Wisdom Takes Work: Learn. Apply. Repeat. (Unabridged)
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3.0 • 1 Rating
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- CHF 14.00
Publisher Description
In this much-anticipated final installment in the Stoic Virtues series, Ryan Holiday makes the case for the virtue on which all other virtues depend.
Of all the stoic virtues - courage, discipline, justice, and wisdom - wisdom is the most elusive. This is especially apparent in an age where reaction and idle chatter are rewarded, and restraint and thoughtfulness are unfashionable. The great statesman and philosophers of the past would not be fooled, as we are, by headlines or appearances or the primal pull of tribalism. They knew too much of history, of their own flaws, of the need for collaboration to do any of that. That's wisdom - and we need it more than ever.
Wisdom is Ryan Holiday's guiding principle, and Wisdom Takes Work is the culmination of all his work. Drawing on fascinating stories of the ancient and modern figures alike, Holiday shows how to cultivate wisdom through reading, self-education, and experience. Through the lives of Montaigne, Seneca, Joan Didion, Abraham Lincoln, and others, Holiday teaches us how to listen more than we talk, to think with nuance, to ruthlessly question our own beliefs, and to develop a method of self-education. He argues convincingly for the necessity of mental struggle and warns against taking shortcuts that deprive us of real knowledge. And he shows us how dangerous power and intelligence can be without the tempering influence of wisdom.
An absence of curiosity and prudence is a catastrophe for all of us, argues Ryan Holiday. This incredibly timely book both diagnoses the greatest problem of our current moment and offers solutions for the way forward. Wisdom is work - but it's worth it.
Customer Reviews
It’s a difficult topic to adress…
I will start by upfront saying I like Ryan work and enjoy his books on stoicism very much , (I have en all ..) even some leather bound versions etc. That been said I don’t feel this book makes justice to the topic , seems a bit like a personal rant against Elon Musk , which I don’t particularly neither like or dislike but it’s a bit tiresome to hear about him all along the book , I would very much prefer more different examples but any way my two cents , I think he could have done better or my be I had way too high expectations, really gave this 3 stars out of his style but if I wanted a book about Elon I would have bought a book about Elon.