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1 oeuvres 653 utilisateurs 31 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Eric Brende has degrees from Yale, Washburn University, and MIT, and has received a Citation of Excellence from the National Science Foundation and a graduate fellowship from the Mellon Foundation in the Humanities. At the insistence of his editor, he now has an e-mail account at the local library afficher plus but continues to minimize modern technology for himself and his family. Eric and Mary Brende have recently relocated to an old-town section in St. Louis, where Eric makes his living as a rickshaw driver and a soap make afficher moins

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I very much enjoyed reading this book, & was pleased to see it was not completely anti-technology, but calls for more thought in how we use it.
 
Signalé
bujeya | 30 autres critiques | Jan 23, 2024 |
4.5 stars

Part memoir, part critique of modern living, and a few helpful tips about using less technology.

I really liked this book - it was informative and funny, and easy to read. I highly recommend it to anyone who is feeling tired with the "normal" mentalities of bigger is better and being busy means you matter.

Honestly, one of the only drawbacks I found related to his faith. He's Catholic, and yet at one point, when he mentions God's influence in the world, he tacks on "or substitute here your own word for the hidden impetus underlying and uniting visible phenomena" (p 45), which was a huge copout to me. For someone who doesn't believe in God, it would be easy enough for them to come to that workaround on their own, but for a Christian to hand it to them and essentially state that truth about God is relative is just not okay, as it contradicts the Bible, God's Word.

Other than that, a great read.
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RachelRachelRachel | 30 autres critiques | Nov 21, 2023 |
Overall a good book but the author comes across to be a bit of an evangelical fundamentalist with his anti-technology views. Perhaps I'm overly sensitive to that, though, having had similar feelings and broadcast them on my blog back when we lived in a yurt with no electricity or running water for 2 years. Ten years after that, living then in a highrise in Canada's biggest city I realized that it was pretty narrow-minded of me to be so sure that living that simply was not only right for me but the way everyone should be living. It was right for our family then, and a different way of life is right for us now.

The author seems to fall into the same trap I did - feeling that the fact that the life change he made then and that worked so well for him then was the life change that everyone else needs to make, and that many of society's ills are caused by the failure of everyone to do so.
… (plus d'informations)
 
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toddtyrtle | 30 autres critiques | Dec 28, 2022 |
Thought-provoking, but at times too pretentious for my taste. It made me excited to plant my garden and ride my bike when the weather turns nice again, but it also made me want to smack him several times because he sounded like such a pretentious know-it-all when he really didn't have a clue. Overall it was pretty good, and challenged me to become less dependent on technology.
 
Signalé
liannecollins | 30 autres critiques | Jun 10, 2022 |

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Œuvres
1
Membres
653
Popularité
#38,652
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
31
ISBN
8
Langues
2
Favoris
1

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