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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 101
EAN num: 9780679779179
ISBN number: 0679779175
Label: Vintage
Manufacturer: Vintage
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 272
Printing Date: April 03, 2001
Publishing house: Vintage
Release Date: April 03, 2001
Sale Popularity Level: 28699
Studio: Vintage
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Product Description:
From the internationally heralded author of How Proust Can Change Your Life comes this remarkable new book that presents the wisdom of some of the greatest thinkers of the ages as advice for our day to day struggles.
Solace for the broken heart can be found in the words of Schopenhauer. The ancient Greek Epicurus has the wisest, and most affordable, solution to cash flow problems. A remedy for impotence lies in Montaigne. Seneca offers advice upon losing a job. And Nietzsche has shrewd counsel for everything from loneliness to illness. The Consolations of Philosophy is a book as accessibly erudite as it is useful and entertaining.
Amazon.com Review:
'It is common,' Alain de Botton writes in The Consolations of Philosophy, 'to assume that we are dealing with a highly intelligent book when we cease to understand it. Profound ideas cannot, after all, be explained in the language of children.' While his easygoing exploration of philosophers from Socrates to Nietzsche isn't exactly written for the Blue's Clues set, few readers will cease to understand it. Furthermore, it's a joy to read. De Botton's 1997 How Proust Can Change Your Life forged a new kind of lit crit: an exploration of Remembrance of Things Past, delivered in the sweet-gummed envelope of an advice book. He returns to the self-help format here, this time plundering the great thinkers to puzzle out the way we ought to live.
What was stunning about the Proust book was de Botton's brazen annexing of a hallowed novelist to address lite emotional problems. That format is less arresting when applied to the philosophers, since which earnest philosophy major has not, from time to time, tried to apply the alpine heights of thought to his own humble worries? Usually, sophomoric attempts to turn to, say, Kant for advice on love tend to be unmitigated disasters. In de Botton's case, however, he is able to find consolation for a broken heart in Schopenhauer, consolation for inadequacy in Montaigne. Epicurus, usually associated with a love of luxury, is a solace for those of us without much money--and de Botton learns from him that 'objects mimic in a material dimension what we require in a psychological one. We need to rearrange our minds but are lured towards new shelves. We buy a cashmere cardigan as a substitute for the counsel of friends.'
Lest the reader become burdened by all this philosophizing, the book is peppered with illustrations--the section on Nietzsche of course includes a DC Comics drawing of Superman. And it's further leavened by the author's personal anecdotes and winning confessional tone. Early on, for instance, he admits his own gnawing need for popularity: 'A desire to please led me to laugh at modest jokes like a parent on the opening night of a school play.' Before he became a medicine man for the soul, de Botton was a first-rate novelist, and it shows in his writing. --Claire Dederer
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Rated by buyers
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. . . I tried it in my "Intro. to Philosophy" class
P h I l o s o p h y, the mere word causes heads to swell and eyelids to grow heavy. How can anything so "intellectual" rate 5 stars? I understand your hesitation. But this book isn't your normal text. It isn't a book for geeks. It is based on a 6-part video series prepared for television. This is a book of powerful stories that will bring all sorts of emotions to the reader.
I wanted to wait on this review until I had used the book in my classroom. When I saw it I found it to be interesting, but could it be used in a college philosophy class? I wasn't sure. I used three books 1) Viktor Frankl's "Man's Search for Meaning" 2) Michael Pollan's "The Omnivore's Dilemma" and 3) Alain de Botton's "The Consolations of Philosophy". These were the core texts for our "Philosophy Book of the Month Club". Fundamentals were given through lecture.
The semester is nearly over, the results are in. The students loved it. Philosophy came alive for them. Try this book, it may help philosophy come alive for you also.
Rated by buyers
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Inadequacies, suffering and broken hearts litter the human experience and this book gives Botton the philosophical universe to help bring consolation to all our human failings. Also included are a quick brief on the socratic method and the common man's approach to the understanding of philsophy.
I had read "How Proust Can Change Your Life" before reading this book. I have to say I wish I had read this book first. The "Proust" book is entertaining, but a bit more superficial and superfulous in comparision.
I have to admit I am going through a rough patch in my life right now and this book was of great consolation. What more can be said? Hopefully you will have same luck!!
Rated by buyers
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If you recognize that the title of this book is taken from Boethius then the book is not for you. I can't remember where I heard about this book (NPR I think). I got on Amazon and ordered it without thinking twice. I was mislead.
This is not a book for people with any significant background in philosophy. It is clearly a self help book very first and foremost. It belongs subsequent to Chicken Soup for ______, not the original Consolations of Philosophy.
If you are looking for self help wrapped in a pop introduction to an interesting group of philosophers this is the book for you. If you are looking for a philosophy book then I've got to agree with the reviewer who commented "no clothes on this emperor."
Rated by buyers
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This book did two things for me: First, it brought back my respect for philosophy as an effort to get oneself right with the world. Second, it caused to bring philosophy back into the mix of therapeutic psychology books I've sought out at various stages of life. The book is a great little down-to-earth explanation of how philosophy is, at its best, still an avenue toward finding meaning in life, not simply an esoteric or over-intellectualized mental sport. It explains how each philosopher connected personally not abstractly to the ideas he pondered. It's especially useful for an aging secular soul like me, but it also appealed to my son who is in his late 20s. I wish a book like this had been part of the mix in the intro philosophy course I took and fled when I was in college. As for my own favorite philosopher at this stage in my life, of course it's Dr. Peanut! Nutty to Meet You! Dr. Peanut Book #1
Rated by buyers
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Better living thought, Nietzsche, Schopenhauer, Montaigne, Socrates, Epicurus, and Seneca. Alain de Botton accounts of six great philosophers, and what they bring to an individual in modern times. Good read.
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