
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Henry David Thoreau was a philosopher, poet, and pencil-maker. He was a great resigner and, above all, a superb writer whose masterpiece, "Walden," is considered by many to be America's first environmentalist manifesto.
But John Kaag has a different view.
"Thoreau's attempt to 'get back to nature,'" he and co-author Jonathan Van Belle write in their new book, "Henry at Work: Thoreau on Making a Living," was an "attempt to get away from the capitalist rat race." By resigning from that race, Thoreau was, in a sense, reclaiming life—he was making a conscious choice about what to respect and where to tap meaning. "The abiding message of 'Walden,'" according to John and Jonathan, is that "the frenetic busyness of modern life should never be confused with the essential business of living."
Today on the show, John Kaag and our producer Caleb Bissinger explore Thoreau's life and career, and they come away with surprising lessons about why we work and how we can make it more meaningful—how we can, in Thoreau's words, "live deliberately."
If you have questions, comments, or ideas for future guests, email us at [email protected]
Guest: John Kaag
Book: "Henry at Work: Thoreau on Making a Living"
Host: Caleb Bissinger
The Next Big Idea is produced in partnership with LinkedIn Presents
4.4
12051,205 ratings
Henry David Thoreau was a philosopher, poet, and pencil-maker. He was a great resigner and, above all, a superb writer whose masterpiece, "Walden," is considered by many to be America's first environmentalist manifesto.
But John Kaag has a different view.
"Thoreau's attempt to 'get back to nature,'" he and co-author Jonathan Van Belle write in their new book, "Henry at Work: Thoreau on Making a Living," was an "attempt to get away from the capitalist rat race." By resigning from that race, Thoreau was, in a sense, reclaiming life—he was making a conscious choice about what to respect and where to tap meaning. "The abiding message of 'Walden,'" according to John and Jonathan, is that "the frenetic busyness of modern life should never be confused with the essential business of living."
Today on the show, John Kaag and our producer Caleb Bissinger explore Thoreau's life and career, and they come away with surprising lessons about why we work and how we can make it more meaningful—how we can, in Thoreau's words, "live deliberately."
If you have questions, comments, or ideas for future guests, email us at [email protected]
Guest: John Kaag
Book: "Henry at Work: Thoreau on Making a Living"
Host: Caleb Bissinger
The Next Big Idea is produced in partnership with LinkedIn Presents
242 Listeners
31,972 Listeners
43,319 Listeners
649 Listeners
3,963 Listeners
9,273 Listeners
1,025 Listeners
314 Listeners
476 Listeners
14,531 Listeners
56 Listeners
572 Listeners
397 Listeners
2,125 Listeners
616 Listeners
1,982 Listeners
141 Listeners
100 Listeners
33 Listeners
78 Listeners
214 Listeners
44 Listeners
21 Listeners