In a world that equates constant connectivity with happiness and endless social engagement with success, The Art of Being Alone by Choice offers a different perspective: some of history's greatest thinkers discovered that deliberately stepping back from society opens the door to freedom, clarity, and creativity. Spanning two millennia, this book introduces thirteen philosophers who defended solitude as a conscious act of strength, not a social weakness:Lao Tzu - the effortless solitude of Taoist wisdom Diogenes - radical independence from social convention Epicurus - the Garden as a retreat for selective companionship Seneca - letters on the luxury of philosophical retirement Marcus Aurelius - inner solitude while ruling an empire Pascal - on humanity's struggle to sit quietly in a room Montaigne - essays of self-discovery from his tower library Rousseau - exile transformed into chosen wisdom Schopenhauer - solitude as the mark of a strong mind Kierkegaard - becoming "the single one" in authentic existence Thoreau - deliberate living at Walden Pond Nietzsche - the solitude of the free spirit Emerson - self-reliance and the solitary soul This is not a guide to becoming antisocial, nor is it tied to personality labels. Instead, it is a philosophical toolkit for anyone who feels socially exhausted, digitally overwhelmed, or simply curious about why stepping away from the crowd has been celebrated throughout history. By reframing solitude as choice rather than failure, The Art of Being Alone by Choice shows that learning to be alone-without loneliness, anxiety, or need for validation-may be one of the most important skills for living authentically in a hyperconnected world.
Bitte wählen Sie Ihr Anliegen aus.
Rechnungen
Retourenschein anfordern
Bestellstatus
Storno







