Д°tiraflarд±m Kitabд±nд± • Exclusive

: He reflects on his youth, admitting to a life driven by ambition, pride, and greed, and critiques the intellectual elite for their inability to provide answers to life's ultimate questions.

: Tolstoy explores various fields—science, philosophy, and mathematics—only to find that they explain "how" things exist but fail to address "why" we live. Д°tiraflarД±m KitabД±nД±

: Despite his immense literary success and social standing, Tolstoy recounts feeling a "thirst for life" that suddenly vanished, replaced by an overwhelming sense of meaninglessness and recurring thoughts of suicide. : He reflects on his youth, admitting to

: The work marks Tolstoy’s transition from a world-renowned novelist to a moral and spiritual philosopher who advocated for simple living, non-violence, and universal love. Itiraflarim Book : The work marks Tolstoy’s transition from a

One of the most famous sections of the book is the , where a man hangs over a well to escape a wild beast. He holds onto a branch being gnawed by two mice (day and night) while a dragon waits below. Even as he sees his doom, he licks a few drops of honey from the leaves, representing the fleeting pleasures of life that fail to mask the inevitability of death.