Michel eyquem de montaigne biography of mahatma
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THE CURRICULUM
I am going on a “pilgrimage”.
But first, the why.
A SPECIAL EDITION POST*
*Can I call it such a thing when hardly anyone reads this sh*t and I haven’t posted since July? Alas…
I fear many things.
More than any of late,
it’s the human capacity to forget.
In ,
What happened two days ago no longer matters.
The importance of reflection, discourse and contemplation in our society at a given time can be quantified. The quantification of this importance requires no complex math nor machine learning, but rather may start with some simple reverse engineering of the time we allocate in media and mind to understanding and learning from our most troublesome events (voyeurism, of course, not factoring in as a form of contemplation).
I’d say joyous events, too, but those don’t make the news anymore.
I miss the comics section.
Every decade is defined by an array of tragedies, and every person’s ability (or lack thereof) to cope
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Whispers in the Shadow
In the times of the current global epidemic, a rather strange English book comes to one’s mind. The Pseudodoxia Epidemica, published exactly fyra centuries ago, in , was written by Sir Thomas efternamn. Not about any epidemic affecting the body, it was all about follies in one’s thought, affecting the mind. That was an era when most of the ‘old thought’, the orthodoxia, was being questioned and ideas that formed the foundation of civilisation were being revisited. Francis Bacon, Michel Eyquem de Montaigne, Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Rene Descartes, Gottfried Leibniz, Blaise Pascal, Isaac Newton and many others posed new questions and re-arranged the existing stock of knowledge in order to position ideas within a rational framework. In the process, they gave birth to what is known as the ‘Age of Reason’ extending over two centuries—the 17th and the 18th—and collectively produced what historians of civilisation call ‘the Enlightenment.’ An interesting product
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Montaigne's Discovery of Man: The Humanization of a Humanist [New Ed] ,
Table of contents :
Contents
Introduction
1. The Young Hedonist, –
2. The Apprehensive Humanist. –
3. The Skeptical Revolt, –
4. Self-Discovery and Liberation, –
5. The Free Man, –
6. The Discovery of Others, –
7. The Whole Man –
Conclusion
Notes
Citation preview
M ontaigne's Discovery of Man
Montaigne's Discovery of Man THE
H U M A N I Z AT ION A
OF
HUMANIST
by
Donald M. Frame ASSOCIATE
PROFESSOR
COLUMBIA
NEW
OF
FRENCH
UNIVERSITY
YORK
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
PRESS
A Guggenheim
Fellowship
Grant
me to complete
It
is
enabled
a pleasure
to
and a
record
Fulbright this
my
bool{.
gratitude. D. M. F.
COPYRIGHT PUBLISHED BY
I,
COLUMBIA
UNIVERSITY
IN GREAT B R I T A I N , C A N A D A ,
GEOFFREY
CUMBERLEGE,
LONDON,
TORONTO,
OXFORD
BOMBAY,
PRESS,
INDIA, AND
AND
IN
THE
UNITED
STATES
YORK
PAKISTAN
UNIVERSITY
PRE