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The Usefulness of the Useless
Taschenbuch von Nuccio Ordine
Sprache: Englisch

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Beschreibung
International Best Seller -- Now in English for the First Time. In this thought-provoking and extremely timely work, Nuccio Ordine convincingly argues for the utility of useless knowledge and against the contemporary fixation on utilitarianism - for the fundamental importance of the liberal arts and against the damage caused by their neglect. Inspired by the reflections of great philosophers and writers (eg: Plato, Dante, Montaigne, Shakespeare, Borges, and Calvino), Ordine reveals how the obsession for material goods and the cult of utility ultimately wither the spirit, jeopardising not only schools and universities, art, and creativity, but also our most fundamental values -- human dignity, love, and truth. Also included is Abraham Flexners 1939 essay The Usefulness of Useless Knowledge", which originally prompted Ordine to write this book. Flexner -- a founder and the first director of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton -- offers an impassioned defense of curiosity-driven research and learning.
International Best Seller -- Now in English for the First Time. In this thought-provoking and extremely timely work, Nuccio Ordine convincingly argues for the utility of useless knowledge and against the contemporary fixation on utilitarianism - for the fundamental importance of the liberal arts and against the damage caused by their neglect. Inspired by the reflections of great philosophers and writers (eg: Plato, Dante, Montaigne, Shakespeare, Borges, and Calvino), Ordine reveals how the obsession for material goods and the cult of utility ultimately wither the spirit, jeopardising not only schools and universities, art, and creativity, but also our most fundamental values -- human dignity, love, and truth. Also included is Abraham Flexners 1939 essay The Usefulness of Useless Knowledge", which originally prompted Ordine to write this book. Flexner -- a founder and the first director of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton -- offers an impassioned defense of curiosity-driven research and learning.
Über den Autor
Nuccio Ordine is a professor of literature at the University of Calabria, and is an expert on Giordano Bruno.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Contents

Introduction by Nuccio Ordine

Part One
The Useful Uselessness of Literature

1. "He who has not is not”
2. Knowledge without profit is useless!
3. What's water? An anecdote from David Foster Wallace
4. Colonel Buendía's little gold fish
5. Dante and Petrarch: literature should not be subservient to profit
6. The literature of utopia and golden chamber pots
7. Jim Hawkins: treasure hunter or numismatist?
8. The Merchant of Venice: the pound of flesh, the kingdom of Belmont and the hermeneutics of Socrates
9. Aristotle: learning has no practical usefulness
10. Pure theorist or philosopher-king? Plato's contradictions
11. Kant: the pleasure of beauty is disinterested
12. Ovid: nothing is more useful than the useless arts
13. Montaigne: "nothing is useless,” "not even uselessness itself”
14. Leopardi the flâneur: the choice of the useless against the utilitarianism of a "proud and foolish age”
15. Théophile Gautier: "what is useful is ugly” as "the jakes”
16. Baudelaire: a useful man is a squalid one
17. John Locke against poetry
18. Boccaccio: "bread” and poetry
19. García Lorca: it is unwise to live without the madness of poetry
20. The madness of Don Quixote, the hero of the useless and the gratuitous
21. The Facts of Coketown: Dickens's criticism of utilitarianism
22. Heidegger: it is hard to understand the useless
23. Uselessness and the essence of life: Zhuang-zi and Kakuzo Okakura
24. Eugène Ionesco: the useful is a useless burden
25. Italo Calvino: the gratuitous is revealed to be essential
26. Emile Cioran and Socrates' flute

Part Two
The University as Company
The Student as Client

1. The disengagement of the state
2. The student as client
3. Universities as companies and teachers as bureaucrats
4. Hugo: the crisis can be beaten not by cutting the culture budget but by doubling it
5. Tocqueville: "easy beauties” and the perils of commercial democracies
6. Herzen: timeless merchants
7. Bataille: the limits of utility and the vitality of the superfluous
8. Against the professionalizing university: John Henry Newman
9. What is the use of dead languages? John Locke and Antonio Gramsci
10. The planned disappearance of the classics
11. The encounter with a classic can change your life
12. Libraries at risk: the sensational case of the Warburg Institute
13. The disappearance of historic bookstores
14. The unexpected utility of the useless sciences
15. What do you get from a theorem? From Euclid to Archimedes.
16. Poincaré: "science does not study nature” to look for "utility”
17. "Knowledge is an asset that can be transmitted without becoming poor”

Part Three
Possession Kills:
Dignitas Hominis, Love, Truth

1. The voice of the classics
2. Dignitas hominis: the illusion of wealth and the prostitution of knowledge
3. Loving in order to possess is the death of love
4. The possession of truth is the death of truth

Bibliography
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2017
Fachbereich: Allgemeines
Genre: Philosophie
Jahrhundert: Antike
Rubrik: Geisteswissenschaften
Thema: Lexika
Medium: Taschenbuch
Seiten: 175
ISBN-13: 9781589881167
ISBN-10: 1589881168
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Ordine, Nuccio
Übersetzung: Mcewen, Alastair
Hersteller: Paul Dry Books
Maße: 175 x 112 x 13 mm
Von/Mit: Nuccio Ordine
Erscheinungsdatum: 07.03.2017
Gewicht: 0,162 kg
preigu-id: 121109573
Über den Autor
Nuccio Ordine is a professor of literature at the University of Calabria, and is an expert on Giordano Bruno.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Contents

Introduction by Nuccio Ordine

Part One
The Useful Uselessness of Literature

1. "He who has not is not”
2. Knowledge without profit is useless!
3. What's water? An anecdote from David Foster Wallace
4. Colonel Buendía's little gold fish
5. Dante and Petrarch: literature should not be subservient to profit
6. The literature of utopia and golden chamber pots
7. Jim Hawkins: treasure hunter or numismatist?
8. The Merchant of Venice: the pound of flesh, the kingdom of Belmont and the hermeneutics of Socrates
9. Aristotle: learning has no practical usefulness
10. Pure theorist or philosopher-king? Plato's contradictions
11. Kant: the pleasure of beauty is disinterested
12. Ovid: nothing is more useful than the useless arts
13. Montaigne: "nothing is useless,” "not even uselessness itself”
14. Leopardi the flâneur: the choice of the useless against the utilitarianism of a "proud and foolish age”
15. Théophile Gautier: "what is useful is ugly” as "the jakes”
16. Baudelaire: a useful man is a squalid one
17. John Locke against poetry
18. Boccaccio: "bread” and poetry
19. García Lorca: it is unwise to live without the madness of poetry
20. The madness of Don Quixote, the hero of the useless and the gratuitous
21. The Facts of Coketown: Dickens's criticism of utilitarianism
22. Heidegger: it is hard to understand the useless
23. Uselessness and the essence of life: Zhuang-zi and Kakuzo Okakura
24. Eugène Ionesco: the useful is a useless burden
25. Italo Calvino: the gratuitous is revealed to be essential
26. Emile Cioran and Socrates' flute

Part Two
The University as Company
The Student as Client

1. The disengagement of the state
2. The student as client
3. Universities as companies and teachers as bureaucrats
4. Hugo: the crisis can be beaten not by cutting the culture budget but by doubling it
5. Tocqueville: "easy beauties” and the perils of commercial democracies
6. Herzen: timeless merchants
7. Bataille: the limits of utility and the vitality of the superfluous
8. Against the professionalizing university: John Henry Newman
9. What is the use of dead languages? John Locke and Antonio Gramsci
10. The planned disappearance of the classics
11. The encounter with a classic can change your life
12. Libraries at risk: the sensational case of the Warburg Institute
13. The disappearance of historic bookstores
14. The unexpected utility of the useless sciences
15. What do you get from a theorem? From Euclid to Archimedes.
16. Poincaré: "science does not study nature” to look for "utility”
17. "Knowledge is an asset that can be transmitted without becoming poor”

Part Three
Possession Kills:
Dignitas Hominis, Love, Truth

1. The voice of the classics
2. Dignitas hominis: the illusion of wealth and the prostitution of knowledge
3. Loving in order to possess is the death of love
4. The possession of truth is the death of truth

Bibliography
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2017
Fachbereich: Allgemeines
Genre: Philosophie
Jahrhundert: Antike
Rubrik: Geisteswissenschaften
Thema: Lexika
Medium: Taschenbuch
Seiten: 175
ISBN-13: 9781589881167
ISBN-10: 1589881168
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Ordine, Nuccio
Übersetzung: Mcewen, Alastair
Hersteller: Paul Dry Books
Maße: 175 x 112 x 13 mm
Von/Mit: Nuccio Ordine
Erscheinungsdatum: 07.03.2017
Gewicht: 0,162 kg
preigu-id: 121109573
Warnhinweis