I recommend that everyone read this fine collection of meditations on the practical use of time in daily living. A pleasurable read.
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This book reminds me of ancient moral philosophy. It's intelligent thinking about life, with a practical emphasis: how to enjoy your life and live well. It's quite thoughtful and original, yet not systematic at all, usually overconfident (kind of forcedly profound), and occasionally even ridiculous. But always relevant and stimulating. It's more thinking about time, or our experience of time, than you'd think is possible,...
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Robert Grudin's "Time and the Art of Living" is about how we exist in time, and the role time plays in our lives, for better if we make productive use of it, or for worse if we ignore it. Not a self-help book, it is nonetheless a book that I come back to every several years, both for its accessible erudition and for its suggestions for giving shape to your life in time. Highly recommended.
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I would like to take a slightly different tact in reviewing this title, and that is to describe the pertinent circumstances in which I re-read it. I came back to Grudin's beautiful little volume after finally making my way through Heidegger's "Being and Time". I struggled through the weightier tome, and believe that I mined several nuggets of wisdom from it, although I think for the most part the battle was not always worth...
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360 very brief interconnected observations about aspects of how humans experience, distort, learn from, and ignore the flow of time. Rich in science, philosophy, and ideas that can be helpful in your life and your thinking. Deft and accessible, to be meditated upon or dipped into at random
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