Riku Sayuj's Reviews > The Consolations of Philosophy
The Consolations of Philosophy
by
As I went through the book I was unable to make up my mind whether it was a work on philosophy masquerading as a self-help book to reach a wide audience or if it was a pretentious self-help book with aspirations to be a book on deep philosophy.
Even after I finished it, I am not sure how to judge it. Should I judge it harshly for picking and choosing among the works of these great philosophers to fit them into the narrow framework that Botton has drawn for them and thus making them draw his yoke? Or should I be lenient that Botton makes lofty thoughts so accessible by dragging them down and tethering them to the normal privations of men and offering consolations for the same?
The title is of course a brilliant one and almost irresistible. Not original maybe, as Boethius has already used it, but Boethius' was a private consolation with his own philosophy (personified as a woman) while Botton offers up his philosopher's thoughts for a public audience for his reader's consolation. I am no judge on which was the more effective work as I am yet to read the original work.
As for the book itself, Botton tries hard to make it entertaining and relevant and uses almost a bullet-point like efficiency to ensure that he can pack everything into an 'airport size' book.
The framework of the book is to use the wisdom of six philosophers, almost in chronological order, to offer consolations for some of the common maladies that afflict the average person. The fact that he spends more time and pages detailing out the lives of the philosophers should not deter from the fact that he does manage to stick admirably to the overall structure of the book and does offer a coherent sequence and logic of 'consolations'.
Consolation For Unpopularity
Botton uses the example and philosophy of Socrates and his life to illustrate that the judgement of others should have no real bearing on how we judge ourselves. This is not to say that we should count ourselves superior by being in the minority. No, the real message is that the weight of numbers supporting any argument or moral standpoint has nothing to do with the real strength of that position. Only reason should guide us in our judgements of ourselves and of others. In the hatred unfairly directed towards an innocent philosopher we recognize an echo of the hurt we ourselves encounter at the hands of those who are either unable or unwilling to do us justice. But if your reason tells us we are right, we should stick to our beliefs and we might be redeemed as Socrates was by the very people who condemned him and be consoled by the prospect of posterity's verdict.
Consolation For Not Having Enough Money
What is wealth? Is it mere material wealth or is it anything that provides us real happiness? These were the questions that Epicurus grappled with. His answer was that just as we are not capable of judging what is good for our physical body and would gladly gorge ourselves with unhealthy food to the point of death (as a lot of us do). so we are not capable of judging what is truly good for our souls, for our life.
I want to belabor this point - If left to ourselves and our instinctive tastes, we would find no reason to refrain from consuming as much as we can of everything that tastes good and this only leads to a decay in bodily health. It takes an expert opinion and self-control to be able to give up this unhealthy habit and adopt a moderate and healthy diet that allows us much better health.
Epicurus says that we similarly gorge on money and all the other pleasurable thing sin life and jump head long into the rat race thinking that is important. But only deep reflection can show us that it is a bad for our spiritual well-being and health as all that good food is for our bodily health.
So he says pleasure is the ultimate goal of life - but what gives you true pleasure can only be found by deep reflection. So what should we dedicate all our energies to if we want a happy life?
We should find Friendship, good companionship - association with people who recognize our true nature with all our defects is what we really need. in fact all our mad scramble after money and power is just a manifestation of our need to be esteemed and listened to by our fellow beings. We may seek a fortune for no reason but to secure the respect and attention of people who would otherwise look straight through us. But do we need money to get them to respect us? Would not a true friend value every word of yours and respect you even if you were penniless?
The second most important constituent of happiness is Freedom - the freedom to be ourselves. This eventually connects back to being with people who will accept us as us. Epicurus and his friends made a radical innovation. In order not to have to work for people they didn't like and answer to potentially humiliating whims, they removed themselves from employment in the commercial world of Athens ('We must free ourselves from the prison of everyday affairs and polities'), and began what could best have been described as a commune, accepting a simpler way of life in exchange for independence. They would have less money but would never again have to follow the commands of odious superiors.
Simplicity did not affect the friends' sense of status because, by distancing themselves from the values of Athens, they had ceased to judge themselves on a material basis. There was no need to be embarrassed by bare walls, and no benefit in showing off gold. Among a group of friends living outside the political and economic centre of the city, there was - in the financial sense - nothing to prove.
So, Happiness, an acquisition list:
1. A hut 2. Friends 3. To avoid superiors, patronization, infighting and competition 4. Thought 5. Art.
Happiness may indeed be difficult to attain. The obstacles are not primarily financial.
Consolation For Frustration
All frustration arises from a faulty view of the world says Lucius Annaeus Seneca. We are frustrated because we expect the world to behave in a particular way and then reality turns out to be different. the Great Stoic philosopher advises us to be always aware that the worst scenario is always possible and to be prepared for it so that when it does happen we are ready for it and will not descend into anger, shock, anxiety or despair, all of which are marks of an unprepared mind that was not in tune with reality. Correct your worldview to accept the fact that reality is cruel and thus find escape from these common frustrations. This does not mean that you should accept everything, you may struggle mightily to avoid the misfortune but you just need to be aware of its possibility to be not prey to anger, grief and other frustrations.
Consolation For Inadequacy
Michel de Montaigne consoles us about the ultimately human nature of us all. We have to accept that we are not perfect, no one ever was. Once we accept that every inadequacy we find so appalling in ourselves is shared by millions and is one of the side effects of being human and being alive, we will learn to be less embarrassed by them and can live a more fulfilling life.
Consolation For Heartbreak
The nerve to invoke the greatest pessimist of the western world to console heartbroken young Werthers!
But it is Arthur Schopenhauer who is being called upon to give advice on how to deal with rejection and broken love affairs. Schopenhauer's famous 'will to life' theory which modern readers might as well read as a sort of natural selection through conditioned unconscious eugenics states that we are controlled in who we find attractive and lovable by a great force of nature which is concerned only with the need to propagate the species. It is not concerned with our happiness and more often than not we will end up with people who are our anti-thesis and inconducive to our happiness. So a happy marriage is a statistical anomaly and unnatural rather than something we can naturally expect.
So, if and when you find yourself a Young Werther with a broken heart or a girl for that matter, understand that it is not you who were rejected but it was just that the union was not approved by the good of the species by the 'will to power' or natural selection. This might sound like an artificial explanation but think about it, please, it is all just genetics.
Consolation For Difficulties
Finally Friedrich Nietzsche makes his grand entry and gives The Ultimate Consolation - You do not need consolations in life!
All life's difficulties are to be embraced. So accept your unpopularity, poverty, inadequacy, frustrations, heart-breaks and every sorrow as necessary to become the best you can be. If you do not have these difficulties you will be a mindless creature without knowledge of life. Use all this grief and the ills of life to forge a character and life that is noble and grand.
Your greatest gifts are your difficulties.
Disclaimer: I have modified the views expressed in this review from that in the book to match my own understanding of these philosophers at times (especially for Nietzsche). At other times I have reproduced the core message of the book without modification. I have not distinguished the two as the original works of all these great minds are always available to anyone who finds any disparity between this review and their own convictions. I have done justice neither to this book nor to the philosophers in this review and would ask you to pursue them further if you find it interesting. I will try to do a comprehensive review of Will Durant's The Story of Philosophy as a counterpoint to this simplistic interpretation of multi-faceted thoughts.
by

As I went through the book I was unable to make up my mind whether it was a work on philosophy masquerading as a self-help book to reach a wide audience or if it was a pretentious self-help book with aspirations to be a book on deep philosophy.
Even after I finished it, I am not sure how to judge it. Should I judge it harshly for picking and choosing among the works of these great philosophers to fit them into the narrow framework that Botton has drawn for them and thus making them draw his yoke? Or should I be lenient that Botton makes lofty thoughts so accessible by dragging them down and tethering them to the normal privations of men and offering consolations for the same?
The title is of course a brilliant one and almost irresistible. Not original maybe, as Boethius has already used it, but Boethius' was a private consolation with his own philosophy (personified as a woman) while Botton offers up his philosopher's thoughts for a public audience for his reader's consolation. I am no judge on which was the more effective work as I am yet to read the original work.
As for the book itself, Botton tries hard to make it entertaining and relevant and uses almost a bullet-point like efficiency to ensure that he can pack everything into an 'airport size' book.
The framework of the book is to use the wisdom of six philosophers, almost in chronological order, to offer consolations for some of the common maladies that afflict the average person. The fact that he spends more time and pages detailing out the lives of the philosophers should not deter from the fact that he does manage to stick admirably to the overall structure of the book and does offer a coherent sequence and logic of 'consolations'.
Consolation For Unpopularity
Botton uses the example and philosophy of Socrates and his life to illustrate that the judgement of others should have no real bearing on how we judge ourselves. This is not to say that we should count ourselves superior by being in the minority. No, the real message is that the weight of numbers supporting any argument or moral standpoint has nothing to do with the real strength of that position. Only reason should guide us in our judgements of ourselves and of others. In the hatred unfairly directed towards an innocent philosopher we recognize an echo of the hurt we ourselves encounter at the hands of those who are either unable or unwilling to do us justice. But if your reason tells us we are right, we should stick to our beliefs and we might be redeemed as Socrates was by the very people who condemned him and be consoled by the prospect of posterity's verdict.
Consolation For Not Having Enough Money
What is wealth? Is it mere material wealth or is it anything that provides us real happiness? These were the questions that Epicurus grappled with. His answer was that just as we are not capable of judging what is good for our physical body and would gladly gorge ourselves with unhealthy food to the point of death (as a lot of us do). so we are not capable of judging what is truly good for our souls, for our life.
I want to belabor this point - If left to ourselves and our instinctive tastes, we would find no reason to refrain from consuming as much as we can of everything that tastes good and this only leads to a decay in bodily health. It takes an expert opinion and self-control to be able to give up this unhealthy habit and adopt a moderate and healthy diet that allows us much better health.
Epicurus says that we similarly gorge on money and all the other pleasurable thing sin life and jump head long into the rat race thinking that is important. But only deep reflection can show us that it is a bad for our spiritual well-being and health as all that good food is for our bodily health.
So he says pleasure is the ultimate goal of life - but what gives you true pleasure can only be found by deep reflection. So what should we dedicate all our energies to if we want a happy life?
We should find Friendship, good companionship - association with people who recognize our true nature with all our defects is what we really need. in fact all our mad scramble after money and power is just a manifestation of our need to be esteemed and listened to by our fellow beings. We may seek a fortune for no reason but to secure the respect and attention of people who would otherwise look straight through us. But do we need money to get them to respect us? Would not a true friend value every word of yours and respect you even if you were penniless?
The second most important constituent of happiness is Freedom - the freedom to be ourselves. This eventually connects back to being with people who will accept us as us. Epicurus and his friends made a radical innovation. In order not to have to work for people they didn't like and answer to potentially humiliating whims, they removed themselves from employment in the commercial world of Athens ('We must free ourselves from the prison of everyday affairs and polities'), and began what could best have been described as a commune, accepting a simpler way of life in exchange for independence. They would have less money but would never again have to follow the commands of odious superiors.
Simplicity did not affect the friends' sense of status because, by distancing themselves from the values of Athens, they had ceased to judge themselves on a material basis. There was no need to be embarrassed by bare walls, and no benefit in showing off gold. Among a group of friends living outside the political and economic centre of the city, there was - in the financial sense - nothing to prove.
So, Happiness, an acquisition list:
1. A hut 2. Friends 3. To avoid superiors, patronization, infighting and competition 4. Thought 5. Art.
Happiness may indeed be difficult to attain. The obstacles are not primarily financial.
Consolation For Frustration
All frustration arises from a faulty view of the world says Lucius Annaeus Seneca. We are frustrated because we expect the world to behave in a particular way and then reality turns out to be different. the Great Stoic philosopher advises us to be always aware that the worst scenario is always possible and to be prepared for it so that when it does happen we are ready for it and will not descend into anger, shock, anxiety or despair, all of which are marks of an unprepared mind that was not in tune with reality. Correct your worldview to accept the fact that reality is cruel and thus find escape from these common frustrations. This does not mean that you should accept everything, you may struggle mightily to avoid the misfortune but you just need to be aware of its possibility to be not prey to anger, grief and other frustrations.
Consolation For Inadequacy
Michel de Montaigne consoles us about the ultimately human nature of us all. We have to accept that we are not perfect, no one ever was. Once we accept that every inadequacy we find so appalling in ourselves is shared by millions and is one of the side effects of being human and being alive, we will learn to be less embarrassed by them and can live a more fulfilling life.
Consolation For Heartbreak
The nerve to invoke the greatest pessimist of the western world to console heartbroken young Werthers!
But it is Arthur Schopenhauer who is being called upon to give advice on how to deal with rejection and broken love affairs. Schopenhauer's famous 'will to life' theory which modern readers might as well read as a sort of natural selection through conditioned unconscious eugenics states that we are controlled in who we find attractive and lovable by a great force of nature which is concerned only with the need to propagate the species. It is not concerned with our happiness and more often than not we will end up with people who are our anti-thesis and inconducive to our happiness. So a happy marriage is a statistical anomaly and unnatural rather than something we can naturally expect.
So, if and when you find yourself a Young Werther with a broken heart or a girl for that matter, understand that it is not you who were rejected but it was just that the union was not approved by the good of the species by the 'will to power' or natural selection. This might sound like an artificial explanation but think about it, please, it is all just genetics.
Consolation For Difficulties
Finally Friedrich Nietzsche makes his grand entry and gives The Ultimate Consolation - You do not need consolations in life!
All life's difficulties are to be embraced. So accept your unpopularity, poverty, inadequacy, frustrations, heart-breaks and every sorrow as necessary to become the best you can be. If you do not have these difficulties you will be a mindless creature without knowledge of life. Use all this grief and the ills of life to forge a character and life that is noble and grand.
Your greatest gifts are your difficulties.
Disclaimer: I have modified the views expressed in this review from that in the book to match my own understanding of these philosophers at times (especially for Nietzsche). At other times I have reproduced the core message of the book without modification. I have not distinguished the two as the original works of all these great minds are always available to anyone who finds any disparity between this review and their own convictions. I have done justice neither to this book nor to the philosophers in this review and would ask you to pursue them further if you find it interesting. I will try to do a comprehensive review of Will Durant's The Story of Philosophy as a counterpoint to this simplistic interpretation of multi-faceted thoughts.
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Reading Progress
December 1, 2011
– Shelved
February 16, 2012
–
Started Reading
February 16, 2012
–
18.01%
"After the long digression into the manufacturing method of pottery, Botton is now engaging in a long and mostly architectural and cibarious list of ideal pleasures - get to the philosophy at some point will he?"
page
49
February 18, 2012
–
Finished Reading
December 18, 2013
– Shelved as:
pop-phil
December 18, 2013
– Shelved as:
philosophy
December 22, 2013
– Shelved as:
r-r-rs
Comments Showing 1-44 of 44 (44 new)
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A less superficial work, but still cursory, and thus very very useful.
Liked the review a lot!

Thanks for the recc.. i will check out the book.

:) It was half irony... Thank you for the comment!

sure :) as long as it is taken philosophically love should be a cake walk.

things don't have to be from a "Genre" to be informative.

umm... The answer to your first question is surely there in my review. It was informative, but no harm in musing about where it could be classified is there?

Thanks for the review. You've given me all I need to know in order to continue to not recommend Botton's pablum. Instead, if I may summarize your review, one ought to read:
Socrates (by way of Plato)
Epicurus
Seneca
Montaigne
Schopenhauer
Nietzsche.
That would make for a fascinating Summer of reading.

Thanks for the review. You've given me all I need to know in order to continue to not recommend Botton's pablum. Instead, if I may summarize your review, one ought to read:
Socrates (by way..."
oh yes incomparable :)


pleasure :) why do we realize all the fun things late

I believe I have acknowledged the intended nature of the book in my review... And I haven't "torn it apart" in anyway I can see. I highlighted a few negative points but have also shown that it might be a book worth reading. Will try to make future reviews more balanced :)

Pursuits of Wisdom: Six Ways of Life in Ancient Philosophy from Socrates to Plotinus
You can read a review here:

By the way, what is the spanish you had in mind?
Thanks a lot for the iInformative rReview Riku.. I have often found a lot of consolations from 'Thus Spake Zarathustra'..

Thanks Gaurav. Though I must say that I found no consolations in Mr. Z :)
Riku wrote: "Gaurav wrote: "Thanks a lot for the iInformative rReview Riku.. I have often found a lot of consolations from 'Thus Spake Zarathustra'.."
Thanks Gaurav. Though I must say that I found no consolati..."
Am curious.. :)
what did you find?
Thanks Gaurav. Though I must say that I found no consolati..."
Am curious.. :)
what did you find?

Thanks Gaurav. Though I must say that I found..."
I found disorientation, definitely no consolation.

. Once we accept that every inadequacy we find so appalling in ourselves is shared by millions and is one of the side effects of being human and being alive, we will learn to be less embarrassed by them and can live a more fulfilling life
I do not see that being one of millions who is rubbish at chess is any kind of consolation. It does not allow me to live a more fulfulling life. My chess computer beats me relentlessly. I want to murder my chess computer.

. Once we accept that every inadequacy we find so appalling in ourselves is shared by millions and is one of the side effects of being human and being alive, we will..."
I don't think Montaigne means deficiencies of skill (the 'techne', of Plato), but those that are part of human nature - our common failings (such as being prone to jealousy, not able to control our anger, etc).
But then I have not read Montaigne directly and I don't trust Botton enough to assert this point. In any case, this is how I took it.

My sentiments exactly!"
Thanks, Martha!

I haven't read this book. I am not sure the degree to which he acknowledges or reflects the work of original sources. I certainly enjoyed your review, and agreed with all the perspectives given, except the Nietzsche one about embracing difficulties. Perhaps half embrace half forget might be more helpful? Or perhaps one quarter embrace three quarters forget? Nietzsche sounds a stern taskmaster.
De Botton maybe be a sop for the uneducated, but for many of us he is the only way in to philosophical ideas that we will understand. Over my lifetime I have often wished that more people wrote to give better access to philosophical ideas. (Now it is a bit late in the day. I am much more complaisant, or likely to answer my questions with different disciplines.)

I haven't read this book. I am not sure the degr..."
I just got a short cut to answer this. :)
Nathan:
Please do not read de Botton.
"Why Alain de Botton is a moron" Fisun Güner
"And please, before I say another word, do let’s stop calling him a philosopher. He’s a businessman and a writer whose pop-psych, mind-body-spirit essays make Paulo Coelho look like Dostoevsky."
from: /review/show...

; )
But to Caroline's point, "I find philosophy an enormously difficult subject", which is entirely correct.


I need to get to it someday too... you class Boethius among the practical/useful?


any translation you would recommend?

urging has been headed. thanks.

I look forward to your take on Boethius, for better or worse. A former partner once considered me a little more insane than usual after my Boethius revelations became unchained at an Ivy League soiree fundraiser for some forgettable then-Presidential candidate, and yrstruly was escorted, condemned to the curb. I spilled my ginger ale, tore my tie, lost my spare key to a grate, yet the text remained intact. I will now have to unearth Boethius in time after my lengthy go with Gibbon. Will be in touch!




Philosophy is self-help for humanity, yes. But modern self-help books have a specific meaning. :)

heh.. hoping it will get better