This toothsome classic takes on the combined challenges of discovering the meaning of the universe and eliminating fat at the same time. Its topic sentence contains a promise that should sell millions: "In this book, I tell how to take weight off and keep it off." He doesn't stop there, but continues, "The book also embodies a philosophy of life. The weight program is the content of the book, the philosophy of life is its form." If Descartes had sat down to write a treatise on losing weight as a metaphor for maintaining discipline amidst life's vicissitudes, it would have read much like this. Clearly, Mr. Watson has not written a low-fat, new-age, easy-fix solution for the weight challenged. After all, losing weight is hard work. But for our money, it is the most erudite, fascinating, and eccentric book ever written on the subject of weight control, a combination of common sense (driven by human experience), Cartesian philosophy, and the presumption that understanding the mysteries of weight loss and the universe are somehow compatible, even sympathetic, ambitions. The author is (of course) a professional philosopher, and this extraordinary exegesis is at once a moral manifesto, a philosophical discourse, and a practical manual (although the chapter on "How to Live" and "How to Die" take it a few steps beyond the ordinary). We love this book for its humor, its iconoclasm, and its weird and wacky mixture of high seriousness and low humor. Read it. Even if you're not overweight, it's a book to treasure.
This wry, witty book is not just for anyone who has ever tried to learn another language, but for anyone who has yearned desperately to learn something and worked to the limit to achieve it.
An array of savory "recipes" designed to nourish the heart, mind and soul. This medley of poetic, philosophical and spiritual concoctions, hopefully shall whet the appetite of those seeking to satisfy the wisdom seeking palate.
But while philosophers do at least sometimes talk about food, and even about our diet, perhaps only one philosopher— Richard ... But his Philosopher's Diet is really interested in telling his readers how to lose weight—in a reflective, ...
Also by Richard Watson Non - Fiction THE DOWNFALL OF CARTESIANISM MAN AND NATURE ( with Patty Jo Watson ) the longest cave ( with Roger W. Brucker ) the philosopher's diet the breakdown of cartesian metaphysics the philosopher's joke ...
Hidden in works of philosophy are a several original, counterintuitive, and astonishingly effective pieces of dieting advice.
This book explores food from a philosophical perspective, bringing together leading philosophers to consider the most basic questions about food. Each essay analyses many contemporary debates in food studies.
This unorthodox volume of related literary-philosophical essays is sure to ruffle a few feathers by making merry with the styles of philosophy fashionable today, and in each of the last...
Everyone is talking about food. Chefs are celebrities. "Locavore" and "freegan" have earned spots in the dictionary.
Make the book your own, mark it up, and then simply relax and enjoy as the book itself begins to transform you from within.
But I'm back on the downtown trail outside Faneuil Hall. The locals insist on calling it “Fannel,” but clearly it's Faneuil Hall because it was built by the Huguenot Peter Faneuil in 1740. He did a deal with the town fathers, ...