Why should the pet, if it does, obey our instructions? When does punishment suppose a moral sense that is ridiculous to attribute to this other animal? What does it mean when we watch a dog, say, cavort through being a puppy and then, so much faster than we do, age and ultimately die? Are we really such different creatures?
Answering questions of this order is the mission of Englishman Mark Rowlands's The Philosopher and the Wolf: Lessons From the Wild on Love, Death and Happiness . The pet in this case is not a dog but, true to the book's title, a wolf called Brenin. The author, a philosopher, purchases the wolf cub on something of a whim while teaching in Tuscaloosa, at the University of Alabama. The Philosopher and the Wolf is a memoir of their relationship and a catalogue of the epiphanies and contemplations that their living together leads him to. His book is a ruminative and often challenging set of reflections about the meaning of life.
Early on, Rowlands makes an early distinction between wolves' ways of living and “simian” ways – those of the ape family to which we, as humans, belong. “Dogs,” Rowlands writes, “call out to something in the deepest recesses of a long-forgotten part of our soul ... a part of us that was there before we became apes. This is the wolf that we once were.”
In the fork of his evolutionary schema, we simians come off badly – this despite the students' lunches Brenin eats, the fights he gets into and the damage he wreaks if ever he is left alone for more than 20 minutes.
Relying in large part on the work of celebrated naturalist Frans de Waal – he of the sex-mad bonobos and our “inner ape” – Rowlands concludes that the ape family is the one less to be admired. It is less dedicated to the welfare of the group and inherently more calculating, and so capable of premeditation and, subsequently, evil.
“ What is most important when the time comes – and it always will – is to live your life with the coldness of a wolf ”
— Mark Rowlands
And what is the driver? Lust, of course, and the urge to power over our brethren. These two appetites are, to his mind, the consequence of our inversion of the importance of the reproductive function and pleasure as the actual point of sex . (A wolf may have it only once a year, and blithely.) As a result, we simians are scheming and nasty and dishonest, whereas, Rowlands says, “A wolf cannot lie to us; neither can a dog. That is why we think that we are better than them.”
Rowlands is hardly the first to romanticize beasts (“Sometimes I get a feeling: it's the strangest feeling. It's that I used to be a wolf and now I'm just a stupid labrador”) and he is in a long line of thinkers using the animal world to explore the thorny question of what, if anything, distinguishes our species. It has been argued, for instance, that humans, but not animals, are capable of free will, or that we alone are the species that can imagine love and our eventual deaths.
But Rowlands will have none of these constructs in humans' favour. He sees our striving for some way to scientifically explain our superiority as an act of wishful thinking designed to explain away and excuse our dominance over animals, and our dependence on them for food.
Rowlands argues, pushing philosopher John Rawls's “original position” one step further, that even our social contract with one another fails because it is less about equality than about forgetting the weak, and it is hugely flawed because usually it does not include animals at all. Rowlands becomes a vegetarian, though his attempts to make Brenin one fail.
Alongside the moral questioning and a gamut of disturbing moments – Brenin's fights with dogs, a road accident – there are amusing ones. All those who have put up with table kegs gnawed by a normal puppy will consider themselves lucky reading about the author's destroyed living-room curtains, lacerated car interiors and, after the wolf cub scurries under the house when he is first brought home, $10,000 worth of destroyed air-conditioning pipes. Rowlands, who has “already started to tune out human beings,” is gloriously undeterred. Tending to and accepting the havoc Brenin wreaks is but a small demonstration of the loyalty he feels is the highest expression of his love for a companion he nurses through illness and eventually must euthanize.
Death, of course, is the hardest lesson and, as the wolf's final days approach, Rowlands decides that we are what we leave behind in stories, and in the changed behaviour of others – this, despite a world view that is jocular and even … well, brutal. Happiness, not purpose, and therefore the wolf's being in the moment and not the ape's future perfect, is, Rowlands decides, the point of life. He draws succour, even, from the memory of the “deep and calm and sonorous growl” that Brenin emitted once when another, stronger dog had the young wolf cub by the throat. It indicated, to him, defiance and “a recognition that pain is coming, for pain is the nature of life.”
And yet Rowlands still does not take Brenin's loss easily, and he almost drinks himself to death over the spot in France where he buries him. His eventual epiphany is that “a life lived in the rosy warmth and kindness of hope is the one any of us would choose if we could,” but that “what is most important when the time comes – and it always will – is to live your life with the coldness of a wolf ... because in the end, it is only our defiance that redeems us.”
Rowlands is not an altogether savoury person. By his own admittance, he is something of a rugby-playing, carousing womanizer who is aware, at opportune moments, that the wolf by his side adds to his cachet. (He is a simian, therefore he schemes.) It is not difficult to see how such reasoning does the English philosopher, enjoying his time as a young professor in the American Southwest, a good turn, and leads him to the curious and not altogether convincing conclusion that although the wolf (and the part of himself he sees in it) “in the right circumstances might quickly and efficiently kill your dog,” the animal has no place in a civilized society not because he is dangerous, but because he is “nowhere near dangerous, and nowhere near unpleasant, enough.”
“Civilization,” Rowlands declares, “is only possible for deeply unpleasant animals. It is only an ape that can be truly civilized.”
I'm still not sure what this actually means; elsewhere the implication is that sappy dogs, relying on humans, are wolves that have succumbed to the civilizing path, and that his own inner wolf is only latent. Neither is it clear, even in death, that Brenin has made the author a better person, though he does shack up with another simian, finally.
But there is no question that Rowlands's thoughtful and provocative memoir is an engrossing bit of story left to the rest of us, and in this much Rowlands is certainly right: Story is the only way any of us can hope to live on.
Mark Rowlands
任教於邁阿密大學哲學系。著有《宇宙盡頭的哲學家》(The Philosopher at the End of Universe)和《我所學到的一切都來自電視》(Everything I Know I Learned From TV),作品曾被翻譯成十五國語言。
人是猿的近亲。我们懂得所有猿的诡计、欺骗、和残忍,文明仿佛不过是这些本性之后的副产品。而狼始终关注于当下:忠诚于时间的瞬间。历史这东西也只有猿类才如此关注,因为我们只感觉到时间的流逝。
评分买这本书,与其说是因为狼的存在,不如说是希望看哲学家与狼之间能存在什么智慧的闪光。 一开始或许有些难以接受作者的观点——他一直在试图让我们抛弃固有的成见,劝我们承认我们比狼所有的总总不足,狼比我们更投入的去生活。 一开始觉...
评分有的是心灵参汤,有的可做理性的薪柴,有的则是怀疑的踏脚石。) 尽管我们能够清晰的看出一些思想家的影响,比如尼采、海德格尔、卡谬、康德和后来的理查德·泰勒,而是,用比喻的方法来说,我认为某些想法只能出现在狼和人之间。 在早期生活中,我和布润尼经常趁着周末去亚拉...
评分人是猿的近亲。我们懂得所有猿的诡计、欺骗、和残忍,文明仿佛不过是这些本性之后的副产品。而狼始终关注于当下:忠诚于时间的瞬间。历史这东西也只有猿类才如此关注,因为我们只感觉到时间的流逝。
评分本書作者是一位哲學教授,正如書名所示,他養了一匹狼,這本書記錄了他與這匹名為布列寧的狼朝夕相處的十餘年光陰。他以自身哲學思考的專業出發,反覆辯析人與動物的關係與差異,藉以重新釐清人是什麼樣的存在,進而碰觸到生命最根本的困惑。但這畢竟不是一本冷硬的理論書,狼...
初看之下,这本书的文字似乎有些晦涩难懂,但只要耐下心来,深入其中,就会发现那是一种精心打磨过的、充满内在音乐性的语言。作者对句法的运用达到了出神入化的地步,长句的舒展与短句的铿锵交替,营造出一种独特的阅读韵律,如同聆听一部层次丰富的古典音乐作品。它不急于提供答案,反而更专注于描绘“追问”本身的状态。我感觉作者在试图探讨某种超越日常经验的领域,一种关于存在边界的模糊地带。这种探索的勇气令人敬佩。它迫使我跳出固有的思维定势,去重新审视一些我习以为常的观念。这本书更像是一次思想的拓展训练,而非简单的故事消费,读完后,你的“阅读肌肉”似乎得到了锻炼,对其他作品的理解力也随之提升了一个档次。
评分这本新近读到的作品,其叙事之绵密,结构之精巧,着实令人惊叹。作者似乎在摹写一个宏大而又微观的世界,每一个场景的切换都带着一种精心设计的节奏感,仿佛在指挥一场无声的交响乐。我尤其欣赏其对人物内心挣扎的细腻刻画,那些转瞬即逝的念头、压抑已久的渴望,都被笔尖捕捉得栩栩如生。阅读过程中,我常常需要停下来,反复咀嚼那些充满哲思的句子,它们如同暗夜中的灯塔,虽然光芒微弱,却足以指引读者穿越迷雾。这本书不仅仅是一个故事的讲述,更像是一场智力上的探戈,你需要跟上作者的步伐,才能领会其中深藏的韵味。整体而言,它提供的阅读体验是多层次的,既有情节的张力,更有对人性深处的探问,推荐给那些不满足于浅尝辄止、渴望深入文本肌理的读者。它成功地在商业的流畅性与文学的深度之间找到了一种令人信服的平衡点。
评分这部作品在氛围营造上的功力,令人叹为观止。它成功地在纸面上构建了一个独特而封闭的感官世界,你几乎可以闻到空气中弥漫的气味,感受到特定光线下事物的质感。作者对环境的描绘,绝非简单的背景交代,而是作为叙事本身的重要参与者,参与到角色的命运之中。这种强烈的沉浸感,使得阅读过程变得异常真实,有时甚至让人感到一种轻微的幽闭恐惧。关于主题的探讨,它似乎巧妙地避开了宏大的口号,而是通过极其个人化、私密化的叙事视角,来折射出普遍性的困境与挣扎。整本书读下来,留下的不仅仅是情节的回味,更多的是那种挥之不去的、关于“在场”与“疏离”的复杂情绪。它要求读者放下预设,完全进入作者精心铺设的那个情绪场域,才能体会到其真正的价值所在。
评分读完此书,我感到一种久违的、近乎原始的震撼。叙事语言的选取极具侵略性,直接将人抛入一个充满原始力量感的语境之中,那种粗粝、直接的表达方式,毫不留情地撕开了表象,直抵核心的荒谬或真实。文字的运用如同雕刻刀,毫不拖泥带水,每一个词汇的选择都带着一种必然性,仿佛作者穷尽了所有可能性,才最终选定了眼前这一组排列。我感受到的主题似乎围绕着某种永恒的冲突,关于秩序与混沌、理性与本能之间的拉锯战。这本书的节奏感非常强烈,时而如狂风暴雨,信息倾泻而下,令人喘不过气;时而又陷入一种近乎静默的冥想,留给读者足够的时间去消化那些重量级的概念。它绝不是一本轻松的消遣读物,它要求读者全身心的投入,并准备好面对一些可能令人不安但又无比真实的存在主义困惑。
评分这本书的结构设计堪称鬼斧神工,它并非采取传统的时间线性叙事,而是通过碎片化的记忆、交叉对比的视角,构建出一个复杂而又自洽的逻辑空间。每一次翻页,都像是在解开一个多维度的谜题,你以为掌握了线索,却发现那只是通往下一层迷宫的入口。我欣赏作者在叙事声调上的游刃有余,时而冷静得如同冰冷的科学报告,时而又突然爆发出一股炽热的情感洪流,这种强烈的反差恰恰增强了故事的戏剧张力。更妙的是,它对特定意象的反复回溯和变异处理,使得这些意象在读者的脑海中形成了强烈的心理暗示,最终构成了一种令人难忘的符号系统。对于那些喜欢在文字中寻找隐藏代码、热衷于文学解构的读者来说,这本书无疑是一场盛宴,它鼓励你质疑所读到的每一个字,去探寻其背后的真正意图。
评分xzvcd df
评分很有启发,我最记得是巧克力蛋糕那个故事。
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