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Gordon Marino

The Truth Is a Trap

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“When it comes to living, there’s no getting out alive. But books can help us survive, so to speak, by passing on what is most important about being human before we perish. In The Existentialist’s Survival Guide, Marino has produced an honest and moving book of self-help for readers generally disposed to loathe the genre.” —The Wall Street Journal
Sophisticated self-help for the 21st century—when every crisis feels like an existential crisis
Soren Kierkegaard, Frederick Nietzsche, Jean-Paul Sartre, and other towering figures of existentialism grasped that human beings are, at heart, moody creatures, susceptible to an array of psychological setbacks, crises of faith, flights of fancy, and other emotional ups and downs. Rather than understanding moods—good and bad alike—as afflictions to be treated with pharmaceuticals, this swashbuckling group of thinkers generally known as existentialists believed that such feelings not only offer enduring lessons about living a life of integrity, but also help us discern an inner spark that can inspire spiritual development and personal transformation. To listen to Kierkegaard and company, how we grapple with these feelings shapes who we are, how we act, and, ultimately, the kind of lives we lead.
In The Existentialist's Survival Guide, Gordon Marino, director of the Hong Kierkegaard Library at St. Olaf College and boxing correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, recasts the practical takeaways existentialism offers for the twenty-first century. From negotiating angst, depression, despair, and death to practicing faith, morality, and love, Marino dispenses wisdom on how to face existence head-on while keeping our hearts intact, especially when the universe feels like it’s working against us and nothing seems to matter.
What emerges are life-altering and, in some cases, lifesaving epiphanies—existential prescriptions for living with integrity, courage, and authenticity in an increasingly chaotic, uncertain, and inauthentic age.
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221 printed pages
Original publication
2018
Publication year
2018
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Quotes

  • memento2011has quoted4 years ago
    In his very flesh, Jesus was an insult to reason. For Kierkegaard, approaches to Jesus that abnegate this offense (à la Jesus was a sage with a message about teaching us to love one another) annul the need for and possibility of faith.
  • memento2011has quoted4 years ago
    A physicist and philosopher, Dr. Ben Yacobi sincerely states it:

    The concept of “authenticity” is a human construct, and as such it has no reality independent of minds. But is authenticity possible, or even desirable? . . . This steers us toward an interpretation of the concept of authenticity as an absolute, but in general the search for absolutes is fruitless.2
  • memento2011has quoted4 years ago
    Can you be an existentialist and a Tibetan monk? I don’t see why not.

    Это успокаивает :)))

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