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<title>Personal ethics in an impersonal world</title>
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<namePart>Conover, C.Eugene</namePart>
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<dateIssued>1967</dateIssued>
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<note>PERSONAL ETHICS IN AN

IMPERSONAL WORLD

C. Eugene Conover

Today you rarely find a book that deals with personal ethics in the context of philosophy and theology. This book does and its focus on the effect of the &#34;impersonality&#34; of our world makes it unique.

Taking the campus as a microcosm of society, this critical analysis of its moral climate points up the differing views of the older and younger generations. It reveals the presence of both a new radicalism and a new &#34;privatism&#34; that interpret morality as a personal matter. It examines five perspectives for moral decisions. Each centers on a different criterion the individual's demand for freedom and authenticity, the unique situation calling for decision, the culture with its folk- ways, universal ethical principles, and the theological teach- ings of a particular form of religion.

As our society makes us increasingly dependent on other per- sons, there is a continuing need for a personal morality, and a call for new relationships intermediate to those which are fully personal and those which are &#34;open&#34; and impersonal. But the sense of social responsibility that marks today's theo- logical ethics, our scientific resources for overcoming ig- norance and prejudice, and the universal obligations our moral philosophers formulate, point to a coming social moral- ity that will transcend class, racial, cultural, and religious barriers.

C. EUGENE CONOVER is a graduate of The College of Wooster, Union Theological Seminary, and the University of Cincinnati (Ph.D.). Formerly an active pastor, he is now Pro- fessor of Philosophy, Chairman of the Department of Phi- losophy and Religion, and Dean of Chapel at Lindenwood Col- lege, Missouri. He is also author of Moral Education in Family, School, and Church.</note>
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