Pyrrhic Victory
When Triumph Becomes Defeat
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Narrado por:
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Jason Guess
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De:
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Boris Kriger
A victory so costly it devours the victor. From the weary voice of King Pyrrhus to the ruins of modern empires, the idea of the Pyrrhic victory runs like a fault line through history, politics, and the human heart.
This book follows that line—from ancient battlefields to colonial campaigns, from the Cold War to Vietnam, from the struggles of modern geopolitics to the silent wars waged in private lives. It is a journey through victories that turned into defeats, through triumphs that corroded the very hands that seized them.
Here philosophy meets history: the Stoics teaching limits, Kant and Nietzsche redrawing them, Camus and Sartre confronting absurdity and freedom, Derrida and Foucault unmasking power. Pyrrhus’s ancient sigh—“One more such victory, and all is lost”—echoes in every age, not as lament, but as a warning.
In the end, the lesson is stark: the greatest strength is not in those who conquer, but in those who refuse to destroy. True victory lies not in broken enemies or captured ground, but in preserved life, in peace held against the weight of fear and pride.
A meditation on war, power, and the fragile wisdom of restraint, this book asks its listeners to look into the mirror of history—and to recognize themselves. For some battles should never be fought. And the only lasting triumph is the one that leaves the world alive.