What it Means to be Human. Robert Rowland Smith
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4th Estate
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Previously published in Great Britain by 4th Estate as AutoBioPhilosophy in 2018
This 4th Estate eBook edition 2019
Copyright © Robert Rowland Smith Ltd 2018
Cover design by Heike Schüssler
Cover images © plainpicture/our labor of love
The right of Robert Rowland Smith to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988
This book is based on the author’s experiences. Some names, identifying characteristics, dialogue and details have been changed, reconstructed or fictionalised.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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Source ISBN: 9780008218522
Ebook Edition © 2019 ISBN: 9780008218485
Version: 2019-04-18
Contents
2 The Dream of Three Daughters
5 Going to California: a case of aller-retour
When such a spacious mirror’s set before him
He needs must see himself.
William Shakespeare
What is it to be human? That is the question. This book offers nine answers, each mapping on to one of the nine chapters. Being human means:
1 Dealing with our fate
2 Standing in the flow of time
3 Needing a purpose
4 Living amongst others
5 Making mistakes
6 Belonging to groups
7 Facing mortality
8 Not knowing it all
9 Looking for love
Needless to say, there are far more potential answers than those on the above list. The nine offered here correspond broadly to the nine phases of my own life, from my origins to the present day. For I have used my own experience as the source material for answering the question of what it is to be human. To arrive at the general, I go via the specific.
What results is an autobiographical narrative that serves up philosophical insights along the way. But I should stress that the narrative has many gaps. It is not supposed to be a complete life story. My criterion for selecting content was how fertile it appeared to be from a philosophic point of view. If people or periods are represented unevenly, that is why. For example, because of circumstances unique to him, my father Colin plays a more leading role in the text than does my mother. In real life, she is no less important. This book is dedicated to them both.
In the vast majority of cases, I have changed people’s names for the sake of anonymity. When talking about individuals, disguised or otherwise, I have been as even-handed as I can be. I recognise that judgements are hard to keep out of one’s descriptions of other people, but the agenda here is philosophical rather than personal. Besides, it is the flaws in my own character that will be the most conspicuous by far.
The specific weight of the soul is equal to the weight of what has been dared.
Bert Hellinger