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  • Format: ePub

This book was written by the great German writer Emil Ludwig, and it is the last thing published to the people. He wrote it in English, so the translator relied on its English original and its translation into French in translating it into Arabic. In his book, Ludwig deals with matters of life and love and examines them carefully, based on his studies and the foundations of psychology and physiology that have become innovations in his field. Ludwig followed the path of brevity and more than metaphor, so some of his phrases seemed like a kind of riddles, and it appears that Ludwig reached the…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
This book was written by the great German writer Emil Ludwig, and it is the last thing published to the people. He wrote it in English, so the translator relied on its English original and its translation into French in translating it into Arabic. In his book, Ludwig deals with matters of life and love and examines them carefully, based on his studies and the foundations of psychology and physiology that have become innovations in his field. Ludwig followed the path of brevity and more than metaphor, so some of his phrases seemed like a kind of riddles, and it appears that Ludwig reached the peak of complexity in expression while not hiding the intention. Frankness with depth, ambiguity with accuracy, and ambiguity with clarity were the most prominent features of this book, and Ludwig has something to apologize for that. The book includes thorny topics and sensitive aspects that must be explained with various signs and metaphors. Whoever carefully looks at the book will see the dissolution of the family in the West. He wishes that the East, especially the Arab world, would limit itself to borrowing aspects of science and art from the West without imitating it, while the social entity will suffer grave damage. It is as if Ludwig did not want to see what it would become. The Western family suffers from disintegration and lack of cohesion, so he addresses his topic from a social perspective as well. Rather, he looked at the issue from a realistic, experimental perspective in terms of sexual instincts and the secrets of souls, with interesting discussions of happiness, greatness, and isolation.

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