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Uncanny Soulscapes in Uncustomary Dreamscope

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Uncanny Soulscapes in Uncustomary Dreamscope

Humour and cruelty - two themes that have been central to Baruchello's philosophical work for decades - combine here in sixty short works of experimental philosophy.

Oh, but what a boring way to write a back-cover for a book like this! Sure it's factually correct, but it's also terribly dull. For this is not a work of prim and proper propositional prose. It's a work of avant-garde theatre; a work of intellectual play. And hence, perhaps, not a work at all. Baruchello crosses style with substance and substance with style, offering not only ideas to contemplate but also worlds to explore. And his worlds are a magic circus: surreal, satirical, sarcastic, strange, marvellous, bizzarevellous, and odd, and sometimes even scary or sad. The idea is not only to explain how humour and cruelty can go together or even fight each other, but also to show it.

Italian-Icelandic Professor Giorgio Baruchello, PhD., pairs well with a 1972 Valpolicella Ripasso, and with Phil Collins' all-drummer performance of Bach's Toccata and Fugue. His as-yet-unthought works include How To Philosophize With A Puppet, and A Discourse On The Last Ten Digits Of Pi. Reading his books out loud has caused some listeners to enter a mystical trance and levitate.
Humour and cruelty - two themes that have been central to Baruchello's philosophical work for decades - combine here in sixty short works of experimental philosophy.

Oh, but what a boring way to write a back-cover for a book like this! Sure it's factually correct, but it's also terribly dull. For this is not a work of prim and proper propositional prose. It's a work of avant-garde theatre; a work of intellectual play. And hence, perhaps, not a work at all. Baruchello crosses style with substance and substance with style, offering not only ideas to contemplate but also worlds to explore. And his worlds are a magic circus: surreal, satirical, sarcastic, strange, marvellous, bizzarevellous, and odd, and sometimes even scary or sad. The idea is not only to explain how humour and cruelty can go together or even fight each other, but also to show it.

Italian-Icelandic Professor Giorgio Baruchello, PhD., pairs well with a 1972 Valpolicella Ripasso, and with Phil Collins' all-drummer performance of Bach's Toccata and Fugue. His as-yet-unthought works include How To Philosophize With A Puppet, and A Discourse On The Last Ten Digits Of Pi. Reading his books out loud has caused some listeners to enter a mystical trance and levitate.
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Uncanny Soulscapes in Uncustomary Dreamscope
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Humour and cruelty - two themes that have been central to Baruchello's philosophical work for decades - combine here in sixty short works of experimental philosophy.

Oh, but what a boring way to write a back-cover for a book like this! Sure it's factually correct, but it's also terribly dull. For this is not a work of prim and proper propositional prose. It's a work of avant-garde theatre; a work of intellectual play. And hence, perhaps, not a work at all. Baruchello crosses style with substance and substance with style, offering not only ideas to contemplate but also worlds to explore. And his worlds are a magic circus: surreal, satirical, sarcastic, strange, marvellous, bizzarevellous, and odd, and sometimes even scary or sad. The idea is not only to explain how humour and cruelty can go together or even fight each other, but also to show it.

Italian-Icelandic Professor Giorgio Baruchello, PhD., pairs well with a 1972 Valpolicella Ripasso, and with Phil Collins' all-drummer performance of Bach's Toccata and Fugue. His as-yet-unthought works include How To Philosophize With A Puppet, and A Discourse On The Last Ten Digits Of Pi. Reading his books out loud has caused some listeners to enter a mystical trance and levitate.
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