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Philosophically, Homo Faber describes human beings as creatures defined by their ability to control their environment through tools.
Written in a dry, clinical "report" style, the book depicts a man disconnected from his emotions and the natural world, viewing even people as machines or biological data points. Homo Faber
Walter Faber, a highly rational Swiss engineer working for UNESCO, believes only in logic, mathematics, and probability. His life unravels after a series of "improbable" events—a plane crash in the Mexican desert, a chance meeting with his former lover’s brother, and a tragic romance with a young woman named Sabeth, who he later discovers is his own daughter. Key Themes: clinical "report" style
I keep finding songs in my library I forgot about with