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Advice to Clever Children
 
 
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Advice to Clever Children [Hardcover]

Celia Green
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Dr Ralph Yarrow, 'Phoenix'

'What this aggressive, stimulating book does is to make us face up to some of the polite fictions we have come to accept.'

Western Daily Press

'Often thought-provoking.'

Lord Rothermere

'A brilliant exposition of the human predicament.'
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Book Description

Reflections on education, religion and the human predicament. Lord St.John of Fawsley writes: 'Celia Green has written an important and mentally stimulating book which goes far beyond its title. Herself a brilliantly precocious child, she details some of the difficulties such children go through. She goes on to set out and reflect on her philosophy of life and displays some strikingly original ideas. This is a book which will repay careful reading and study.'

About the Author

Celia Green has been at various times Senior Open Scholar at Somerville College, Oxford, holder of a Perrott Warrick Studentship from Trinity College, Cambridge, and Honorary Research Fellow at the Department of Philosophy, Liverpool University. She was awarded her doctorate by Oxford University for work on causation and the mind-body problem. She is the author of eight other books, among them The Human Evasion, The Decline and Fall of Science, and Advice to Clever Children. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

Excerpted from Advice to Clever Children by Celia Green. Copyright © 1999. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

`The starting point is that one is interested in the universe, one observes that one is finite and that this is intolerable. One has a limited time and apparently limited capacity with which to find anything out. Therefore it is possible to despair. There are many orders of despair, and none of them are known to normal psychology...

Existential psychology, at least to a certain point, consists of exploiting the recoil from the despair of finiteness. The recoil is a drive with at least the instinctive immediacy of the survival instinct. There is no point in saying, 'What is there to do? What could such a drive possibly tend towards?'. The survival instinct tends to prolong life. The fundamental drive tends to inform itself about the universe.'

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