The Meaning of Nothingness
Thomas Nisslmüller

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The Meaning of Nothingness

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Produktbeschreibung

Autor/Autorin: Nisslmüller Thomas

Thomas Nisslmüller studied in London, Mainz, St. Gallen, Luxembourg and at UC Berkeley (California, USA). Dr. theol. (1995), Executive MBA (2002), Post-Doc (2006). He loves books, writing, aesthetics and travelling. He teaches Practical Theology at the University of Mainz (JGU) in Germany. Writings: "Homo audiens", "Provokative Theologie" et alia.
There is a (or some) meaning to everything, we are told. And we think this is "good liberal arts tradition". In other ways, we might think that a Western mind has to find meaning in everything to get happy or at least to find something (special or relevant) in everything we encounter. But this might exactly be the wrong way to grasp what life is. "Life is endlessly fascinating, even if it is all about nothing.” (Marty Rubin)
There is a (or some) meaning to everything, we are told. And we think this is "good liberal arts tradition". In other ways, we might think that a Western mind has to find meaning in everything to get happy or at least to find something (special or relevant) in everything we encounter. But this might exactly be the wrong way to grasp what life is. "Life is endlessly fascinating, even if it is all about nothing." (Marty Rubin)
Thomas Nisslmüller studied in London, Mainz, St. Gallen, Luxembourg and at UC Berkeley (California, USA). Dr. theol. (1995), Executive MBA (2002), Post-Doc (2006). He loves books, writing, aesthetics and travelling. He teaches Practical Theology at the University of Mainz (JGU) in Germany. Writings: "Homo audiens", "Provokative Theologie" et alia.

Über den Autor

PD Dr. habil. Thomas Nisslmüller, Executive MBA (Uni St. Gallen/University of California, Berkeley): Promotion 1995, Executive MBA 2002, Habilitation 2006. Seit 2006 Privatdozent der TU Dortmund, ebda. Vertretungsprofessur (2011). Seit 2014 Privatdozent der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz. Interessen: Sport, Reisen, Ästhetik, Mode und Kultur.


Klappentext

There is a (or some) meaning to everything, we are told. And we think this is ¿good liberal arts tradition¿. In other ways, we might think that a Western mind has to find meaning in everything to get happy or at least to find something (special or relevant) in everything we encounter. But this might exactly be the wrong way to grasp what life is. ¿Life is endlessly fascinating, even if it is all about nothing.¿ (Marty Rubin)