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Volume 3, Number 1 (Fall 2005)
Iris Murdoch, Spiritual Exercises, and Anselm's Proslogion and Prayers
Thomas S. Hibbs
Baylor University
ABSTRACT
In a number of philosophical essays, the novelist Iris Murdoch argued that modern ethics had
become an abstract and arid affair, detached from a) the concrete conditions of human action, b)
any overarching conception of the good, and c) from the sort of spiritual exercises that make
moral transformation possible. In this essay, I argue that Anselm's writings provide a neglected
resource for recovering what Murdoch thinks contemporary ethics has lost. It is not surprising
that Anselm situates all human reasoning within an overarching account of the good, but what
has been less obvious to readers is the way, not just in his prayers but even in his speculative
writings, he never loses sight of the concrete conditions of the individual human soul, its virtues
and vices. In Anselm's writings, we can discern patterns or practices that amount to spiritual
exercises designed to bring about the moral transformation of the reader.
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