Reviews

Life is Hard: How Philosophy Can Help Us Find Our Way by Kieran Setiya

madmadder's review against another edition

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reflective medium-paced

3.25

cmcrockford's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark hopeful informative reflective sad slow-paced

3.25

Some fine pop science/philosophy, though I think I'm much more of an existentialist than Setiya, even if I agree with him most of the time. (I appreciated the Diogenes shout-out near the very end.) Definitely a good addition to my recent reading. 

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acousticdefacto's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective slow-paced

3.0

unfoldingdrama's review against another edition

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challenging reflective medium-paced

3.5

rick2's review against another edition

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3.0

It’s fine. There’s some interesting ideas. I’m sure as a course or lecture this would’ve been better. And maybe it’s the fact that I’ve discovered that caffeine pills are a thing, and I don’t think my heart rate has dropped below 120 for the last few weeks, but I find myself incredibly impatient with this book spending way too much time talking about things that didn’t seem to drive it forward.

Reading philosophy is such a treat when you can understand it. But reading people discuss reading philosophy is it’s own special circle of hell. Some thing to bear in mind, I guess.

In an ideal world, I get all of my modern philosophy from strange hermits residing in the woods, whatever odd man cave/faraday cage Jaron Lanier lives in, or from beautiful women who reside in ponds distributing political science philosophy, as well as swords

dantheman83's review against another edition

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emotional funny hopeful informative inspiring reflective sad medium-paced

4.0

smrankin5's review against another edition

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4.0

This book was a bit tough for a non-philosopher to read, but many parts of it were so helpful for me.
Mostly the chapter about failure. "The foundational myth of failure is that it's our own fault...We can be at fault for failure, but the chaos of contingency in life reminds us that control is never absolute and often limited".

Also the discussion around Telic and Atelic activities. Those that has a terminus, and those that don't. That the value lies in the process, not the project. To me this spoke to spending time doing work you don't enjoy, working hard at the expense of your health, happiness, fulfillment with the hope that their will be a reward at the end. The only thing is, you have little control over whether that reward comes at the end. It is very human ideal that we have more control than we do. It made me relook at my life in a really profound way

"There is no way to eliminate failure in every form and no point pretending that results don't matter. But we can reframe how we live our lives so that our failures are less central"

"Learning how to live a better life, one less mortgaged to success and failure, attuned not just to project but to process"

_pickle_'s review against another edition

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informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

3.0

i enjoyed reading this but days after i've finished, not much remains in my mind of it. i think a wonderful primer for those who haven't read much philosophy. 

plcbaker's review against another edition

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Maybe I just wasn't in the right frame of mind, but after a few chapters, I wasn't sure what advice he was even offering. 

robotprimate's review against another edition

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challenging hopeful reflective slow-paced

4.0