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Full Description
Joan Fuster offers us in Poetry, Aphorisms, Diary, Vignettes and Drawings a collection of maxims, apothegms, and aphorisms that constitute a series of philosophical reflections on a variety of topics. The author purposely rejects a fully-developed narrative style as well as a more methodical and comprehensive philosophical approach to the presentation of his ideas. Instead, he chooses the seemingly innocuous and more humble style of the laconic and brief note to offer us what could be termed as his inconsequential musings on life. But Fuster is not alone in this way of approaching the essay and the philosophical genre. In fact, he belongs to a long list of philosophers who have prioritized this form and style in their writings, from the classical Greek and Roman periods to the writings of Montaigne, one of his main sources, and the encyclopedists. The author of Nosaltres, els valencians (1965) and coiner of the successful term països catalans is here at his best ruminating on a multiplicity of ideas, surprising the reader with his acute perceptions, and suggesting myriad possibilities of thought and reflection.
Contents
Fuster's Aforisms and the Tradition of Ἀφορισμός/ Aphorismi - Proverbs, Adages, and Emblems - Montaigne and the Essai - Friedrich Nietzsche - Ramón Gómez de la Serna - Finally, Fuster - Fuster and Aphorisms - APHORISMS - Final Judgments - Prejudices - Knowing What I am Talking About - Ethics for a Stranger - Works and Days - For One, For Many - General Absolution and Plenary Indulgence - Indecent Proposals - Initial Caution - Randomly Observed - Ideas for Family Children - Personal Experience - Philosophy and Letters - The Art of Giving Rabbits - They Call It «SOCIETY» - Contents 6 - I Am Temporarily Closing the Parenthesis - Few Words - About Other Final Judgments.