Robert Pearcey, Reading as a Philosophical Practice, Yerevan: Fortis Press, 2024

Settling into a comfortable chair with a book, you can now rightfully consider yourself a significant person. Professor Robert Pearcey recognized reading as a philosophical activity—not in the sense of mundane reflections on life's central question, but as a practice of knowledge. Pearcey is convinced that philosophy and books share similar goals—they explain the incomprehensible. This seems like nothing new, but the beauty of this concept is that it is built on the foundation of ordinary reading—that is, hedonistic and "non-professional" reading. Most of the book's sections are devoted precisely to this. Its pages contain "fanfares for the ordinary reader," advice on "how to feel like a reader," and thoughts on the future of reading. All of this is beautifully complemented by the foreword by cultural scholar and book expert Yuri Saprykin.
"The ordinary reader is not just one who reads, but one who leads the life of a reader."

