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A Danger Which We Do Not Know: A Philosophical Journey into Anxiety

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A Danger Which We Do Not Know tells a story about how philosophy and anxiety are tangled up with each other. David Rondel explores how anxiety is one of the main human contexts in which the inclination to philosophize arises. The experience of anxiety sometimes prompts us to reflect and inquire, drawing us toward perennial philosophical questions about the nature of reality and knowledge, freedom and morality, the meaning of life and the prospect of death. Anxiety can give these questions fresh urgency, making them vivid and momentous in ways they otherwise might not be. Rondel also considers how turning to philosophy can sometimes offer relief for the anxious sufferer. In the face of the overwhelming force of anxiety, philosophy offers powerful tools. Philosophy helps us achieve precision and clarity of thinking that cuts through our anxiety-based stress. Highly abstract thought can also serve as a form of escapism--a happy diversion from the anxiety of everyday life. For these reasons, philosophy has a long and illustrious history as a form of therapy.

The chapters in this book cover significant ground, historically and thematically, and together provide a philosophical guide to anxiety. Each chapter focusses on the work of a particular philosopher or philosophical tradition with an eye toward showing how their ideas help us better understand anxiety's nature and meaning. One of the main arguments on which the chapters converge is that anxiety is much more than simple, blood-pumping fear. The human experience of anxiety has a distinctively evaluative and interpretive element. It is bound up with our capacity to reflect on sensations of fear, to anticipate and interpret them, and to have such thoughts and feelings (themselves always mediated by language and culture) shape how we see the world and ourselves in it. Suffering with anxiety is never simply a colorless fact, but an experience that must be understood in light of what matters to us--in light of who we are and what we care about.

232 pages, Hardcover

Published July 22, 2024

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David Rondel

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1 review
December 12, 2025
Reading A Danger Which We Do Not Know as one of David Rondel’s students felt like discovering how the ideas he brings into the classroom actually take shape on the page. The book thoughtfully traces the connection between philosophy and anxiety, showing how many great thinkers help us see anxiety not just as a feeling to escape but as something that reveals what really matters to us. Rondel draws on voices from Kierkegaard to William James to show how anxiety pushes us into deeper reflection about freedom, meaning, and our place in the world, and he does it with clarity and care that make the subject feel alive rather than abstract. What made this especially engaging for me was how he blends historical insight with a sense of why these questions matter now, especially in a time when many of us feel our worries pulling us in every direction. It left me thinking about anxiety in a more generous and thoughtful way than I ever expected.
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