Description

Book Synopsis
Strangers by Choice explores voluntary otherness as a philosophy of life. This philosophy is asocial in the sense that its followers tend to privilege separateness over belonging, and yet it does not lead to alienation or isolation from society. Building on Simmel’s notion of the stranger, the author sheds light on the experience of spiritual idealists, both real and fictional, who maintain a distance from mainstream society in order to live by the laws of their transcendental homelands. Waśkiewicz addresses representations of strangeness from a broad spectrum of Western culture, including Stoic philosophy, Augustine of Hippo, Henry David Thoreau, the physicist Richard Feynman, and finally Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Highlighting how these writers and thinkers have negotiated individuality and community, this interdisciplinary study contributes to debates on identity in both practical philosophy and the history of ideas.

Table of Contents
Contents: Interdisciplinarity – Practical philosophy – History of ideas – Ethics – Strangeness – Otherness – Individuality – Community – Society – Identity – Alienation – Idealism – Roman Stoic philosophy – Seneca – Marcus Aurelius – Early Christianity – Augustine of Hippo – Henry David Thoreau – Jean-Jacques Rousseau – Richard Feynman.

Strangers by Choice: An Asocial Philosophy of

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    A Hardback by Andrzej Waskiewicz

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      View other formats and editions of Strangers by Choice: An Asocial Philosophy of by Andrzej Waskiewicz

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 29/12/2014
      ISBN13: 9783631640401, 978-3631640401
      ISBN10: 3631640404

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Strangers by Choice explores voluntary otherness as a philosophy of life. This philosophy is asocial in the sense that its followers tend to privilege separateness over belonging, and yet it does not lead to alienation or isolation from society. Building on Simmel’s notion of the stranger, the author sheds light on the experience of spiritual idealists, both real and fictional, who maintain a distance from mainstream society in order to live by the laws of their transcendental homelands. Waśkiewicz addresses representations of strangeness from a broad spectrum of Western culture, including Stoic philosophy, Augustine of Hippo, Henry David Thoreau, the physicist Richard Feynman, and finally Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Highlighting how these writers and thinkers have negotiated individuality and community, this interdisciplinary study contributes to debates on identity in both practical philosophy and the history of ideas.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Interdisciplinarity – Practical philosophy – History of ideas – Ethics – Strangeness – Otherness – Individuality – Community – Society – Identity – Alienation – Idealism – Roman Stoic philosophy – Seneca – Marcus Aurelius – Early Christianity – Augustine of Hippo – Henry David Thoreau – Jean-Jacques Rousseau – Richard Feynman.

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