In April 2019, Canadian psychologist Jordan B. Peterson sat down with
Slovenian philosopher and psychoanalyst Slavoj Zizek for a debate that
would collect higher ticket prices than the local Toronto Maple Leafs
game. The debate was considered by many to be something of a dud, with
both figures largely appearing to talk past each other, but to ignore it
would be a mistake. Instead, the fact that a major public event put the
Communist vs. Capitalist question back into play speaks to larger
cultural trends that are occurring; an old consensus seems to be
bursting at the seams, and it's unclear if the center will hold or be
moved. Taking on the existentialism of Martin Heidegger as their
starting point, Stephen Dozeman argues that understanding this debate
means starting with the individual subject, and understanding its
increasingly confused and precarious place in a disenchanted world.
Wandering in between philosophical theory, history, popular culture, and
back to philosophy again, this book tries to explore why so many feel
compelled to call ancient wisdom into question, and what it might mean
to take responsibility for our lives.