notes * Acknowledgments * Further Reading * Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account