...rich, subtle and hugely ambitious book...Grand scheme, rich in detail, by turns meditative and aggressively analytic, unhurried yet purposive, it is, in short, a book of the highest insight about metaphysics and the meaning of life...prospective readers should notunderestimate the task of reading this book. It is a rich diet and a demanding read that will require close and repeated attention. It brings proportionate rewards.
Ian Ground Philosophy
Among Cooper's many virtues is a generous - in attitude and quantity - use of continental and eastern philosophy, still unusual and refreshing in a book by a philosopher from the Anglo-American tradition.
Times Higher Education Supplement
... remarkable ... an unusual and courageous book. Most striking, perhaps, is the originality and ambition of its overall conception, persuasively linking up a range of important questions not standardly seen as germane to each other ... The overall position presented in this book is skilfully woven from these different strands of inquiry and the sheer range of philosophical learning exhibited in the course of it is genuinely impressive. In his generous, searching, and imaginative interpretations and reconstructions of a wide array of heterogeneous but, he argues, often converging sources, Cooper succeeds in presenting and exemplifying an attractive and humane vision of things. It is not the least of the significant merits of his book that it reminds us in the process that the quality of a philosophy lies as much in the questions it has the courage to ask as in the answers it ventures.
Peter Poellner, Mind
David Cooper has written an extraordinarily rich, deep, thought-provoking book. It is remarkable for its range and its erudition. Cooper engages freely with both eastern and western traditions, with both "continental" and "analytic" traditions, and with both past and contemporary traditions. . . . I think this is a superb book. It amply rewards close and repeated study.
A. W. Moore, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research