On Borrowed Time: The Art and Economy of Living with Deadlines

Life is short. This indisputable fact of existence has driven human ingenuity since antiquity, whether through efforts to lengthen our lives with medicine or shorten the amount of time we spend on work using technology. Alongside this struggle to manage the pressure of life’s ultimate deadline, human perception of the passage and effects of time has also changed. In On Borrowed Time, Harald Weinrich examines an extraordinary range of materials—from Hippocrates to Run Lola Run—to put forth a new conception of time and its limits that, unlike older models, is firmly grounded in human experience.
            Weinrich’s analysis of the roots of the word time connects it to the temples of the skull, demonstrating that humans first experienced time in the beating of their pulses. Tracing this corporeal perception of time across literary, religious, and philosophical works, Weinrich concludes that time functions as a kind of sixth sense—the crucial sense that enables the other five.
            Written with Weinrich’s customary narrative elegance, On Borrowed Time is an absorbing—and, fittingly, succinct—meditation on life’s inexorable brevity.

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On Borrowed Time: The Art and Economy of Living with Deadlines

Life is short. This indisputable fact of existence has driven human ingenuity since antiquity, whether through efforts to lengthen our lives with medicine or shorten the amount of time we spend on work using technology. Alongside this struggle to manage the pressure of life’s ultimate deadline, human perception of the passage and effects of time has also changed. In On Borrowed Time, Harald Weinrich examines an extraordinary range of materials—from Hippocrates to Run Lola Run—to put forth a new conception of time and its limits that, unlike older models, is firmly grounded in human experience.
            Weinrich’s analysis of the roots of the word time connects it to the temples of the skull, demonstrating that humans first experienced time in the beating of their pulses. Tracing this corporeal perception of time across literary, religious, and philosophical works, Weinrich concludes that time functions as a kind of sixth sense—the crucial sense that enables the other five.
            Written with Weinrich’s customary narrative elegance, On Borrowed Time is an absorbing—and, fittingly, succinct—meditation on life’s inexorable brevity.

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On Borrowed Time: The Art and Economy of Living with Deadlines

On Borrowed Time: The Art and Economy of Living with Deadlines

On Borrowed Time: The Art and Economy of Living with Deadlines

On Borrowed Time: The Art and Economy of Living with Deadlines

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Overview

Life is short. This indisputable fact of existence has driven human ingenuity since antiquity, whether through efforts to lengthen our lives with medicine or shorten the amount of time we spend on work using technology. Alongside this struggle to manage the pressure of life’s ultimate deadline, human perception of the passage and effects of time has also changed. In On Borrowed Time, Harald Weinrich examines an extraordinary range of materials—from Hippocrates to Run Lola Run—to put forth a new conception of time and its limits that, unlike older models, is firmly grounded in human experience.
            Weinrich’s analysis of the roots of the word time connects it to the temples of the skull, demonstrating that humans first experienced time in the beating of their pulses. Tracing this corporeal perception of time across literary, religious, and philosophical works, Weinrich concludes that time functions as a kind of sixth sense—the crucial sense that enables the other five.
            Written with Weinrich’s customary narrative elegance, On Borrowed Time is an absorbing—and, fittingly, succinct—meditation on life’s inexorable brevity.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226886039
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 02/15/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 413 KB

About the Author

Harald Weinrich is chair of Romance literature at the Collège de France and the author of many books, including The Linguistics of Lying and Other Essays. Steven Rendall has translated numerous books, including Weinrich’s Lethe: The Art and Critique of Forgetting.

Table of Contents

1. LIFE IS SHORT ART IS LONG

Medical Aphorisms and the Movement of Time • Hippocrates, Aristotle, Theophrastus

Philosophical Remarks on the Brevity of Life • Seneca

Domestic Economy and Time Management • Leon Battisti Alberti

Teaching Time Management • Chesterfield, Rilke


2 THE MIDPOINT OF LIFE


Midway on Life's Journey • Dante, Petrarch, Hölderlin

Rejuvenation in Rome – through Rome • Goethe

The Physician's Art of Prolonging Life • Hufeland

A Long Life with Faust • Goethe

New Art and Another Life • Vittorio Alfieri, Schiller

Magic and Style in Life-Time • Balzac

Every Day is a Sonnet • Oscar Wilde

Untimely Death or Venerable Old Age • Chatterton, Keats, Benn, Thomas Mann

Revocable and Irrevocable Time • Ingeborg Bachmann


3. LIMITED TIME IN THIS WORLD AND IN THE NEXT


Yet a Little While • Jesus, St. Paul

In Purgatory, Time Is Precious • Dante

More Time for a New World • Benjamin Franklin

A Purgatory in this World • Max Weber

Revolutionary Historical Times, in Rapid Fire • Heine, Marx


4. SHORT AND SHORTEST TIMES


Two Gods of Time: Chronos and Kairos • Mythology, Classics

Stars and Hours • Schiller, Wallenstein; Stefan Zweig

Between Austerlitz and Waterloo •  Émile Zola

5. THE ECONOMY OF LIMITED TIME


Three-Day Friendship: Hospitality • Homer, Knigge

Classicism as Economy of Time • From Plutarch to André Gide

Living Faster, Talking Less • Jean Paul, Madame de Staël


6. THE DRAMA OF TIME IN SHORT SUPPLY


Epic Is Long, Drama Is Short • Aristotle

How Long Is Twenty-Four Hours? • Corneille

Time out of Joint • Shakespeare, Hamlet

Saladin Learns to Take His Time • Lessing, Nathan the Wise

Time and the Oeuvre • Proust


7. FINITUDE, INFINITY


Curiosity–Thirst for Knowledge–Science • from Aristotle to Leibniz

A Nothingness of Time in Exchange for Eternity • Pascal, Emily Dickinson

Too Little Time, Too Much World • Blumenberg

Anthropological Experiences of Shortage • Odo Marquard


8. LIVING WITH DEADLINES


Clocks, Calendars, Appointment Calendars • Clockmakers, Calendarmakers

Deadlines in Everyday Life • Tutti, con moto

Deadlines in Law, with a Brief Glance at "Abortion Limits" • Civil Law, Criminal Law, Labor Law

"...but for the Present, not Yet" • Heidegger, Marquard


9. SHORT STORIES ABOUT SHORT DEADLINES


Saved from Death at the Last Minute • Thousand and One Nights; Shakespeare, Merchant of Venice

A Ballad about Friendship and Deadlines • Schiller, "Die Bürgschaft"

A Devil's Pact with Deadlines • Chamisso

The Traps and Labors of Deadlines • Flaubert, Maupassant

Deadlines of Honor, Prussian Style • Theodore Fontaine

Deadlines for Honor in Imperial Austria • Arthur Schnitzler

A Short Time to Be Humane • García Márquez, Chronicle of a Death Foretold

Fifteen Minutes' Delay for Death • Blaise Cendrars

Everyman's Last Reprieve • Hugo von Hofmannsthal

A Short Epilogue in the Emergency Room • Tabucchi

A Race Around the World • Jules Verne, Around the World in Eighty Days

Short Time, Comic Style • Camoletti, Boeing-Boeing

A Twenty-Minute Deadline: Lola Runs • Tom Twyker, Lola Rennt


10 EPILOGUE ON THE SENSE OF TIME


Notes

Index

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