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A collection of meditations in the Stoic tradition. Meditations on
Self-Discipline and Failure provides access to the ruminations,
practices, and applications of ancient Stoic philosophy as deployed
by a contemporary professional philosopher with twenty five years
of experience teaching, researching, and publishing articles in
academic journals. Each meditation is presented in the second
person, encouraging the reader to examine their struggles and
failures in the pursuit of self-improvement and enlightenment.
You can learn a lot about yourself if you pay careful attention for
one full year. Here are 365 daily meditations that, through their
brutal confessionalism, will unearth the stoic in you. 'God Bless
the Broken Bones won't tickle your ears with pleasant words.
Instead what you'll find is a year of one man's seemingly
uncensored thoughts, fears, frustrations, longings, gratitude, and
self-exhortations. Raw yet eloquent, William Ferraiolo's musings
reveal the daily challenges to living a life of equanimity and
honor, and why there's no worthier goal. At times this book might
offend you. It will certainly challenge you. And if you're willing,
it might change you. I recommend you see for yourself.' Seth J.
Gillihan, PhD, author of Retrain Your Brain: Cognitive Behavioral
Therapy in 7 Weeks
In Slave and Sage William Ferraiolo distills and reanimates the
original spirit of Epictetus' Enchiridion for a 21st century
audience, and shows how the lessons Epictetus offered are more
relevant than ever to modern life. Much like the original stoics,
Ferraiolo's work prides itself on a combination of erudition and
accessibility, to teach and counsel every reader. "This little gem
of philosophical insight will help you dig down into the best
wisdom of the ancient Stoic philosopher, Epictetus, and see how it
can apply powerfully in our lives today. Highly recommended." Tom
Morris, author of The Stoic Art of Living
The fundamentals of a human's life on this planet have not changed
very much over the millennia. The world is large and indifferent to
the suffering of its denizens, its inhabitants. Perhaps there is a
God who is not indifferent. Perhaps there is no such God. There
are, however, people who suffer. Those people sometimes wonder
about their suffering, their place in this world, and, forgive the
expression, God knows what else. You Die at the End: Meditations on
Mortality and the Human Condition is William Ferraiolo's attempt to
contemplate a few elements of the human condition from the
perspective of an individual, middling effort to manage a human
life. Perhaps this will prove worthy of the reader's time and
effort. The author hopes to be of service. The author frequently
fails. Sometimes, the author blunders into a brief, useful moment
of clarity. Read on to find out if this book serves as a useful
blunder.
Stoicism offers rationally grounded, proven psychological
techniques for the gradual development of consistent self-mastery,
and emotional detachment from those elements of the human condition
that tend to cause the most pervasive and unsettling forms of fear,
anxiety, and avoidable disquiet. In the essays in A Life Worth
Living, William Ferraiolo examines what it means to incorporate
Stoicism into 21st century life, adapting classical Stoic
philosophy for the modern day. 'William Ferraiolo's new book
represents an essential contribution to all who struggle with
living a meaningful life.' Eldon Taylor, Ph.D, New York Times
bestselling author of Choices and Illusions
"Cynical Maxims and Marginalia" is a collection of cognitive
projectiles. They pierce the reader's pretensions, illusions, and
unexamined assumptions. They provide flashes of insight along with
an occasional good laugh at mankind's expense. There is little
effort here to prove any point, demonstrate any claim, or justify
any supposition. Persuasion is of secondary interest. The primary
intention is to incite, to puncture, and to awaken the reader from
slumber. The maxim is the author's weapon of choice-a scattershot
delivery system. The book lets fly in all directions, but takes
particular aim at no one- or at everyone (which amounts to much the
same thing). Careful argumentation has its place and value, but so
does firing off a quiver full of flaming rhetorical arrows. These
are haphazard shots loosed into the darkness. Take cover.
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