Author: | Adam Joseph | ISBN: | 9781504926980 |
Publisher: | AuthorHouse | Publication: | September 1, 2015 |
Imprint: | AuthorHouse | Language: | English |
Author: | Adam Joseph |
ISBN: | 9781504926980 |
Publisher: | AuthorHouse |
Publication: | September 1, 2015 |
Imprint: | AuthorHouse |
Language: | English |
A Curiosity Turbulent is an intriguing collection of short musings on a variety of central philosophical themessuch as selfhood, the limits of consciousness, subjectivity and objectivity, and action and perception. The author channels such writers as Nietzsche in his style and approach, with sections reminiscent of Nietzsches Thus Spoke Zarathustra or the Gay Scienceshort aphorisms penned with an energetic, sometimes bombastic, but always poetic philosophical muster. Readers who enjoy philosophy and the stylings of existentialist or other absurdist authors should similarly enjoy this book as a contemporary attempt at this unique and powerful philosophical approach to the themes explored. The manuscript is presented in short, titled chapters, with each chapter focusing on a particular philosophical theme or conceptsometimes with more or less specific focus, as some shorter chapters stand as disparate aphorisms that can diverge from a more prolonged analysis presented in other chapters. Nevertheless, readers who are familiar with this approach should be able to follow the authors style, logic, and argumentative method. Readers who are also familiar with the philosophical themes presented in the bookwith theories of self, philosophy of mind, and perhaps some background in the history of philosophy generally speakingshould have the most attraction and ease of transition into reading the text.
A Curiosity Turbulent is an intriguing collection of short musings on a variety of central philosophical themessuch as selfhood, the limits of consciousness, subjectivity and objectivity, and action and perception. The author channels such writers as Nietzsche in his style and approach, with sections reminiscent of Nietzsches Thus Spoke Zarathustra or the Gay Scienceshort aphorisms penned with an energetic, sometimes bombastic, but always poetic philosophical muster. Readers who enjoy philosophy and the stylings of existentialist or other absurdist authors should similarly enjoy this book as a contemporary attempt at this unique and powerful philosophical approach to the themes explored. The manuscript is presented in short, titled chapters, with each chapter focusing on a particular philosophical theme or conceptsometimes with more or less specific focus, as some shorter chapters stand as disparate aphorisms that can diverge from a more prolonged analysis presented in other chapters. Nevertheless, readers who are familiar with this approach should be able to follow the authors style, logic, and argumentative method. Readers who are also familiar with the philosophical themes presented in the bookwith theories of self, philosophy of mind, and perhaps some background in the history of philosophy generally speakingshould have the most attraction and ease of transition into reading the text.