Abstract
Anyone who has paid attention to the work of Leon Kass over the years is likely to have read earlier versions of many of the essays collected in Leading a Worthy Life: Finding Meaning in Modern Times. Even so, they will repay repeated readings, if only because they are evidence that one who has spent his life in the academy can write prose that is clear, readable, and often arresting. Moreover, the essays, taken as a whole, exemplify nicely, as Kass puts it, “the two major activities of my professional life”—namely, “examining closely the human meaning of the new biology” and “teaching searchingly great books that offer profound but competing accounts of the good life” (p. 12).