Book jacket of - Who's Afraid of Freemasonry?
by Alexander Piatigorsky
|
Taken from dust jacket:
Often viewed with suspicion and seen by outsiders as an alien and even
inherently hostile institution, freemasonry is an undoubtedly powerful
presence in British, American and European life. In this thought-provoking
study, Professor Alexander Piatigorsky looks at freemasonry as
"phenomenon": on the one hand he analysis it as an object of thought, what
do masons think of masonry and themselves and what do others think; and on
the other hand he examines masonry as an objet in itself, the
Lodges,rituals, signs, and symbols, their habits, language and speeches.
The first part of the book gives an outline of masonic history, the
founding of the Grand Lodge in Covent Garden in London in 1717; masonry's
inception, in Britain, as an instrument to solve the endemic tension
between individual desire and public responsibility; its religious and
ethical conceptions. Looking at one of the main sources of masonic
history, Anderson's Constitutions (1717-1738), which documented masonic
practice and the masons' mythical history back to Hiram Abiff, the first
Master Mason in the reign of King Solomon, Dr. Piatigorsky is able to
extract some essential truths about masonic philosophy. From enlightenment
Europe, the American war of Independence to the present day, he describes
its many trials, tribulations and schisms.
The second part is devoted to the rituals and symbolism within which all
principal masonic religious ideas fin their place. It is here that Dr.
Piatigorsky's background as a professor of comparative religion comes into
its own, his intellectual pursuit revealing more about masonry and its aims
than any so-called expose.
|
Index
Meetings
History
Contact
Links
Ring