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Words We Once Knew: Recovering the Language That Makes Us Human

Words We Once Knew: Recovering the Language That Makes Us Human in Ottawa, ON

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Current price: $13.99
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Words We Once Knew: Recovering the Language That Makes Us Human

By None

Words We Once Knew: Recovering the Language That Makes Us Human in Ottawa, ON

Current price: $13.99
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Size: Kobo eBook

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Words are not just tools we use. They are the containers that hold our understanding of the world. Over time, those containers can crack. In Words We Once Knew, Jeff Gatlin examines what happens when the language that once helped people describe reality—words like common sense, tolerance, hero, responsibility, gratitude, truth, and reverence—gradually loses its depth. The words remain, but their meanings grow thinner. What once guided judgment and character becomes vague, contested, or hollow. The result is not merely confusion about language. It is confusion about life itself. Drawing inspiration from thinkers such as Owen Barfield and the Inklings, Gatlin explores how the history of a culture can be traced through the changing meanings of its words. Each chapter takes a familiar term and asks a simple but unsettling question: What did this word once mean, and what has happened to it now? The answers reveal a pattern. Words that once described moral courage become labels of convenience. Words that once referred to physical realities become emotional categories. Words that once anchored shared understanding are increasingly used as instruments of argument or accusation. Yet this book is not a lament for a lost past. It is an invitation to recover attentiveness to language—to notice how words shape our thinking, our relationships, and our ability to live together. When language loses precision, thought becomes shallow. When words regain weight, our conversations—and perhaps our culture—can begin to recover depth. Written in the tradition of reflective cultural criticism, Words We Once Knew will resonate with readers who appreciate the work of C.S. Lewis, Owen Barfield, Wendell Berry, and other writers concerned with the relationship between language, truth, and the moral imagination. For readers who have sensed that something in our public language has grown strangely thin, this book offers both explanation and hope: the possibility that by recovering our words, we might also recover a clearer way of seeing the world. Includes a Reader's Guide for Individuals and Groups.
Words are not just tools we use. They are the containers that hold our understanding of the world. Over time, those containers can crack. In Words We Once Knew, Jeff Gatlin examines what happens when the language that once helped people describe reality—words like common sense, tolerance, hero, responsibility, gratitude, truth, and reverence—gradually loses its depth. The words remain, but their meanings grow thinner. What once guided judgment and character becomes vague, contested, or hollow. The result is not merely confusion about language. It is confusion about life itself. Drawing inspiration from thinkers such as Owen Barfield and the Inklings, Gatlin explores how the history of a culture can be traced through the changing meanings of its words. Each chapter takes a familiar term and asks a simple but unsettling question: What did this word once mean, and what has happened to it now? The answers reveal a pattern. Words that once described moral courage become labels of convenience. Words that once referred to physical realities become emotional categories. Words that once anchored shared understanding are increasingly used as instruments of argument or accusation. Yet this book is not a lament for a lost past. It is an invitation to recover attentiveness to language—to notice how words shape our thinking, our relationships, and our ability to live together. When language loses precision, thought becomes shallow. When words regain weight, our conversations—and perhaps our culture—can begin to recover depth. Written in the tradition of reflective cultural criticism, Words We Once Knew will resonate with readers who appreciate the work of C.S. Lewis, Owen Barfield, Wendell Berry, and other writers concerned with the relationship between language, truth, and the moral imagination. For readers who have sensed that something in our public language has grown strangely thin, this book offers both explanation and hope: the possibility that by recovering our words, we might also recover a clearer way of seeing the world. Includes a Reader's Guide for Individuals and Groups.

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