OUR AGE IS CHARACTERIZED by an uncertainty about the na- ture of moral
obligations, about what one can hope for in an afterlife, and about the
limits of human knowledge. These uncertainties were captured by Immanuel
Kant in his Critique of Pure Reason, where he noted three basic human
questions: what can we know, what ought we to do, and what can we hope
for. Those questions and the uncer- tainties about their answers still
in great part define our cultural per- spective. In particular, we are
not clear about the foundations of ethics, or about their relationship
to religion and to science. This volume brings together previously
published essays that focus on these inter- relationships and their
uncertainties. It offers an attempt to sketch the interrelationship
among three major intellectual efforts: determining moral obligations,
the ultimate purpose and goals of man and the cosmos, and the nature of
empirical reality. Though imperfect, it is an effort to frame the unity
of the human condition, which is captured in part by ethics, in part by
religion, and in part by the sciences. Put another way, this collection
of essays springs from an attempt to see the unity of humans who engage
in the diverse roles of valuers, be- lievers, and knowers, while still
remaining single, individual humans.