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The Essays of Arthur Schopenhauer: the Wisdom of Life
- Language
- EN
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- EPUB
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Description
The collection of essays by Arthur Schopenhauer presents a philosophical analysis of the nature of happiness and the means of achieving a fulfilling life. Central to the work is the idea that internal qualities of personality hold greater significance than external possessions or social status. Schopenhauer examines the role of character and suggests that true contentment arises from self-awareness and moral development rather than material success. The work introduces the concept of "Eudaemonology," which refers to the study of happiness and the art of living well, emphasizing rational reflection and personal virtue.
Written in the early 19th century, these essays reflect Schopenhauer’s philosophical outlook and focus on practical guidance for attaining a pleasurable existence. The book belongs to the category of philosophical essays, letters, and speeches, and addresses fundamental questions about human well-being and the nature of life’s fulfillment. Its insights are rooted in classical and contemporary philosophical thought of the period.
Written in the early 19th century, these essays reflect Schopenhauer’s philosophical outlook and focus on practical guidance for attaining a pleasurable existence. The book belongs to the category of philosophical essays, letters, and speeches, and addresses fundamental questions about human well-being and the nature of life’s fulfillment. Its insights are rooted in classical and contemporary philosophical thought of the period.
From the opening pages
In these pages I shall speak of The Wisdom of Life in the common meaning of the term, as the art, namely, of ordering our lives so as to obtain the greatest possible amount of pleasure and success; an art the theory of which may be called Eudaemonology , for it teaches us how to lead a happy existence. Such an existence might perhaps be defined as one which, looked at from a purely objective point of view, or, rather, after cool and mature reflection—for the question necessarily involves subjective considerations,—would be decidedly preferable to non-existence; implying that we should cling to it for its own sake, and not merely from the fear of death; and further, that we should never like it to come to an end. Now whether human life corresponds, or could possibly correspond, to this conception of existence, is a question to which, as is well-known, my philosophical system returns a negative answer. On the eudaemonistic hypothesis, however, the question must be answered in the affirmative; and I have shown, in the second volume of my chief work (ch. 49), that this hypothesis is based upon a fundamental mistake. Accordingly, in elaborating the scheme of a happy existence, I have had to make a complete surrender of the higher metaphysical and ethical standpoint to which my own theories lead; and everything I shall say here will to some extent rest upon a compromise; in so far, that is, as I take the common standpoint of every day, and embrace the error which is at the bottom of it. My remarks, therefore, will possess only a qualified value, for the very word eudaemonology is a euphemism. Further, I make no claims to completeness; partly because the subject is inexhaustible, and partly because I should otherwise have to say over again what has been already said by others. The only book composed, as far as I remember, with a like purpose to that which animates this collection of aphorisms, is Cardan's De utilitate ex adversis capienda , which is well worth reading, and may be used to supplement the present work. Aristotle, it is true, has a few words on eudaemonology in the fifth chapter of the first book of his Rhetoric ; but what he says does not come to very much. As compilation is not my business, I have made no use of these predecessors; more…
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