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Please, not a philosophy book...not a motivational book...a book for those of us who didn't get the lessons we should have when we were kids.

2007-05-29 01:08:47 · 14 answers · asked by stonerosedesigndotcom 3 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

14 answers

the Bible. It seriously talks about every single human emotion, you just have to find the right book within it.

2007-05-29 01:16:17 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

The Naked Ape by Desmond Morris (I think)
If Life is a Bowl of Cherries, Why Am I Always In The Pits? by Erma Bombeck
Black Elk Speaks (can't remember the author)

2007-05-29 02:13:04 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

look, buddhism isn't a filosophy, motivational? i don't understand... i understand only that's particularly a lesson on useful user-friendly approaches to navigate the merciless certainty of existence, in my experience of 10 years I promise that it help plenty!!! now that meditation helps even little ones with interest deficency because it quite is prooved and documented on newspaper this teachings could desire to be quite given to little ones with the purpose to strengthen up waiting. provide it a attempt and don't believe people who think of it quite is a faith because of the fact that's not, it quite is a technology of the strategies the 1st coaching of the Buddha (4 Noble Truths) grow to be: Sufference, the 2d grow to be clarification for Soffering, the trhird a thank you to get loose from suffering (the path, the training), the fourth end of suffering it works a hundred%

2016-12-30 05:40:53 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

The Philosophy of Humanism by Corliss Lamont
This is not an obscure philosophical treaty!
Its just down to Earth!...Best book ever!

2007-05-29 02:03:09 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

One Hundred Years of Solitude , Gabriel Marquez
and Moby Dick, Hermin Melville

The Marquez book is a spectacular book. It is funny, endearing, and its premise is generational. It is a brilliant
fictional account of a family in crisis after crisis after crisis.Its characters are taken from your own past, your own history your own future.

Moby Dick will teach you more about Whaling than you ever will want or need to know and it will instruct you in hardship and the quest for reality.
It will also bore you as lie often does.

2007-05-29 06:31:36 · answer #5 · answered by pat 4 · 0 0

I offer you the record of my own life. You will not find it written in a book, but in random comments here on ANSWERS and across the Internet. To begin, you might want to wade through my answers here, and consider the more serious ones and the ones which may move you to laughter or to tears. This is the mode of "teaching" I offer.

2007-05-29 01:28:08 · answer #6 · answered by In Honor of Moja 4 · 0 0

The strenght of emotions. Francois Lelord and Christophe André. Isbn: 90 581 4004 0 (original title: La Force des émotions.
I'm one of those people who had to learn everything later on in life... ;)

2007-05-29 01:17:59 · answer #7 · answered by freebird31wizard 6 · 0 0

I really liked "The Road less Traveled" by M. Scott Peck (and so did everybody else, it was a bestseller for over 10 years).

I find it odd that you would ask a philo forum for help and insist that the answer not include philo.

2007-05-29 04:22:30 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"The Spirit of Terrorism" by Jean Baudrillard

or

"When Nietzsche Wept" by Irvin Yalom

2007-05-29 03:57:34 · answer #9 · answered by !@#%&! 3 · 0 0

REAL LOVE, by Greg Baer.
A great perspective toward the challenges of everyday living and loving.

2007-05-29 01:32:03 · answer #10 · answered by BooBooKins 5 · 0 0

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