Tag Archives: debts of honor
How Did I Get To Be This Happy?
How Did I Get To Be This Happy? If I put this question to an existentialist, the answer would be: “Because you’re inauthentic. You walk around in bad faith.” The human situation can be deemed absurd (if you’re feeling French) … Continue reading →
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Tagged "my station and its duties", Abigail L. Rosenthal's "A Good Look at Evil", Abigail L. Rosenthal's "Confessions of a Young Philosopher", absurdism, angst, animal communicators, animal emotions, animal personalities, anxiety, archiving materials, asking the experts, awareness in nature, bad faith, blogging, book illustrations, childhood hero, childhood influence, Confessions of a Young Philosopher, debts of honor, distant God v near God, double-sided experience, Elmer Sprague, existentialists, filial piety, genius, grandparents, hasidic forgiveness, Hebrew Union College, Henry M. Rosenthal, horse knowledge, horse sense, human animal interactions, inauthentic, inner changes, Jewish Institute of Religion, Jewish saints, life as fiction, life expertise, life transition, loyal colleagues, Martin Buber, Martin Buber's "Tales of the Hasidim: The Early Masters", maternal impactor, Matthew Cohn, moral bookkeeping, moral burdens, Nancy Drew, natural cheerfulness, nature's goodness, New York attitude, obituaries, objective changes, online communication, online outreach, online readership, pandemic opportunities, pandemic peak experience, paternal impactor, paternal legacy, paying respects, personal God, post-modern attitude, Proceedings and Addresses, Rav Tsair, real life hero, relation to God, repressed guilt, self report, senior colleague, spiritual burden, talmudic scholars, the human situation, time window, work in the world, writers and writing, year-of-the-pandemic, zaddik
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