THE CLASSIC LIFE CUỘC ĐỜI KINH ĐIỂN: Philosophy from Great Works
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Beschrijving
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Minh Hưng - Bác sĩ Nguyễn Đông HưngDear Readers, Perhaps the first thing that comes to your mind when you pick up this book is: Why would a medical doctor, who is familiar with operating rooms, patient records, and complex biochemical terminology, write a book about philosophy? For many people, medicine and philosophy seem to be two separate oceans: one is empirical science, the other is abstract thinking.But to me, they are two inseparable aspects of the same entity: Human.Throughout my years of practicing medicine, I have seen countless patients. I have seen bodies miraculously healed by the advances of modern medicine. But I have also seen people who, despite being completely healthy physically, continue to suffer from invisible pain. It is chronic anxiety, exhaustion from work pressure, a feeling of emptiness despite having many conveniences, and a nagging question about the true meaning of life.Medicine can patch up a bleeding wound, can regulate an irregular heartbeat, but it is often powerless against a lost soul. We have the most sophisticated toolkits to intervene in the body, but seem to lack the necessary "surgical instruments" for the inner self.That's when I turned to Philosophy.
Minh Hưng - Bác sĩ Nguyễn Đông HưngDear Readers, Perhaps the first thing that comes to your mind when you pick up this book is: Why would a medical doctor, who is familiar with operating rooms, patient records, and complex biochemical terminology, write a book about philosophy? For many people, medicine and philosophy seem to be two separate oceans: one is empirical science, the other is abstract thinking.But to me, they are two inseparable aspects of the same entity: Human.Throughout my years of practicing medicine, I have seen countless patients. I have seen bodies miraculously healed by the advances of modern medicine. But I have also seen people who, despite being completely healthy physically, continue to suffer from invisible pain. It is chronic anxiety, exhaustion from work pressure, a feeling of emptiness despite having many conveniences, and a nagging question about the true meaning of life.Medicine can patch up a bleeding wound, can regulate an irregular heartbeat, but it is often powerless against a lost soul. We have the most sophisticated toolkits to intervene in the body, but seem to lack the necessary "surgical instruments" for the inner self.That's when I turned to Philosophy.
AmazonPagina's: 81, Paperback, Independently published
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