
Beshara Magazine | Unity in the Contemporary World Clare Carlisle: Transcendence for Beginners
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Apr 24, 2026 Clare Carlisle, professor of philosophy at King’s College London and author of Transcendence for Beginners, explores how philosophy shapes the good life. She discusses beauty and ethical life, hidden everyday nobility, Spinoza’s interconnected metaphysics, lives as cosmograms, and varied models of transcendence. Short reflections on teachers, biography, and small acts with large consequences punctuate the conversation.
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Philosophy Shapes How We Define A Good Life
- Philosophy helps clarify what a good life means by probing what humans fundamentally are, not just listing moral rules.
- Clare Carlisle explains that questions about mind, soul, and personhood arise once you ask what a human life is.
Beauty As A Measure Of Goodness
- Ancient Greek kalon links moral goodness with aesthetic beauty — a life can be noble, fine, and pleasing in shape.
- Carlisle says beauty includes the soul's radiance and that ugliness of public life can pain us as much as personal beauty moves us.
Hidden Lives Can Manifest Great Goodness
- George Eliot values 'hidden lives' as sources of goodness not recorded in history but still manifesting virtue.
- Carlisle cites Dorothea in Middlemarch as an example of buried goodness that contributes to the world.




