the state of dissolution

7.2.15

categorias:

comentar


He learns how much of what he has taken for granted was by its own nature neither eternal nor necessary but thoroughly temporal and contingent. He learns that the solitude of the self is an irreducible dimension of human life no matter how completely that self had seemed to be contained in its social milieu. In the end, he sees each man as solitary and unsheltered before his own death. Admittedly, these are painful truths, but the most basic things are always learned with pain, since our inertia and complacent love of comfort prevents us from learning them until they are forced upon us.


Irrational Man: A Study in Existential Philosophy, William Barrett

0 comments :

Enviar um comentário