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Kaag, the philosophy-department chair at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell, began experimenting with what might be called first-person philosophy—not desiccated fodder for arcane journals but robust inquiry into what he calls the “stuff of everyday life”—in his 2016 book, American Philosophy: A Love Story
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How to Live Better, According to Nietzsche
article appears in the October 2018 issue. Subscribe now to support 160 years of independent journalism and save up to 78%. Starting at only $24.50. View more stories from the issue. Subscribe <span>Kaag, the philosophy-department chair at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell , began experimenting with what might be called first-person philosophy—not desiccated fodder for arcane journals but robust inquiry into what he calls the “stuff of everyday life”—in his 2016 book, American Philosophy: A Love Story.Mingling romance and scholarship, Kaag related how he stumbled onto the private library of a 20th-century philosophical eminence, then out of a miserable marriage and into the arms of h


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