ZEN AND THE ART OF MOTORCYCLE MAINTENANCE - ROBERT M.PIRSIG

21/ 03/ 2022

As you go through the title, you'll get the impression that this is a ridiculous book: "What does Zen have to do with maintaining a motorcycle? Then there should be titles like Zen and the sale of baluts, Zen and prostitution, Zen and drug trafficking, and so on." But when we curiously flip a few pages, we would feel that this is a serious book, really serious in terms of philosophical thinking which is expressed in the form of a novel in a light, flying style. The work is a dream success for any writer: millions of copies have been sold, translated into more than twenty languages, and numerous articles praising it as "the most widely read philosophical novel of all time."

The father and son's motorcycle journey across America is just a contemporary metaphor for a spiritual journey that begins with fundamental questions enquiries about the meaning of things in life through the character Phaedrus. To many pepple, these enquiries seem meaningless and out of line in a world completely dominated by the Internet and mobile phones. Even traditional intellectual pursuits centered on reflection and contemplation can now be summed up in a single word: Google. The work was written in the 1960s, when there was no Internet or smartphone, and the leisurely attitude of two people wandering the paths in search of truth and complete enlightenment (Aren’t they the ultimate goal of Zen, are they?) which seem alien, even a little too romantic, in the hustle and bustle of today's world. But it is at this strange point that the work has given the reader its greatest strength. How long have people lost their honest, innocent self that only knows how to love and accept life? Returning to our roots, reverting back to the origin to being able to see through our true self in the transparent water of enlightenment, isn't that the attitude of Zen Zong? Of course, leaving does not mean that you will definitely return, much less guarantee that you will find it. But if you do not strongly embark on the journey, will life still have any meaning? Human life is not only about birth, old age, illness, and death. As humans, we are superior to animals thanks to our sense of self-reflection to find the meaning of life. It is true that "Death comes to all men" but we still wonder to know the meaning of death, even yearning to conquer death by performing longlasting works: “Let me but leave a loyal heart shining in the pages of history." Heidegger, one of the greatest philosophers of the West, held that human existence (Dasein) is a pilgriming being to the dead (Sein zum Tode). The author of Zen and the Art of motorcycle maintenance invites us to bravely turn away from pragmatic, practical life, money, fame, envy in better-than games, to once innocently embark on a world of thinking and searching for true human values that ​​are still hidden somewhere in the endless life.

In addition to being a poetic philosophical novel, Zen and the Art of motorcycle maintenance also discusses other important topics such as the relationship between philosophical thinking and scientific attitudes, the role of religion in human life, but always in a style of a writer, not of a school academic scholar, that is, gentle, profound, attractive and contemplative stemming from personal experiences more than from immersing in the books in some library. I venture to suggest that instead of requiring philosophy students to recite some boring introductory textbook, teachers should recommend this work to students so that they can initiate their own searching of wisdom for themselves.

Dr. Dương Ngọc Dũng - Managing Director of Ex Libris Hermes

  • READ MORE
popup

Số lượng:

Tổng tiền: