Philosopher Maxim Rovere, who publishes wishing each other well and insulting each otherinvites you to understand what is at stake in the argument rather than looking for the accuser.
“A glass that spills, keys that you can’t find, an annoying tone, a look… The most serious and superficial arguments can arise from everything,” writes Maxim Rovere. Wishing well and hurting each other. Philosophy of arguments (Flammarion Publications). After the best-selling stripperWhat to do with caterpillars? Not to be himselfPublished by the same publisher in 2019, the essayist and philosopher, influenced by the work of Spinoza, logically attacks our most foolish behavior, our most regrettable interactions: arguments.
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Dialogue and fencing
Whether arguing at home over a badly screwed-on toothpaste cap or a difference of opinion on social media, the process seems to be the same. fugitive thought and speech, which inevitably leads to an increase in unpleasant words and phrases. It’s unfortunate, which we immediately regret. Exchanges that “make perceptible the relationship between dialogue and fencing”…
Source: Le Figaro