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A01=Arthur Kleinman
A01=David Carrasco
A01=Michael J. Puett
A01=Michael Puett
A01=Stephanie Paulsell
Author_Arthur Kleinman
Author_David Carrasco
Author_Michael J. Puett
Author_Michael Puett
Author_Stephanie Paulsell
aztec philosophy
beauty goodness truth
bereavement
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christianity
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everyday wisdom
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global religions
grief
hinduism
inspirational nonfiction
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islam
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meaning of life
mesoamerican religion
moral life
religion
religious studies
ritual
self help
solitude
spiritual essays
spiritual growth
spiritual practice
spirituality

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674306622
  • Weight: 350g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A master class from four renowned Harvard professors—an anthropologist, a physician, a theologian, and a historian—on discovering wisdom in challenging times.

In moments of uncertainty, to whom do we turn for solace and insight? How can we endure and overcome our own suffering? Harvard University professors Davíd Carrasco, Arthur Kleinman, Stephanie Paulsell, and Michael Puett turn to great thinkers, artists, and religious traditions not for definitive answers, but for lessons we can bring to our own quests for wisdom. Wisdom, they find, is not an abstract ideal but a way of living formed by caring for others and through everyday practices of solitude, ritual, and art. Based on their celebrated Harvard course, The Practice of Wisdom helps us brave loneliness, grief, and crises and bring beauty, healing, and spiritual significance into our lives.

Wisdom, they teach, is an ongoing quest—a practice to be lived and deliberately cultivated. Through five interwoven chapters, we travel from Chinese temples and Hindu ashrams to Emily Dickinson’s Homestead and US–Mexico borderlands. We encounter philosopher William James on the power of the subconscious after trauma; theologian Howard Thurman on solitude as a source of dignity; Toni Morrison on the interplay between mercy and goodness; writer John Phillip Santos on generational wisdom; physician Paul Farmer on medical compassion; and Confucius on ritual as a way of breaking the patterns that entrap us. We hear from Wendy Doniger, the eminent scholar of Hinduism, whose reflections present wisdom as a lifelong, unfinished art of seeking meaning, balance, and purpose.

Threaded throughout this short but powerful book is the image of the labyrinth: life as a series of turns that carry us through adversity and loss to hard-won clarity and grace. Led by teachers who have walked these paths, lost their way, and carried on, we learn the art—and practice—of living wisely.

Davíd Carrasco, Neil L. Rudenstine Professor of the Study of Latin America at Harvard University, is Director of the Moses Mesoamerican Archive and author of The Religions of Mesoamerica, City of Sacrifice, and Quetzalcoatl and the Irony of Empire. Arthur Kleinman has taught for over forty years in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School and in the Department of Anthropology, where he is Rabb Professor. He is the author of The Illness Narratives: Suffering, Healing, and the Human Condition and The Soul of Care: The Moral Education of a Husband and a Doctor. Stephanie Paulsell is Swartz Professor of the Practice of Christian Studies, Emerita, at Harvard Divinity School. She is a former columnist at the Christian Century, the author of Religion Around Virginia Woolf, and coeditor of Toni Morrison. Michael Puett, Walter C. Klein Professor of Chinese History and Anthropology and Director of the Asia Center at Harvard University, is the author of The Path: What Chinese Philosophers Can Teach Us About the Good Life and To Become a God: Cosmology, Sacrifice, and Self-Divinization in Early China.

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