Dancing with the Devil, Krista K. Thomason
Dancing with the Devil, Krista K. Thomason
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Dancing with the Devil
Why Bad Feelings Make Life Good

Author: Krista K. Thomason

Narrator: Coleen Marlo

Unabridged: 6 hr 14 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 10/31/2023


Synopsis

We tend to think about bad feelings—feelings like anger, envy, spite, and contempt—as the weeds in life's garden. You may not be able to get rid of them completely, but you're supposed to battle them as best you can. The best garden is one with no weeds. The best life is one with no bad feelings. But this isn't quite right, according to philosopher Krista K. Thomason. Bad feelings are the worms, not the weeds. They're just below the surface, and we like to pretend they aren't there, but they serve an important purpose.

Thomason draws on insights from the history of philosophy to show what we've gotten wrong about bad feelings and to show listeners how we can live better with them. There is nothing wrong with negative emotions per se. Negative emotions are expressions of self-love—not egoism or selfishness, but the felt attachment to ourselves and to our lives. We feel negative emotions because our lives matter to us. After explaining this, Thomason helps us look at individual bad feelings: anger, envy and jealousy, spite and Schadenfreude, and contempt. As she demonstrates in this tour of negative emotions, these feelings are valuable parts of our attachment to our lives. We don't have to battle negative emotions or "channel" them into something productive. Bad feelings aren't obstacles to a good life; they are part of what makes life meaningful.

About Krista K. Thomason

Krista K. Thomason is an associate professor of philosophy at Swarthmore College. In 2021-2022, she was the Philip L. Quinn Fellow at the National Humanities Center. Her areas of expertise include philosophy of emotion, moral philosophy, history of philosophy, and political philosophy. Some of her publications appear in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, European Journal of Philosophy, Kantian Review, and the Monist. She is the author of the book Naked: The Dark Side of Shame and Moral Life, which was published with Oxford University Press in 2018. She has been interviewed by the Wall Street Journal, NBC News, and CNN.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Lydia on February 11, 2024

Absolutely Fantastic! Insights on how to contextualize, understand and embrace a range of emotions with the guidance of an accomplished philosopher with few contemporaries. Thank you! Highly recommend.......more

Goodreads review by Chris on December 29, 2024

2nd read: I love re-reading my favorite books, but it’s extremely rare that I read a book twice in one year. Not to take away from this book at all, but this year has been pretty bad for new non-fiction. This book was released in January of 2024, and I’ve thought about it regularly. At the end of the......more

Goodreads review by Ryan on January 05, 2024

A well-reasoned counterpoint to emotional repression When discussing emotions in certain circles (Buddhism, contemporary Stoicism, perhaps virtue ethics in general), a key tradeoff is often ignored. While no one would intentionally seek to experience bad feelings, training the mind to suppress them......more

Goodreads review by Brendan Shea on January 16, 2024

This is a well-written book on popular philosophy that makes a serious argument about the value of negative emotions (anger, contempt, envy, etc.) in a good human life. Thomason draws on lots of philosophical (Nietzsche, De Bois, Montaigne) and not-so-philosophical sources (Richard Scary books, Red......more

Goodreads review by Maria on January 22, 2024

I'll admit right from the start that general-public philosophy books are my jam and have been since I read Alain de Botton's ''The Consolations of Philosophy'' in highschool. I feel like if more people were aware of all of the different ways humans before us have approached questions of living good,......more