Quick delivery! Same day dispatch if you order before 3pm Monday - Friday...
Word writing, page stroking, paper sniffing, ink smearing, idea loving print believers.
We're a small team of mag lovers and we're with you every step of the way from answering your query to packing up your order and sending it out. Your friendly neighbourhood mag shop wherever you are in the world.
Order by 3pm Mon- Fri and we'll send out that day by 1st class post.
Join the Pics & Ink people Subscribe to our weekly newsletter
Thanks!
Publishers
£9.95
New Philosopher is an independent publication devoted to exploring philosophical ideas from consumerism, to happiness, to the war on your mind. Each issue brings you perspectives from past and present thinkers on ways to live a more fulfilling life.
From the publisher:
"Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard argued that life is a series of choices. Our choices, which he claimed are ours alone to make, define us and bring meaning to our lives. Each action that we take is a choice of sorts, a choice that is solely our responsibility to make – and this responsibility, given its importance in determining the course of our lives, can overwhelm us with dread and anxiety.
His fellow Existentialists, those who followed in his footsteps, tended to agree, although they seemed to regard the situation as more empowering than anxiety-inducing. A wake-up call of sorts. “Man is nothing other than his own project,” wrote Jean-Paul Sartre. “There is no love other than the deeds of love… there is no genius other than that which is expressed in works of art.” Sartre believed that our only purpose is the one we set ourselves; that we forge our own destiny. To Sartre, reality alone counts; and our choices determine this reality.
One of Sartre’s famous choices, which subsequently determined his reality, was to fall out with his former firm friend, the Nobel Prize-winning author Albert Camus. He and Camus fought over various matters, but the turning point came when Sartre argued that the use of violence and terror was a justified means to an end. Camus strongly disagreed.
Sartre spent the next few decades defending his position, or as Galbraith said, “getting busy on the proof ” rather than contemplating alternative arguments. We all face choices on a daily basis but as Sartre’s situation shows, perhaps the most significant ones are the positions we take on important matters.
Although we might be free to choose, ultimately it’s a case of caveat eligens: it’s not so easy to change one’s mind."
Collections: All Magazines Current Affairs Just Arrived New Philosopher PICS & INK MAGS
Category: educational ideas learning news philosophy
We use cookies on our website to give you the best shopping experience. By using this site, you agree to its use of cookies.