The Experimental Life: An Introduction to Michel de Montaigne – By Ryan Holiday
Money and Finance

The Experimental Life: An Introduction to Michel de Montaigne – By Ryan Holiday


In late 1569, Michel de Montaigne was given up as dead after being flung from a galloping horse.

As his friends carried his limp and bloodied body home, he watched life slip away from his physical self, not traumatically but almost flimsily, like some dancing spirit on the “tip of his lips,” and then return. This sublime experience marked the moment Montaigne began a uniquely playful relationship with his existence and was a sense clarity and euphoria about life that he carried with him from that point forwards. Shortly thereafter he took a bold step, retiring from a promising public career—retired to himself, so to speak—and made self-study his official occupation.

Maybe you don’t know anything about this man, Montaigne; perhaps you know him as the bane of your high school existence for inventing the word “essay.” What I’d like to do in this piece is tell you a bit more about him and hopefully remove him from the realm of people-from-history-you-don’t-care-about and place him in his proper context: as our greatest philosopher of life. And Montaigne was a philosopher in the truest sense; he studied life and how we can wring all that we can from the short bit of time each of us is given. Philosophy can seem boring—truthfully, most of it is—but Montaigne is not only incredibly accessible; just a brush with his brand of thinking can change our lives.

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Related books:

Michel de Montaigne - The Complete Essays

The Essays: A Selection

How to Live: Or A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer

Philosophy as a Way of Life: Spiritual Exercises from Socrates to Foucault

Related link: Selected essays of Montaigne





- Seneca, Montaigne, And Paying Attention...
From Sarah Bakewell in How to Live: Or A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer:As Seneca put it, life does not pause to remind you that it is running out: The only one who can keep you mindful of this is you: It...

- Montaigne Quote
From The Complete Essays of Montaigne: "Look on each day as if it were your last, And each unlooked-for hour will seem a boon." HORACE It is uncertain where death awaits us; let us await it everywhere. Premeditation of death is premeditation...

- Montaigne Quote
"In order always to be learning something by communication with others (which is one of the finest schools there can be), I observe in my travels this practice: I always steer those I talk with back to the subjects they know best....For most often the...

- Links
Sanjay Bakshi lecture: Klein vs. Kahneman (LINK) Peter Thiel profiled in Fortune (LINK) Related book: Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the FutureHow the Next iPhone Could Finally Kill the Credit Card (LINK) Why Buffett's son bought...

- Philosophy: A Guide To Happiness
We tend to accept that people in authority must be right. It’s this assumption that Socrates wanted us to challenge by urging us to think logically about the nonsense they often come out with, rather than being struck dumb by their aura of importance...



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