In a small literary gem full of sardonic wit, brilliant insights, and provocative criticism Witold Gombrowicz discusses Kant, Hegel, Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Sartre, and Heidegger in six one-hour essays—and addresses Marxism in a fifteen-minute piece.
Who hasn't wished for a painless way to find out what the big shots of philosophy—Hegel and Kant, Nietzsche and Sartre—thought of the human condition? It has never been easy reading such formidable thinkers, and most explainers and textbooks either get it wrong or massacre the language. So imagine my pleasure in opening Witold Gombrowicz'sGuide to Philosophy in Six Hours and Fifteen Minutes, an exceptional effort at summarizing concepts in bold, declarative sentences. . . . [This book] is like the course in philosophy you wish you had taken. —David Lehman,Bloomberg News
A must for every reader of Gombrowicz. —Denis Hollier, New York University
Witold Gombrowicz(1904–1969) is the author ofFerdydurke, Trans-Atlantyk, Cosmos, andPornografia, the first three available from Yale University Press. These, along with his plays and hisDiary, have been translated into more than thirty languages.Benjamin Ivryis an American writer on the arts, broadcaster, and translator.