Capturing the Ineffable

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anthropology
Category=JHM
Category=JN
communities
consciousness
culture
epistemic
epistemology
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnography
healing
knowledge
philosophical
wisdom

Product details

  • ISBN 9781487503130
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 160 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 18 May 2020
  • Publisher: University of Toronto Press
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Grounded in ethnographic case studies that examine experiences from which wisdom emerges, Capturing the Ineffable provides a rigorous analysis of the sociocultural context of wisdom in the contemporary world. Each chapter in the volume deals with different aspects and showcases how communities in different contexts - nursing homes, religious organizations, corporations, and monastic institutions, for example - engage with the ineffability of wisdom.

Contributors draw from a range of disciplines and cross-cultural and historical data in order to interpret the meaning and value of wisdom as a human endeavour. This book also represents an anthropological method for evaluating various philosophical and scientific approaches to understanding wisdom, including how wisdom is learned and taught. Readers will be able to appreciate how action, emotion, uncertainty, and cultural systems come to bear on wisdom as a value in human life and expression. In the end, Capturing the Ineffable reveals how the conception and paradoxical nature of wisdom dispels the dichotomies of self/other, structure/agency, known/unknown, nature/culture, and the like. What is at stake is a recasting of wisdom as a particular kind of anthropological endeavour and, thus, a return to and modification of philosophical anthropology.

Philip Y. Kao is a research associate in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Pittsburgh. Joseph S. Alter is the director of the Asian Studies Center and a professor of anthropology at the University of Pittsburgh.