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Loading... The Seekers: The Story of Man's Continuing Quest to Understand His World (1992)by Daniel Boorstin
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I read the Discoverers, the first book of Boorstin’s series several years ago (or maybe decades ago 😊.). I’m not sure why I waited so long to read another book of his series. The Seekers is the third and final book of the series (I plan on reading The Creators, the second book in the series, in the very near future.). I found the work to be a beautifully written and organized set of chapters, relating a hand picked set of “Seekers” (Individuals in their quest of understanding their world) and their individual points of view. With this read you not only learn of individual lives, but also the context and the world of their times. If you enjoy reading of the history of the Western view, this is a great one to start with. ( ) Really good at giving a brief look at the philosophy of those from the Classical period up through the Enlightenment. After that, he kind of lost me. As the philosophy became more complicated, so did the explanation. And he didn't really even try on Existentialism. Overall, very good book with concise to-the-point information on philosophy and philosophers throughout the ages. What makes this book unique (and an uniquely excellent read) from among the many intellectual histories out there is the perspective from which Boorstin approaches his subjects and the aspect of his various subjects which he focuses on. Rather than looking, as most intellectual histories do, at what the conclusions, ideas, and dogmas of their various subjects are, Boorstin instead examines the act of seeking itself. In the process, he introduces us to the means of seeking answers to life's greatest questions as they have been applied by some of the greatest seekers of history, from biblical figures like Job to Greek philosophers like Plato to modern day scientists like Albert Einstein. Boorstin's work is a masterpiece of appreciation for the amazing capacities of the human mind and the restless nature of the human spirit. His book is a paean to humanity. Had I only had this book when I was first introduced to the "seekers" described here, even starting with those early years when we were first learning about the Bible. I can't believe I spent an entire year in high school on Virgil (Dido is the only thing I remember...woman scorned was a topic to grab a teenage girl) with no concept of the context. But then, I probably would not have appreciated this. Now at an advanced age I can go back and put my education together with this excellent book. Everyone should read it, really. As one Amazon reviewer observed "This brief history of western seeking will, I believe, provide me with a roadmap that will inform my reading selections for years to come. " no reviews | add a review
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"Throughout history, from the time of Socrates to our own modern age, the human race has sought the answers to fundamental questions of life: Who are we? Why are we here?" "Boorstin says our Western culture has seen three grand epics of Seeking. First there was the heroic way of prophets and philosophers - men like Moses or Job or Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, as well as those in the communities of the early church universities and the Protestant Reformation - seeking salvation or truth from the god above or the reason within each of us." "Then came an age of communal seeking, with people like Thucydides and Thomas More and Machiavelli and Voltaire pursuing civilization and the liberal spirit." "Finally, there was an age of the social sciences, when man seemed ruled by the forces of history. Here are the absorbing stories of exceptional men such as Marx, Spengler, and Toynbee, Carlyle and Emerson, and Malraux, Bergson, and Einstein." "These great thinkers still have the power to speak to us, not always so much for their answers as for their way of asking the questions that never cease either to intrigue or to obsess us."--BOOK JACKET. No library descriptions found. |
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