Two years after The Collector had brought him international recognition and a year before he published The Magus, John Fowles set out his ideas on life... > Lire la suite
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Two years after The Collector had brought him international recognition and a year before he published The Magus, John Fowles set out his ideas on life in The Aristos. The chief inspiration behind them was the fifth century BC philosopher Heraclitus. In the world he posited of constant and chaotic flux
the supreme good was the Aristos, 'of a person or thing, the best or most excellent of its kind'. 'What I was ready trying to define was an idea of human freedom (the Aristos) in an unfree world', wrote Fowles in 1965. He called a materialistic and Over-conforming culture to reckoning with his views on a myriad of subjects - pleasure and pain, beauty and ugliness, Christianity, humanism, existentialism, socialism.