Path

Puett, Michael

£8.99

Harvard’s most popular professor explains how thinkers from Confucius to Xunzi can transform our daily lives. In the first book of its kind, ‘The Path’ draws on the work of six of the great – but largely unknown – Chinese philosophers to offer a radical and life-changing guide to human flourishing. By examining the teachings of Chinese thinkers, and explaining what they reveal about our daily lives – from greeting others to raising children – ‘The Path’ challenges some of our deepest held assumptions. It shows that the way to live well is not to slavishly follow a grand plan , as so much of western thought would have us believe, but rather to follow a path – one of self-cultivation and self-discovery.

Out of stock

Publish Date: 02/02/2017

Description

The Sunday Times Top 10 and International Bestseller:
Ancient Chinese philosophy for modern life from Harvard’s most popular professor

The first book of its kind, The Path offers a profound guide to living well through making small changes to our everyday routines. Covering subjects from decision-making to relationships, it shows how actions from greeting others and playing with children to running meetings can be opportunities to become happier and more productive.

The authors show that we live well not by “finding” ourselves and slavishly following a grand plan, as so much of Western thought would have us believe, but rather through a path of self-cultivation and engagement with the world. Believing in a “true self” only restricts what we can become – and tiny changes, from how we think about careers to how we talk to our family, can start to have powerful effects that will open up constellations of new possibilities.

Professor Michael Puett’s course in Chinese philosophy has taken Harvard by storm. In The Path, he and journalist Christine Gross-Loh make this timeless wisdom accessible to everyone for the first time.

Additional information

Weight 159 g
Dimensions 198 × 129 × 14 mm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Paperback

Pages

xiv, 204

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

181.11 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K