Essays and Aphorisms - Arthur Schopenhauer Selected and Translated with an Introduction by R. J. Hollingdale
Introduction
Essays
On the Suffering of the World
On the Vanity of Existence
On the Antithesis of Thing in Itself and Appearance
On Affirmation and Denial of the Will to Live
On the Indestructibility of our Essential Being by Death
On Suicide
On Women
On Thinking for Yourself
On Religion: A Dialogue
Aphorisms
On Philosophy and the Intellect
On Ethics
On Law and Politics
On Aesthetics
On Psychology
On Religion
On Books and Writing
On Various Subjects
List of Correspondences
Arthur Schopenhauer was born in Danzig in 1788 where his family, of
Dutch origin, owned a respected trading house. Arthur was expected
to inherit the business, but hated the work and in 1807, after his
father's suicide and the sale of the business, he enrolled in the
grammar school at Gotha. He went on to study medicine and science
at Gottingen University and in 1810 began to study philosophy. In
1811 he transferred to Berlin to write his doctoral thesis, and
began to write The World as Will and Idea, a complete exploration
of his philosophy, which was finished in 1818. Although the book
failed to sell, his belief in his own views sustained him through
twenty-five years of frustrated desire for fame. During his middle
life he travelled widely in Europe and in 1844 brought out a much
expanded edition of his book, which after his death became one of
the most widely read of all philosophical works. His fame was
established in 1851 with the publication of Parerga and
Paralipomena, a collection of dialogues, essays and aphorisms. He
died in 1860.
R.J. Hollingdale has translated works by, among others,
Schopenhauer, Goethe, T.A. Hoffmann, Lichtenburg and Theodor
Fontane, as well as eleven of Nietzsche's books, many for the
Penguin Classics. He has published two books on Nietzsche and was
Honorary President of the British Nietzsche Society until his death
in 2003.
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