Justice does not exist. People do not change. You are not born equal. Emotions, not logic, rule the decisions you call rational. Most people prefer suffering they know to freedom they do not.
These are five of the twenty-five propositions in 25 Uncomfortable Truths of Life, and Arthur A. Tiger defends each of them without flinching and without dressing them up. This is a philosophical manifesto, not a self-help book. It dismantles the illusions most modern lives are built on — that the world is fair, that relationships reward effort, that success follows talent, that you are the protagonist of a story headed somewhere.
The book is organized around three axes:
On the structure of the world — justice, irreversibility, meaning, guarantees, the price of everything On human nature — habits, emotions, self-sabotage, the universal preference for the familiar On the illusions we live by — and what becomes possible once they are set downThis is uncomfortable reading. It is also, paradoxically, freeing. The author's argument is not pessimism but maturity: that a clear view of what is actually the case is the only stable ground for an adult life. No consolation. No embellishment. No substitute for professional psychological help.
For readers ready to reconsider fundamentals.
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