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Theory of Jerks and Other Philosophical Misadventures

by Eric Schwitzgebel

Publisher: MIT Press Published: 2019-11-05 Category: Home, Nature & Pets

What does it mean to live an examined life in our complex modern world? Philosophy isn't just an abstract academic pursuit confined to dusty university halls—it's a practical tool for understanding ourselves, our relationships, and the fascinating contradictions that define human existence. This collection of essays invites readers on an intellectual adventure that challenges assumptions about consciousness, ethics, and the everyday mysteries we often take for granted.

At the heart of these philosophical explorations lies a refreshingly honest examination of human nature's paradoxes. We like to think of ourselves as rational, ethical beings who act according to our stated values. Yet a closer look reveals uncomfortable truths: we often behave in ways that contradict our professed beliefs, remain blind to our own biases, and struggle to accurately perceive even our own inner mental states. Rather than offering easy answers or prescriptive solutions, these essays embrace the messiness of human psychology and encourage readers to sit with uncertainty.

One particularly provocative thread running through the collection questions whether we truly know our own minds as well as we think we do. Do you really know what you believe? Can you accurately report your own desires, emotions, and visual experiences? Drawing on empirical psychology and philosophical analysis, the essays reveal how surprisingly unreliable we are as witnesses to our own consciousness. This isn't cause for despair but rather an invitation to intellectual humility—a recognition that self-knowledge requires more than simple introspection.

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