On FriendshipISBN: 978-0-7456-2280-4
Hardcover
200 pages
October 2000, Polity
Other Available Formats: Paperback
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But has this always been the case or is the nature and meaning of
friendship changing in contemporary society? Ray Pahl explores
these issues as well as discussing who needs friends most and when,
how friends make us the people that we are and whether friendship
is a new metaphor for morality.
Pahl brings refreshing new insights to a form of relationship that
has changed in its meaning and significance since the classical
discussion by Aristotle. Drawing on a wide range of material,
including history, philosophy, psychology and sociology, he focuses
it into distinctive shafts of light which illuminate different
aspects of this rich and multi-faceted topic.
Understanding friendship is important at the private level, as we
struggle with the problem of personal identity in a kaleidoscopic
world, and also at the public level where inappropriate friendship
emerges as cronyism or subtle varieties of political
corruption.
This accessible jargon-free book will appeal to a wide readership,
since it does much to illuminate a fascinating topic at many
different levels.