The Seven Ages of Man
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4.0 • 4 Ratings
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
What does it mean to be a man in the twenty-first century? How can today's men lead a more fulfilling existence?
Masculinity has reached a moment of crisis. From the erosion of unifying institutions such as marriage to a rise in male suicide rates, the last century and a half has been a particularly turbulent time to be a man. Increasing numbers of men are finding themselves anchorless, uprooted from the conventions and certainties of their forefathers. Today masculinity itself has come under attack, relentlessly maligned in the media. Now, more than ever, the long and perilous journey from infant to old age is fraught with strange complexities, moral dichotomies and maddening contradictions.
Incisive and solution-driven, The Seven Ages of Man offers men of all ages, and the women who love them, a clear roadmap to a more meaningful life and a better future for all. Part practical guide and part call to arms, it encourages a return to decency, compassion, humility, understanding and forgiveness.
Customer Reviews
Terribly Dull and Obvious
Dollar store Jordan Peterson complains about the lack of traditionalism in rearing boys in the typical, vaguely right-wing style of the online manosphere. I’m embarrassed I paid a full $10 for this. I tried to get all the way through it and I almost did. The end point for me was the bizarre yoga stretching chapter and the unnecessary diet advice. This book might be of interest to you if you want an Internet Father who teaches you the values of stoicism or whatever, but for me, the values expressed in this book are entirely unoriginal, tired, and unimaginative. There are no solutions to be found here that can’t be find a million other self-help books geared at men in the past 5 years.