Bookmark this item
by Sidney Goodwin
£12.68
Available - Usually dispatched within 4 days
Available - Usually dispatched within 4 days

Bookmark this item
The modern world suffers from a peculiar amnesia. It has forgotten beauty. Not entirely, of course-people still seek pleasant experiences, decorate their homes, and admire sunsets-but the deeper meaning of beauty, its metaphysical weight, its capacity to reveal truth and goodness, has been obscured. Beauty has been reduced to a matter of taste, a subjective preference, a fleeting sensation. In many circles, it is treated as a luxury, a distraction, or even a deception. Yet within the Catholic intellectual tradition, beauty has never been a trivial ornament. It is a transcendental, a property of being itself, inseparable from truth and goodness, and ultimately rooted in the very nature of God. To forget beauty is to forget something essential about reality, about ourselves, and about the One who created all things.
This book begins from the conviction that beauty matters because it reveals the deepest structure of the world. It is not an optional extra but a path to God, a mode of knowing, a school of virtue, and a source of joy. The Catholic tradition has always insisted that beauty is a bridge between the visible and the invisible, the material and the spiritual, the human and the divine. In an age marked by fragmentation, relativism, and disenchantment, the recovery of beauty is not merely an aesthetic project but a civilizational necessity. Beauty has the power to heal, to unify, to elevate, and to convert. It speaks a language that even the skeptical can understand, because it addresses the heart as well as the mind.
Title
Why Beauty Matters: The Transcendentals and the Catholic Intellectual Tradition
Publisher
Colloquium
Published
April 2026
Weight
182g
Page Count
148
Dimensions
14 x 21.6 x 0.9 cm
ISBN
9798235422049
ISBN-10
8235422042
Eden Code
7458367
Featured in
For you
Free delivery on orders over £15