Much of Life is Hard exists in dialogue with Aristotle, the ancient Greek philosopher who was Plato’s greatest student. The irony is that none of Aristotle’s dialogues survive. What we have of his work is a compendium of lecture notes—which is more than a shame. The notes are compressed, hard to interpret, painful to read. I quote them sparingly. Meanwhile, Aristotle’s dialogues were praised by Roman orators for their “grace” and “the sweetness of [their] style.”
I don’t think I realized that the book was already out! Congratulations and I can’t wait to read it, and tell others about it as I’ve done with “Midlife.”
I don’t think I realized that the book was already out! Congratulations and I can’t wait to read it, and tell others about it as I’ve done with “Midlife.”
Read Aristotle's response:
https://twitter.com/AristotlesStgra/status/1580570896527343616?s=20&t=1leGGZKcgu-360LKLotPZQ