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Lives of the mind: the use and abuse of intelligence from Hegel to Woodhouse

Autor Roger Kimball

Editorial IVAN R. DEE INC.

Lives of the mind: the use and abuse of intelligence from Hegel to Woodhouse
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  • Publisher IVAN R. DEE INC.
  • ISBN13 9781566635240
  • ISBN10 1566635241
  • Type Book
  • Pages 375
  • Published 2002
  • Bookbinding Rustic

Lives of the mind: the use and abuse of intelligence from Hegel to Woodhouse

Autor Roger Kimball

Editorial IVAN R. DEE INC.

-5% disc.    20,00€
19,00€
Save 1,00€
Not available, ask for avalaibility
Free shipping
Mainland Spain
FREE shipping from €19

to mainland Spain

24/48h shipping

5% discount on all books

FREE pickup at the bookstore

Come and be surprised!

Book Details

"In Lives of the Mind, Roger Kimball, one of our most astute cultural critics, offers a delicious study of genius - and pseudo-genius - at work, and shows how intelligence can be used and abused." "When does a love of ideas become a dangerous infatuation? What antidotes are there for the silliness of unanchored intellect? Mr. Kimball ponders a wide range of figures, looking at their fidelity to the truth and their quotient of what he calls "spiritual prudence": their healthy contact with reality. Drawing on figures as various as Plutarch and Hegel, Kierkegaard and P. G. Wodehouse, Descartes and Trollope, Wittgenstein and Bertrand Russell, he takes the reader on a sharply observed tour of Western intellectual and artistic aspiration. He shows what happens when intellect trumps common sense, and how an affirmation of shared values and ordinary reality can rescue us from the temptations of the higher stupidity." Because language is one of the primary theaters of intelligence, a large part of Lives of the Mind is devoted to savoring forms of verbal extravagance. "What I have assembled," Mr. Kimball writes, "is in part the scrapbook of an intellectual pathologist. But it is also worth noting that the heroes in this book rather outweigh the villains." If there is a moral to be drawn, it is an old and familiar one: on one side, the perils of intellectual infatuation; on another side, the virtues of modesty.

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