This Life

Why Mortality Makes Us Free

Paperback, 464 pages

en-Latn-US language

Published Dec. 31, 2018 by Profile Books.

ISBN:
978-1-78816-386-6
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Goodreads:
44422775
4 stars (4 reviews)

If this life is all there is, what should we do with it? Join Swedish philosopher Martin Hägglund on an original inquiry into the deepest questions of existence, beginning with a radical declaration: ‘What I do and what I love can matter to me only because I understand myself as mortal.’

Through revelatory engagements with some of history’s greatest philosophers, including Aristotle, St Augustine, Nietzsche, Hegel and Marx, Hägglund attacks our two great deceivers, religion and capitalism. Only by stripping away their subtle illusions can we discover the true value of our earthly freedom.

3 editions

Review of 'This Life' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

This book, as far as I've gotten, (not all that far) is making an argument and it's not uninteresting. The problem is, it's not one I need to hear, and I am already finding holes in it. For example, eternity (non-finitude) is presented as a situation in which there is nothing that needs to be done, that since you can't die, there's no room for improvement. If that were true, being condemned to hell would be no worse than being in heaven. All eternity is equal. Hence, only finitude has any real stakes and any real choices. I haven't yet chosen whether to continue reading.

My second objection is the idea that this kind of argument is superior to "faith" because it is rational. I don't see the rational finite way of understanding as a given. It presumes what you're trying to prove. From our (or my, at any rate) …

avatar for Seph

rated it

5 stars
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rated it

4 stars