Críticas:
"Following the gentle flow of Ikeda and Wider's conversations, we enter a heart-warming intimacy with them and with their mentors, Josei Toda and Ralph Waldo Emerson. The authors' unabashed expressions of appreciation for mothers everywhere, for circles of support, and for the natural world evoke radical gratitude." --Ann Diller, professor emerita, philosophy of education, University of New Hampshire"
"A carefully crafted, beautifully organized, and deeply hospitable book. I strongly recommend it to anyone interested in living more humanely." Megan Laverty, associate professor of philosophy and education, Columbia University"
"Following the gentle flow of Ikeda and Wider s conversations, we enter a heart-warming intimacy with them and with their mentors, Josei Toda and Ralph Waldo Emerson. The authors unabashed expressions of appreciation for mothers everywhere, for circles of support, and for the natural world evoke radical gratitude." Ann Diller, professor emerita, philosophy of education, University of New Hampshire"
"This wonderful book both enacts and recalls dialogue as the most fundamental means of human growth. Sarah Wider and Daisaku Ikeda celebrate the self-reliance of Ralph Waldo Emerson as it flowered among others and urged awareness of their needs, with special attention to the women of transcendentalism who were mentors, friends, and teachers of new spiritual awareness." Phyllis Cole, professor of English, women's studies, and American studies, Penn State Brandywine"
Reseña del editor:
In this inspirational discourse, scholar Sarah Wider and Buddhist leader Daisaku Ikeda celebrate the great spiritual and literary figures, East and West, who have inspired their own work as educators, poets, and peace builders, including both the men and the women of the American Renaissance. They reserve their highest praise, though, for the lesser-known influences, especially teachers and mothers, whose humble, compassionate actions provide the truest foundation for the realization of ever-greater peace. Ultimately, the book is a tribute to the bonds that give life meaning. These bonds are the ones built between friends and family; those who teach and those we might learn from; with the great thinkers of the past who live on in books, poetry, and art; with nature; and most of all with the best version of ourselves.
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