On Being Me: A Personal Invitation to Philosophy
By (Author) Emily Bernstein
By (author) J. David Velleman
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
1st September 2020
United States
General
Non Fiction
Ethics and moral philosophy
Social and political philosophy
170
Hardback
112
Width 127mm, Height 178mm
A moral philosopher's meditations on some of life's most important questions
We've all had to puzzle over such profound matters as birth, death, regret, free will, agency, and love. How might philosophy help us think through these vital concerns InOn Being Me, renowned moral philosopher J. David Velleman presents a concise, accessible, and intimate exploration into subjects that we care deeply about, offering compelling insights into what it means to be human.
Each of Velleman's short, personal chapters begins with a theme: 'Being Glad I Was Born,' 'Wanting to Go On,' 'Fearing the End,' 'Regretting What Might Have Been,' 'Aspiring to Authorship,' 'Making Things Happen,' and 'Wanting to Be Loved.' Reflecting on how daily life presents us with thorny riddles that need working out, Velleman arrives at unexpected conclusions about survival and personal identity, the self and its future, time and morality, the rationality of regret, free will and personal efficacy, and goodness and love. He shows that we can rely on our own powers of thought to arrive at a better understanding of the most fundamental parts of ourselves and that the methods of philosophy can help get us there.
Beautifully illustrated byNew Yorkercontributing artist Emily Bernstein,On Being Meinvites us to approach life philosophically.
'A pithy guide to eternal questions, by a specialist in ethics and moral psychology.' Sarah Lyall,New York Times Book Review
"A pithy guide to eternal questions, by a specialist in ethics and moral psychology."---Sarah Lyall, New York Times Book Review
"The text is accompanied by . . . clever and charming illustrations. . . . And throughout, Velleman offers a resolutely first-person meditation that, in the spirit of Descartes, eschews technical jargon and scholarly references."---Emrys Westacott, Philosophers' Magazine
"Each reader will find a different mapping onto their own experience, but it is a stimulating journey." * Paradigm Explorer *
"By reading [On Being Me] we should let its very personal prose nourish our understanding of the world and of ourselves. . . . On Being Me introduces many topics of academic philosophy the self, the nature of time, free-will and responsibility without getting lost in professional discussion and without losing sight of the importance of those themes in our daily life."---Daniel Peixoto Murata, The Journal of Value Inquiry
J. David Velleman is professor of philosophy and bioethics at New York University (retiring in 2020) and the Miller Research Professor of Philosophy at Johns Hopkins University. His books include How We Get Along and Self to Self. He is a founding editor of the open-access journal Philosophers Imprint. He lives in New York City. Emily C. Bernstein is a visual artist and animator who lives in Brooklyn, New York. Her work has been published in the New Yorker and on Vice.com.