Finding Meaning in an Imperfect World
Autor Iddo Landauen Limba Engleză Paperback – 6 aug 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190092221
ISBN-10: 019009222X
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 208 x 140 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 019009222X
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 208 x 140 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
This is a book about the meaning of life, and what it's meaningful to spend your life doing...Landau has this wonderfully down-to-earth, imperfectionist approach, which is based on criticising certain unspoken assumptions that we make about what it means to spend life meaningfully. One of the recurring themes through this book is that having a definition of meaning that most humans can't achieve is a sort of weird, unnecessary cruelty to yourself. We are tiny little individuals on a globe of billions, tiny pinpricks of consciousness in aeons of cosmic time—so if you think you've got to affect that picture, to change the cosmos in some way in order for yours to count as a meaningful life, then basically none of us ever could. But it doesn't actually need to follow that if, in 100 years' time, nobody has any notion that I ever did anything, or even existed, then my life has been meaningless as a result.
this well-written book of Landau should not be missed by academic or non-academic readers who are generally interested in the topic of the MoL. To borrow the author's phrase, the overall discussion of this book "ought not remain on the theoretical level, but be seen as guidelines for improving the meaning of life" (p. 228). Even if one does not bear any practical agenda, reading through the book brings great intellectual enjoyment, in particular, decent training of philosophizing. Moreover, for those who would like to expand their philosophical curriculum, this book provides an excellent reference.
Landau's wisdom shines through, offering sound advice for making one's life feel more meaningful and worthwhile.
...it may very well be the best one on the market. It is accessible to a wide audience, including non-academics. As such, this book could be a good recommended read to persons struggling with finding meaning or work in their lives.
[This] book impressively achieves its main goal: Landau improves both academics' and non-academics' thinking about this important topic, and helps us making and considering our lives more meaningful... I hope that similar books will soon further exemplify contemporary analytic philosophy's great potential to inform cognitive therapy or self-help.
While most of the recent philosophical work on meaning in life is very theoretical, Landau's book is engaging, accessible, and pitched toward those who have genuine concerns about the value or worth of their lives ... This book would work very well in undergraduate courses dealing with meaning in life or well-being. That the book's working account of the meaningful life leaves room for further specification could function as a basis for productive and fun uses in the classroom ... On the whole, Iddo Landau's book is a wonderful contribution. It is a delightful read and should prove a helpful resource for teachers and for researchers who work on the meaning of life. And, perhaps most importantly, this book offers people hope and guidance for living a meaningful life in our all too imperfect world.
This book is rare in being thoroughly versed in many philosophical discussions of the meaning of life, yet full of practical wisdom. Completely accessible to anyone who finds the question of meaning urgent, it sets a standard few discussions of the topic manage to reach.
A deep exploration of the main questions and answers in the meaning of life literature. A pleasure to read.
Written for the generally educated reader, but of interest to the professional philosopher, Iddo Landau's book is a guide to making life meaningful under less than ideal conditions. Landau is a careful, informed navigator, showing the reader how to reach a meaningful life despite obstacles such as suffering, death, evil, randomness, and a lack of free will. Making insightful philosophical points without jargon, referring to literature and the arts to illustrate, and also plumbing people's psychologies to identify mental blocks, Landau's book is practically wise and theoretically profound.
this well-written book of Landau should not be missed by academic or non-academic readers who are generally interested in the topic of the MoL. To borrow the author's phrase, the overall discussion of this book "ought not remain on the theoretical level, but be seen as guidelines for improving the meaning of life" (p. 228). Even if one does not bear any practical agenda, reading through the book brings great intellectual enjoyment, in particular, decent training of philosophizing. Moreover, for those who would like to expand their philosophical curriculum, this book provides an excellent reference.
Landau's wisdom shines through, offering sound advice for making one's life feel more meaningful and worthwhile.
...it may very well be the best one on the market. It is accessible to a wide audience, including non-academics. As such, this book could be a good recommended read to persons struggling with finding meaning or work in their lives.
[This] book impressively achieves its main goal: Landau improves both academics' and non-academics' thinking about this important topic, and helps us making and considering our lives more meaningful... I hope that similar books will soon further exemplify contemporary analytic philosophy's great potential to inform cognitive therapy or self-help.
While most of the recent philosophical work on meaning in life is very theoretical, Landau's book is engaging, accessible, and pitched toward those who have genuine concerns about the value or worth of their lives ... This book would work very well in undergraduate courses dealing with meaning in life or well-being. That the book's working account of the meaningful life leaves room for further specification could function as a basis for productive and fun uses in the classroom ... On the whole, Iddo Landau's book is a wonderful contribution. It is a delightful read and should prove a helpful resource for teachers and for researchers who work on the meaning of life. And, perhaps most importantly, this book offers people hope and guidance for living a meaningful life in our all too imperfect world.
This book is rare in being thoroughly versed in many philosophical discussions of the meaning of life, yet full of practical wisdom. Completely accessible to anyone who finds the question of meaning urgent, it sets a standard few discussions of the topic manage to reach.
A deep exploration of the main questions and answers in the meaning of life literature. A pleasure to read.
Written for the generally educated reader, but of interest to the professional philosopher, Iddo Landau's book is a guide to making life meaningful under less than ideal conditions. Landau is a careful, informed navigator, showing the reader how to reach a meaningful life despite obstacles such as suffering, death, evil, randomness, and a lack of free will. Making insightful philosophical points without jargon, referring to literature and the arts to illustrate, and also plumbing people's psychologies to identify mental blocks, Landau's book is practically wise and theoretically profound.
Notă biografică
Iddo Landau is Professor of Philosophy at Haifa University, Israel. He has published extensively on the meaning of life.