🚶
The Everyday Philosopher's Guide
Simplified Chinese
🚶
The Everyday Philosopher's Guide
Simplified Chinese
  • 👋从这里开始 - 关于日常哲人指南
  • 什么是哲学?
  • 哲学的实践运用
  • ⚙️工具
    • 🤔批判性推理
      • Argumentation
      • Deduction
      • Induction
      • Validity
      • Soundness
      • Refutation
      • Definition
      • Tautology
      • Abduction
      • Certainty
      • Axiom
      • Fallacy
      • Dialectics
      • Analogy
      • Anomaly
      • Reduction
      • Thought Experiment
      • Conditional
      • Ambiguity
      • Counterexample
      • Criteria
      • Doxa
    • ☯️概念区分
      • Absolute/Relative
      • a priori/a posteriori
      • Analytic/Synthetic
      • de re/de dicto
      • Defeasible/Indefeasible
      • Cause/Reason
      • Categorical/Modal
      • Sense/Reference
      • Conditional/Biconditional
      • Entailment/Implication
      • Endurantism/Perdurantism
      • Essential/Accidental
      • Knowledge by acquaintance/Knowledge by description
      • Internalism/Externalism
      • Belief/Knowledge
      • Necessary/Contingent
      • Necessary/Sufficient
      • Being/Nothingness
      • Objective/Subjective
      • Syntax/Semantics
      • Type/Token
    • ⚗️思想实验
      • Ship of Theseus
      • The Chinese Room
      • Butterfly Dream
      • Thompson's Violinist
    • 💫谬误
      • Confirmation bias
      • Circularity
      • Fundamental attribution error
    • ⚖️哲学框架
      • Principle of Charity
      • Golden Rule
  • 📜知识体系
    • 🧑‍🏫哲学家
      • Ancient
        • Aristotle
        • Confucius
        • Xunzi
        • Mencius
        • Zhuangzi
        • Thiruvalluvar
      • Medieval
      • Modern
      • Contemporary
        • Byung Chul Han
    • 📚传统流派
      • Baha'i Faith
      • Buddhism
      • Judaism
      • Islam
      • Posthumanism
    • 🗺️地理区域
  • 🛠️应用
    • 从个人到社会
    • 🧍个人应用
      • Self-reflection
      • Philosophical Health
      • Journaling
      • Skills Development
        • Inner Development Goals
        • Metacognition
        • Integrity and Authenticity
        • Presence
        • Sensemaking
        • Open-mindedness
        • Communication
    • 🫂关系应用
      • Dialectical Behavioural Therapy
      • Interfaith dialogue
      • Existential Coaching
      • Philosophical Counselling
      • Philosophical Enquiry (PhiE)
      • Reason-based decision making
    • 🌏社会应用
      • Education
      • Healthcare
      • Public Policy
      • Gender
      • Religion
  • 关于我们
    • 📜日常哲人宣言
    • 我们的贡献者
      • 马来西亚哲学学会 (MyPhilSoc)
  • 附录
    • 版权说明
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  • Who is Byung Chul Han?
  • Key ideas of Byung Chul Han

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  1. 知识体系
  2. 哲学家
  3. Contemporary

Byung Chul Han

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Who is Byung Chul Han?

Byung-Chul Han is a South Korean-born German philosopher and cultural theorist. Born in 1959 in Seoul, South Korea, he initially studied metallurgy before moving to Germany in the 1980s to study philosophy, German literature, and Catholic theology in Freiburg and Munich.

Han is best known for his in books like The Burnout Society, where he analyzes how the achievement-oriented culture leads to exhaustion and loss of meaning

Key ideas of Byung Chul Han

Byung-Chul Han is a leading philosopher providing a perceptive diagnosis of the pathologies of late modernity, digital technologies, and the crisis of meaning, while advocating for contemplation, embodiment, and re-enchantment as potential antidotes.

Here are some of his philosophical contributions that we could apply in everyday life:

Making time for contemplation and lingering

In our hyperactive "achievement society", Han advocates for the importance of contemplation, inactivity and lingering. He refers this as , in response to Hannah Arendt’s book Vita activa or of the active life, which advocates human action.

This involves taking some time to slow down, do nothing, and let our minds wander without any goal or purpose. Like taking breaks from work to daydream, going for leisurely walks in nature, or spending time alone in quiet reflection.

Doing philosophy as art

Han is known for his short, impactful sentences that create a "haiku effect". He believes you can "" rather than a long treatise.

Cultivating embodied, analogue experiences

Han analyses how digital technologies, social media, and smartphones lead to distraction, loss of attention and narcissism. We are becoming losing touch with reality.

To counter the disembodiment and of the digital world, Han suggests re-engaging with physical, sensory reality. We can spend time away from screens doing analog activities — reading physical books, writing by hand, making art and crafts, cooking, gardening. Anything that grounds us in our bodies and the material world.

Recovering rituals and narratives

In daily life, we can engage in both big and small rituals - family dinners, birthday celebrations, holiday traditions, community gatherings, religious services if applicable.

Appreciating beauty and mystery in the ordinary

Han wants to re-enchant a world stripped of magic by information. We can cultivate an enchanted perspective by noticing beauty, strangeness and mystery in everyday things.

The scent of coffee, the play of light, the laughter of children, the complexity of insects, the imperfect uniqueness of handmade objects — contemplating beauty spurs meaningful action.

Han argues for the importance of shared rituals and narratives that provide meaning and bind society together, as opposed to just .

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🧑‍🏫
critique of modern society
vita contemplativa
enlighten the world in a few words
infomaniacs
dematerialisation
accumulating information and data