Jonathan Lear is John U. Nef Distinguished Service Professor on the Committee on Social Thought and in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Chicago. His works include Wisdom Won from Illness, Radical Hope, A Case for Irony, and Happiness, Death, and the Remainder of Life.
Mourning, as Jonathan Lear shows, has always been a way of remembering that can add something new to the world. Imagining the End takes a hard look at the contemporary grounds of despair-for a person, a group, or a species-but it conveys hope by the accuracy of its imaginings. Lear's treatment here of a great subject of moral psychology is characteristically subtle and inventive. -- David Bromwich, Yale University