Vincent Bozzino graduated in Philosophy at the University of London in 2022, with the germinal thesis of this book. With Libertine, he published Love Don't Pay the Bills (2022), Comfortable in the Chaos (2023), The Joy of Missing Out (2023) and the hot seller Philosophy Trips. A Naive's Guide (2024). His top-down, philosophical work lies at the intersection of metaphysics and ethics, with academic interests in social sciences, philosophy of mathematics, finance and jurisprudence. He is also a business executive, record producer and composer.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ""Bozzino applies vast interdisciplinary research in a meta-analysis of normative conflict to ultimately side with epistemological impenetrability, expanding notable cases when knowledge is aesthetically manipulated, altered, misrepresented, depending on how much is at stake for that person or party, at that time."" - Canadian Philosophical Reviews ★ ★ ★ ★ ""In an enriched revisitation of his original undergraduate thesis, Bozzino exasperates aesthetics as epistemology or knowledge without certainty, illogical evidence, the society of the spectacle, our mythologies and political self - from ugliness to the multimedia epistemic facelifts - convincing how we have been at war, for at least two decades already: a war of meanings."" - Rational Kingdom ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ""A scholarly odyssey that foments natural sciences to deal with the shadows of metaphysics & humanities to tame their wild abstraction. Good at capturing the origin of liquid society in economical evolution, and of the individual who swims - sometimes drowns and floats in it - agent to patient of any event that makes sense to their political ends."" - Digital Journal ★ ★ ★ ★ ""One of the most provocative considerations is certainly the concept of 'cosm-ethics' that takes a jab at the post-modern ethical appeals to personalising institutional or social responsibilities."" - Thought Exchange ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ""> is one of the most hilarious and refreshing opening lines I have NEVER/EVER read in a serious philosophical study, since George Carlin."" - The Writing Bastards ★ ★ ★ ★ ""Praiseworthy critique of contemporary post-truth normativity - from private taste to public policy - derivative of our congenital aesthetic tendency to alter the original epistemic value, for interest and escalate distorted ethical absolutisms for civilization. It was about time we had a full classification of the false idols (constructed social goods and evils) alienating the 21st century."" - The Last Critic ★ ★ ★ ★ ""As Foucault, Zizek and contemporary cultural theorists like Byung-Chul Han, his writings are pervaded by deep emotional currents. Bozzino addressees philosophical concepts practically from an economical perspective, which is a rare combo in the work of a humanist but mass appealing."" - Skeptical Enquiry ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ""I fairly doubt there exist an emerging scholar out there matching Bozzino's broad range of knowledge, effortlessly crossing over from financial markets to neurosciences, in a heartbeat, without dropping the transcendental project, against the trends of overspecialization and partisanship."" - BuzzFeed