

desertcart.com: How to Be Perfect: The Correct Answer to Every Moral Question: 9781982159320: Schur, Michael: Books Review: A great, hilarious book to help humans dive into moral philosophy and ethics :) - I enjoyed "The Good Place" so much that I dove into this book (first on Audible). I loved it so much that I purchased a physical copy of the book to highlight and make notes. Just like the show, this book highlights the complexities that we as humans face when faced with moral and ethical values. I highly recommend this book for anyone looking to dip their toes in moral ethics and philosophy. If you love "The Good Place" as much as I do, you will likely get a kick out of listening to it on Audible. Having members of the cast read parts of the book was not only entertaining but also enlightening. Review: The most entertaining philosophy book. - Entertaining and educational. Fun to listen to. I didn’t want it to end.
| Best Sellers Rank | #20,550 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #239 in Humor (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 2,411 Reviews |
T**T
A great, hilarious book to help humans dive into moral philosophy and ethics :)
I enjoyed "The Good Place" so much that I dove into this book (first on Audible). I loved it so much that I purchased a physical copy of the book to highlight and make notes. Just like the show, this book highlights the complexities that we as humans face when faced with moral and ethical values. I highly recommend this book for anyone looking to dip their toes in moral ethics and philosophy. If you love "The Good Place" as much as I do, you will likely get a kick out of listening to it on Audible. Having members of the cast read parts of the book was not only entertaining but also enlightening.
A**N
The most entertaining philosophy book.
Entertaining and educational. Fun to listen to. I didn’t want it to end.
J**N
Digestible Philosphy
Love listening to Mike on the Lebatard Podcast and this book had his same style and humor. He’s super insightful and knowledgeable and makes digestible philosophical quandaries relatable and poignant for the average reader. A few chapters could have been fleshed out a bit, but it’s a perfect beach weekend read for anyone interested in the state of the world and being a good human.
A**M
Amazing
Such an insightful book. I can't recommend it enough.
D**S
That time Mose Schrute helped teach me to be a better person...
(That headline is a light-hearted dig because I know Mike Schur kinda hated playing Mose on The Office. In the spirit of the book: Mike, I apologize. :-) ) I heard about this book on the Office Ladies podcast when they interviewed Mike. They mentioned the title of the chapter about whether you really HAVE to return your shopping cart and I was sold--bought it the next day. I've always seen that as the lowest bar, minimum possible thing that humans can do to make the lives of other humans better--and I'm constantly shaking my head at the fact that so many people have such disregard for others that they don't return their damned carts! It's frustrating! Anyway...this book does not disappoint. Think of it as a humorous Cliffs Notes distillation of the many philosophies of morality. It's a book that makes you laugh and makes you think. And it really does give you some easy to understand (but hard to follow in some cases...that's the nature of being better, it's hard) guidelines for the things one can do to be a better person. It's so worth the read. Great stuff, Mike. I'm gonna go stream The Good Place now.
G**E
A wonderful crash course into ethics and moral philosophy
I liked, no, I loved The Good Place, and while I watched it the first time because of the story and actors, my many subsequent viewings were because I wanted to dive into the ethics more. I never thought I’d be that guy, but here we are. Turns out, the same is true for Michael Schur, and I’m so happy he wrote this book about his journey and how that translated into the show. This book has been fantastic. It’s helped me put some names and descriptions on to gut feelings I already had, and it’s introduced me to concepts that I can use to continue my own personal growth. Actually, that’s my review right there: I feel like a better, more well-rounded person after reading this.
C**O
Kind of a hard read
The Good Place is my new comfort show. I've watched through it at least a dozen times. It makes me want to be a better person. Someone in a Facebook group mentioned this book and I bought it without hesitation. Philosophy has always been an interest and this book definitely covers a lot in a small amount of space. It helped me to understand the show more, too, and it was fun reading about certain philosophies and remembering how Michael Schur applied them into the show. Philosophy is a hard read already and this book simplifies it. It's laid out decently. But what made it difficult for me was all the footnotes. SO MANY FOOTNOTES!! And maybe 1/4 of them are useful.. the rest are just distracting little jokes. It took me out of what I was learning and I'd have to go back and reread a bit. Ignoring the footnotes is certainly an option, but some of them do have good information in them that I didn't want to miss out on. Honestly, I don't know who to recommend this book to.. if you're looking for a comedy, the philosophy makes it a hard read.. if you're looking for philosophy, the comedy is super distracting. I still absolutely love the show, though. Watch The Good Place.
D**J
Light, funny, irreverent, but entirely serious
This is a short, gentle, practical, populist introduction to the world of moral philosophy -- light, funny, irreverent, but entirely serious. I’m glad I read it. It kicked up a lot of dust for me and led me to ponder deeply some big questions. I’m grateful. Fair warning, however – several things bothered me. I found much of the humor flippant to the point of annoying. I also felt the book contains a few too many cheap shots at real-world folks whose conduct the author considers morally repugnant. Most seriously, I think the book’s tone and content is too politically polarizing. The author leans to the left politically (as do I) -- fair enough. But he seems blind to the possibility that there are thoughtful people of good will who see things differently. He seems to presume (unconsciously?) that liberal values are morally superior, spends too much time outlining standard defenses of those values in a tone that suggests no reasonable person could disagree, and is often dismissive of conservative views. On page 142 the author says “we should remember how powerful the simple act of conversation can be, to help us navigate these choppy waters.” I agree. In my view, however, these conversations are most valuable when they take place among people with different views who engage respectfully in a sincere attempt to understand and appreciate other perspectives. Here, I think, the book falls short. But I honor and appreciate Michael Schur’s sincere effort. He cares deeply. He’s trying. And as he makes clear throughout the book, that’s the most important thing of all. At some level it’s all any of us can do. We try, we fail, we try again, and we keep on trying. Before he even begins the book’s introduction, the author allows Maya Angelou to speak beautifully on this point: “Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better.”
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