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Paperback
Published: 31st January 2024
Hardback
Published: 4th October 2023
Paperback
Published: 25th July 2024
How to Be: Life Lessons from the Early Greeks
By (Author) Adam Nicolson
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
31st January 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Philosophical traditions and schools of thought
Ancient Greek and Roman literature
Historical geography
Geographical discovery and exploration
Philosophy: epistemology and theory of knowledge
Idealism
182
Paperback
384
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 30mm
480g
What is the nature of things Must I think my own way through the world What is justice How can I be me How should we treat each other
Before the Greeks, the idea of the world was dominated by god-kings and their priests, in a life ruled by imagined metaphysical monsters. 2,500 years ago, in a succession of small eastern Mediterranean harbour-cities, that way of thinking began to change. Men (and some women) decided to cast off mental subservience and apply their own worrying and thinking minds to the conundrums of life.
These great innovators shaped the beginnings of philosophy. Through the questioning voyager Odysseus, Homer explored how we might navigate our way through the world. Heraclitus in Ephesus was the first to consider the interrelatedness of things. Xenophanes of Colophon was the first champion of civility. In Lesbos, the Aegean island of Sappho and Alcaeus, the early lyric poets asked themselves How can I be true to myself In Samos, Pythagoras imagined an everlasting soul and took his ideas to Italy where they flowered again in surprising and radical forms.
Prize-winning and bestselling writer Adam Nicolson travels through this transforming world and asks what light these ancient thinkers can throw on our deepest preconceptions. Sparkling with maps, photographs and artwork, How to Be is a journey into the origins of Western thought.
Hugely formative ideas emerged in these harbour-cities: fluidity of mind, the search for coherence, a need for the just city, a recognition of the mutability of things, a belief in the reality of the ideal all became the Greeks legacy to the world.
Born out of a rough, dynamicand often cruel moment in human history, it was the dawn of enquiry, where these fundamental questions about self, city and cosmos, asked for the first time, became, as they remain, the unlikely bedrock of understanding.
EARLY PRAISE FOR HOW TO BE
Passionate, poetic, and hauntingly beautiful, Adam Nicolsons account of the wests earliest philosophers brings vividly alive the mercantile hustle and bustle of ideas traded and transformed in a web of maritime Greek cities, where men and women first questioned the nature of the universe and established what it is to be human. In this life-affirming, vital book, those ideas sing with the excitement of a new discovery David Stuttard
PRAISE FOR ADAM NICOLSONS LIFE BETWEEN THE TIDES
Miraculous Effortlessly, in deft, sure and delightful prose, he segues through species, science and art to present tidal nature as a microcosm. The result is an utterly fascinating glimpse of a watery world we only thought we knew
Philip Hoare
A beautiful, powerful story of how we understand the unfolding change of the shore. This is a remarkable and powerful book, the rarest of things, both a call-to-arms and a call-to-pause and truly look. Nicolson is unique as a writer, happy soaked to the skin on the shoreline and happy unweaving skeins of philosophy. I loved it
Edmund de Waal
Pure joy. From the ecology of a sandhopper to the cosmic pull of the tides Adam Nicolson takes us paddling into the pools of our own nature a dazzling, kaleidoscopic exploration into the meaning of life itself
Isabella Tree
A fascinating guide to all things littoral: a natural history of the rockpool that teems with life Endlessly interesting, its wonders unfurl, fractal-like, the more closely you examine it
Cal Flyn
The man who finds wonder in a winkle Remarkable In Nicolsons hands the intertidal zone is shown to be rich and revelatory It is as lyrical, learned and rambunctiously eccentric as his previous work For a book so focused on non-human life, it is luminously humane
The Times
Adam Nicolson is the author of many books on history, travel and the environment. He is winner of the Somerset Maugham Award and the British Topography Prize and lives on at Sissinghust Castle in Kent. His most recent book for HarperCollins is Sissinghurst, a wonderful and personal biography of a place the story of a heritage, of a vision of connecting once more buildings and garden, fields and farms and of how that dream was realised.