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This book confronts the crisis of human existence in an age dominated by data, algorithms, and technocratic systems. Once celebrated as the path to truth and liberation, reason has been corrupted into a tool of optimization and control, reducing people to measurable variables. Against this backdrop, the author redefines freedom not as escape from necessity, but as the creative capacity to act within limits, to preserve dignity and meaning. The work explores the dialectic of alienation and freedom, life and death, necessity and possibility, insisting that uncertainty is not a threat but the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book confronts the crisis of human existence in an age dominated by data, algorithms, and technocratic systems. Once celebrated as the path to truth and liberation, reason has been corrupted into a tool of optimization and control, reducing people to measurable variables. Against this backdrop, the author redefines freedom not as escape from necessity, but as the creative capacity to act within limits, to preserve dignity and meaning. The work explores the dialectic of alienation and freedom, life and death, necessity and possibility, insisting that uncertainty is not a threat but the very condition for creativity and responsibility. It calls for a shift from linear, deterministic reason to a nonlinear, dialogical rationality that acknowledges complexity, transparency, and ethical responsibility. Ultimately, philosophy is reclaimed as a lived act-an art of questioning, reconstructing, and liberating. Its central message is clear: humans must never be treated as means, but asthe ultimate end of all scientific, technological, and institutional processes, so that a new human order-grounded in truth, creativity, and freedom-can emerge.
Autorenporträt
Nguyen Anh Quoc, born in 1972 in Dak Lak, Vietnam, is currently teaching Human philosophy and Social philosophy; participating in teaching undergraduate, graduate and doctoral students majoring in philosophy.