Revelatory
"I came to Schopenhauer through Houellebecq’s misanthropy and object-oriented ontology’s existential horror. Reading this book has helped me understand both more deeply, as well as better understand older, fin-de-siècle authors like Marx, Freud, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Oddly enough, reading Schopenhauer has been, for me, bracing, even invigorating, rather than depressing — in the same way that a cold plunge can be an invigorating shock to the system. Why do we fear the eternity of death, he asks, when we are indifferent to the eternity that preceded our birth? And why do we cling to life, which is mere “endless worries and anxieties”? It is better to admit that “Life is a uselessly disturbing episode in the blissful repose of nothingness. ” Lastly, while Eugene Thatcher’s introduction to this volume is brilliant, the selected essays are repetitive: a wider, more varied selection from Schopenhauer’s body of work would have been appreciated."