Living Better: The Philosophy of Belonging in Daily Life presents an accessible and practical exposition of the Philosophy of Belonging, whose central ontological thesis is that human fulfillment does not emerge from isolated individuality but from relational existence: to be is to belong. The work argues that quality of life is primarily grounded in the strength of affective, social, and existential belongings rather than in individual happiness, cognitive control, or personal achievement. The text develops a life-oriented philosophical framework that places emotion, action, embodiment, imagination, and relational bonds at the center of human flourishing. It introduces the “circuit of belonging,” a six-step dynamic model linking movement, instincts, emotional development, imagination, awareness, and reason as an integrated structure of lived experience. Positioned at the intersection of philosophy of life, philosophical anthropology, existential philosophy, and applied ethics, the book proposes that weakened belongings—social isolation, bodily disconnection, and loss of existential meaning—are core sources of contemporary dissatisfaction. Instead of purely cognitive or individualistic approaches to well-being, it advances a relational ontology where belonging functions as the fundamental condition of meaning, vitality, and sustainable life orientation. The Philosophy of Belonging integrates emotion before reason, action before abstraction, and relational embeddedness before individual optimization. It also highlights the constructive role of imagination and fantasy in making imperfect belonging habitable, offering a humane philosophical guide for everyday living, embodiment, social connection, and existential meaning in modern life.
Carlos Federico Obregon Diaz (Thu,) studied this question.
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