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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is a must-read!
This book is a remarkable breath of fresh air in an ever more confusing world. John Ralston Saul uses his wit, intelligence and considerable grasp of history to explain the current malaise of the Western world in terms of the patterns of thought from the ancient world to the present. However, this is not a heavy or impenetrable tome, but a clear and accesible joy to read...
Published on August 10, 1998

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19 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars puerile
The main problem with this book is that it's just not funny, although Saul tries so very hard to be. Ambrose Bierce he is not. Nor much of an incisive critic in the Frankfurt School vein either, though no doubt he wishes he had Adorno's acerbic wit. What the book ends up being, then, is a collection of half-baked observations written in workaday prose. The entries either...
Published on August 22, 2003


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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is a must-read!, August 10, 1998
By A Customer
This book is a remarkable breath of fresh air in an ever more confusing world. John Ralston Saul uses his wit, intelligence and considerable grasp of history to explain the current malaise of the Western world in terms of the patterns of thought from the ancient world to the present. However, this is not a heavy or impenetrable tome, but a clear and accesible joy to read. If I could recommend only one book to anyone seeking to understand the global economy, corporatism, taxation, ethics, competition, efficiency (and many other topics from A to Z) then it would be this one. Saul begins with the definition of a dictionary as 'opinion presented as truth in alphabetical order', but his opinions are well worth your time.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A huge alarm clock for the citizen mind, August 19, 2007
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This review is from: The Doubter's Companion: A Dictionary of Aggressive Common Sense (Paperback)
I love this book. Since I have discovered it, I keep on recommending it to all my friends and to the people I care of. And I tell you, too: Run! Buy it, read it asap and keep it on your desk in everyday life.

I feel very ashamed about having come to know about this author so late and found this book in particular only now: as far as I understand it was released in 1994!

So I explain you the reason why for this late enthusiasm for this book. I had the occasion to listen to a public speech about globalism of Mr. Raulston Saul last March at the Shanghai International Literary Festival. Raulston Saul was brilliant and entertaining, and seemed to have developed a lot of ideas I was thinking about myself, rather in loneliness, in the last years. However, having never heard of him and not read one of his many works I felt uncomfortable and didn't feel like meeting him and shaking hands after the speech. After reading this book I will regret that forever...
Back home I searched Amazon and bought his books in bulk. I haven't yet read all of them, of course, but I feel like an urgent need to recommend this book to everybody.

In the form of a dictionary, this book is a masterpiece of communication and a pleasure to read.
By an extraordinary sense of humour and an entertaining prose Mr. Saul shows us how many ideas are circulated in modern society in the form of truths and passively accepted, unveiling for us the subtle play of the technocrat elites behind them, thus exercising power and control, with the result to devoid our modern democracies of real participation and responsibility from the part of the citizens.

I have an economic background and I attended university in Italy during the fabulous Eighties, a time we were prepared only for growth and success. The Nineties proved quite different and I have always thought we were facing times with a set of tools (truths!) which simply no longer fit. We lived the Nineties thinking by ourselves `Maybe this is just lasting some years and then we are back to the Eighties'. But this has never happened.
What really strikes me is the early perception and warning - and the depth of it - of many issues of contemporary life by Raulston Saul. I have been thinking in my loneliness a lot of things along Raulston Saul's lines but I always felt I missed the historical knowledge necessary to put many issues in the right perspective and demonstrate what my critical sense was able to outspeak in an almost wild way.
Now, I don't say I am today in the condition to check and verify all the facts quoted in the book - I still feel too ignorant and still need to investigate a lot of things - taken from the huge, multifaceted and wonderful culture of Saul - summarized and organized in the form of evidences of the aggressive common sense definitions given in the book. But I know it doesn't mind. This would be a lazy way to take Saul's clever book and right a manifestation of lack of doubt which is exactly what the author dislikes, that in fact the most important and revolutionary message of the book is "Citizen, set free your powerful ability to doubt as a mean to check other people assumptions, to get a better understanding of things, to participate in the decisions that shape our world and the life of the people who live in it".
Being overloaded of communication we have lost the habit to check what we are said also due to a lack of time. We leave in a time where brands guide us in our choices and help us to feel ensured about them to be right. We finish to make the same with ideas that circulate under brand names themselves. We tend to quote brands and to become lazy thinkers and we take for right the most advertised ideas. We become lazy also because so many important issues in contemporary life are put in such a complicated and technical way we often just give up to verify the truth, and just verify the brand that truth is labelled with.
Saul is such a great communicator. Using a Western philosophic approach in developing its definitions, putting them in an historical context in a very free and charming way, he makes us aware of so many common sayings, representing very clear interests of elites made blurred by difficult definitions and obscure technicalities, sold us as inevitable truth that time proved to be fashions.

So, even with a terrible delay, I tell I have enjoyed in particular the following entries: DOUBT, CIVILIZATION, the HOLY TRINITY - Late Twentieth Century (COMPETITION, EFFICIENCY and MARKET PLACE), Harvard School of Business and Chicago School of Economics, BUSINESS CONFERENCE, BALLROOM, DAVOS and ASPEN, HUMANISM, HAPPINESS, ECONOMETRICS, DUAL USE, ARMAMENTS, just to mention a few because many others are masterpieces as well.

Enjoy the book and the practice of the art of doubting.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Biting Commentary Essential to all Concerned Citizens, July 5, 2001
Saul has attempted to place the current use of language for the purpose of public discussion into historical terms. Through the unusual format of a dictionary-style argument, Saul convincingly argues that our public officials' obsession with a society conceived upon the faith of knowledge specialization and economic quantification has swerved Western Civilization (as defined by the values that emerged out of the Enlightenment) off the very basis of what has allowed our societies to develop, prosper and gain greater informational and monetary wealth.

Throughout the argument, Saul points out that historically, it is not through a blinding respect for one (sometimes isolated) principle that Western societies have developed, but that it is through careful (humanist) consideration of the complex and interrelated problems that constantly confront the varying interests of society. Though sometimes appalling in its generalizations and uncited factual accounts, the book is a satirical and correct swipe at our use of language sure to affect your own analysis of daily events.

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful, funny, literate and subversive., June 21, 1998
This is a remarkable book. It isn't entirely a work of political commentary, or philosophy, or social history, or humor, but is better (funnier, more direct, more critical) than most books that attempt only one of these topics. Quite outrageous, too.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fabulous, October 18, 1997
John Ralston Saul teaches us to DOUBT. He satirizes everything from the letter A, to the history of the croissant, to the value of sex. This book could change your life
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8 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An abecedarium of subversion., July 1, 2003
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This review is from: The Doubter's Companion: A Dictionary of Aggressive Common Sense (Paperback)
This should truly be compulsory reading for journalists, students, professors, and those who generally like to be informed. Those who prefer to wallow in intellectual mediocrity and ignorance may stay clear of this volume. John Ralston Saul articulates what we all know and yet refuse to believe. Illuminating and necessary.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Introduction to critical thinking, March 27, 2006
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b@will "V" (Vermillion, SD USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Doubter's Companion: A Dictionary of Aggressive Common Sense (Paperback)
I picked this book up at a little bookstore out of curiosity, and have since named it the one of the most influential books I've ever read.

Some bookmarked definitions are :
Destiny: Being rewarded for cooperation
Intelleigence: The ruling elite's description of its own strengths
Dictionary: Opinion presented as truth in alphabetical order

I've always been a critical thinker, but this book helped accelerate that thought process to my current position as a smart ass college student. Get this book if you want to have your mind frazzled.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent bookstore!, July 31, 2010
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Coming from the Amazon Marketplace, I was very happy to see how swiftly the book shipped and arrived. Condition of the item was exactly as described. I would be happy to buy from them again!
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0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Product delivered and recieved, September 5, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
Got my purchase as described, no surprises.
Happy with what I paid for.

Will buy from vendor again.
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5 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars to change the world,write a dictionary!, February 16, 1999
By A Customer
that misuse of language has characterized societies in crisis has been observed since Thucydides. The remedy,to write a dictionary,is attempted by the brave - voltaire,diderot,johnson and bierce have lite beacons in the fog. Ralston Saul here defines a vocabulary for reform.
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The Doubter's Companion: A Dictionary of Aggressive Common Sense
The Doubter's Companion: A Dictionary of Aggressive Common Sense by John Ralston Saul (Paperback - January 15, 2002)
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