Amazon.com Review
"One of the most salient features of our culture is that there is so much bullshit," Harry G. Frankfurt writes, in what must surely be the most eyebrow-raising opener in modern philosophical prose. "Everyone knows this. Each of us contributes his share. But we tend to take the situation for granted." This compact little book, as pungent as the phenomenon it explores, attempts to articulate a theory of this contemporary scourge--what it is, what it does, and why there's so much of it. The result is entertaining and enlightening in almost equal measure. It can't be denied; part of the book's charm is the puerile pleasure of reading classic academic discourse punctuated at regular intervals by the word "bullshit." More pertinent is Frankfurt's focus on intentions--the
practice of bullshit, rather than its end result. Bullshitting, as he notes, is not exactly lying, and bullshit remains bullshit whether it's true or false. The difference lies in the bullshitter's complete disregard for whether what he's saying corresponds to facts in the physical world: he "does not reject the authority of the truth, as the liar does, and oppose himself to it. He pays no attention to it at all. By virtue of this, bullshit is a greater enemy of the truth than lies are."
This may sound all too familiar to those of use who still live in the "reality-based community" and must deal with a world convulsed by those who do not. But Frankfurt leaves such political implications to his readers. Instead, he points to one source of bullshit's unprecedented expansion in recent years, the postmodern skepticism of objective truth in favor of sincerity, or as he defines it, staying true to subjective experience. But what makes us think that anything in our nature is more stable or inherent than what lies outside it? Thus, Frankfurt concludes, with an observation as tiny and perfect as the rest of this exquisite book, "sincerity itself is bullshit." --Mary Park
Review
" it is tempting to say that On Bullshit comes very close to defining the essence of postindustrial society". -- Scott McLemee, Inside Higher Education
"... the book was definitely not meant to be taken lightly. It is, after all, not a knee-slapper." -- Kevin Cowherd, The Baltimore Sun
"Credo che chi pronuncia stronzate confidi anche nella debole memoria del suo uditorio". -- Umberto Eco, L'Espresso
"Editors and reporters will likely recognize their current challenges in the changed cultural landscape he describes." -- Barbara Bedway, Editor & Publisher
"For any genre, however, this humble book is a noteworthy success, and promises to continue to be so." -- Alan Williams, The Simon
"For bullshit artistry demands our complicity. It is, in its own way, a demonstration of power" -- Jonathan Lear, The New Republic
"Frankfurt's deadpan tone gives a comic flavor to many of his observations". -- Kenneth Baker, The San Francisco Chronicle
"On Bulls - - t" is both very funny and refreshingly unpedantic." -- Jon Newlin, The Times-Picayune
"Prize Bull ... We are drowning in bullshit. I mean, the Bush administration has practically made it a Cabinet position". -- Dan Neill, The Los Angeles Times
"The humor, and the naughtiness, lie in the contrast between the highfalutin'and the indelicate". -- Roger Kimball, The Wall Street Journal
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