4/15/2023 0 Comments Tyranny of choice![]() Steve drew with the shaky hand of a child, but with relentless precision, capturing minor variations in the window shapes among the city’s school buses the subtle differences in logos and lettering among interstate, state, and county highway signs and the shape of toilet bowls and direction each door swung in a house he had visited only once. Although the number of pictures was large, the number of subjects was small: school buses, highway signs, house layouts, and street maps of Peoria, Illinois. is disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.Between the ages of about 5 and 12, my brother Steve, who has autism, drew many hundreds of pictures. Foreword Reviews only recommends books that we love. No fee was paid by the publisher for this review. ![]() The publisher of this book provided free copies of the book to have their book reviewed by a professional reviewer. There’s still a bit of jargon here, but overall The Tyranny of Choice is an interesting hybrid-a work of philosophy about an everyday problem and that’s written in everyday language.ĭisclosure: This article is not an endorsement, but a review. Though Salecl touches upon the philosophical works of Georg Hegel and Jacques Lacan, she breaks down their concepts into language that can be understood by the lay reader. The crux of her argument is that, in a society driven by freedom of choice, “social critique is increasingly replaced by self-critique.” This distinction binds the book together, establishing a context in which people’s intimate choices are so agonizingly difficult and they are so engaged in deliberating about them that the possibility of social change through choice on a broader scale becomes unthinkable. The book’s driving theme is this: “ why embrace the idea of choice, and what is gained or lost when they do.” In tracing the idea of choice through its interplay with and impact on anxiety, relationships, love, and the decision to have children, Salecl provides a fascinating look at the emotions and external factors driving the decisions we make. The prevailing societal notion that people “are in a position to make a work of art out of their own lives, shaping every element at will” creates tremendous pressures and sparks anxiety in everything from their physical bodies, finances, and family on down to the decoration of their homes. “The more we have tried to convince ourselves that choice brings greater satisfaction,” she writes, “the less we seem to enjoy actually having it.” ![]() Salecl argues that the tremendous freedom we experience in modern life has had a profound impact on human happiness. For, as Salecl writes in her fascinating new book, The Tyranny of Choice, “Who do we become when everything about us is optional?” We live in a free society, yet, in philosopher Renata Salecl’s opinion, society has reached a point where “life choices are described in the same terms as consumer choices.” It’s a scenario that creates the illusion that we can control every aspect of our lives-from the biggest decision on down to the tiniest details-and one that, for most, leads to anxiety and indecision.
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