This collection of essays offers a vital examination of human existence through the lens of subjectivity, autonomy, and meaning. Rather than approaching philosophy as abstract theory divorced from lived experience, the author grounds philosophical inquiry in the concrete realities of individual human life, arguing that genuine understanding emerges when we attend to the particular struggles and visions of differentiated persons.
The book opens with a provocative prologue featuring Prometheus and the myth of Sisyphus, immediately establishing its central tension: how can individuals maintain dignity and purpose in an objective world that often seems indifferent to human concerns? This question animates all seven chapters that follow.
A significant portion of the work examines Eric Ambler's detective novels as philosophical texts. The author argues that Ambler's fiction reveals the fundamental incompatibility between literary logic—neat, deductive, controllable—and the messy reality of lived experience, where chance and probability govern human affairs far more than rational planning. Through close analysis of A Coffin for Dimitrios, the author demonstrates how writers who attempt to intellectualize reality often find themselves overwhelmed by forces beyond their comprehension.
The book also champions the maxim as a philosophical form worthy of serious attention. Against the tendency of academic philosophy to favor abstract theorizing, the author celebrates maxims for their economy of expression, their refusal of pretension, and their ability to communicate vital truths to readers of all educational backgrounds. Writers from La Rochefoucauld to Baudelaire to Jean Cocteau receive careful consideration as thinkers who understood that brevity and sincerity often convey more truth than lengthy argumentation.
Later chapters turn to literature's capacity to illuminate existential questions that scientific methods cannot address. Through readings of Enrique Anderson Imbert's short story "El Fantasma" and Albert Camus's The First Man, the author argues for literature's essential role in helping individuals confront questions of mortality, loneliness, immortality, and meaning. These are not abstract puzzles to be solved but lived concerns that each person must work through on their own terms.
Throughout, the author insists that philosophy must serve life rather than obscure it. Against the cynicism and specialized jargon that dominate contemporary academic thought, this work recovers philosophy as a vital practice of self-reflection and autonomous meaning-making. For readers seeking philosophical insight that honors both intellectual rigor and human experience, these essays offer a refreshing alternative to fashionable theory.
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Vendeur : Revaluation Books, Exeter, Royaume-Uni
Paperback. Etat : Brand New. 200 pages. 8.25x5.50x0.50 inches. In Stock. N° de réf. du vendeur zk0875863701
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