"[Frankfurt] tries, with the help of Wittgenstein, Pound, St. Augustine and the spy novelist Eric Ambler, among others, to ask some of the preliminary questions--to define the nature of a thing recognized by all but understood by none. . . . What is bullshit, after all? Mr. Frankfurt points out it is neither fish nor fowl. Those who produce it certainly aren't honest, but neither are they liars, given that the liar and the honest man are linked in their common, if not identical, regard for the truth."---Peter Edidin, New York Times
"The scholar who answers the question, 'What is bullshit?' bids boldly to define the spirit of the present age. . . . Frankfurt's conclusion . . . is that bullshit is defined not so much by the end product as by the process by which it is created. Eureka! Frankfurt's definition is one of those not-at-all-obvious insights that become blindingly obvious the moment they are expressed."---Timothy Noah, Slate
"This is what the world has long needed. . . . Bullshit is now such a dominant feature of our culture that most of us are confident we can recognize and rebuff it. But Frankfurt shows the reader just how insidious (and destructive) it can be. . . . This book will change your life."---Leopold Froehlich, Playboy
"On Bullshit offers a tightly focused, telling critique of a political and cultural climate that seems positively humid with mendacity, obfuscation, evasion and illusion."---Steven Winn, San Francisco Chronicle
"[On Bullshit's] calm, clearheaded deconstruction of everyday deceit is without parallel."---Gordon Phinn, Books in Canada
"Terrific. . . . Has anything truer ever been written?"---William Watson, Montreal Gazette
"A #1 New York Times Bestseller"
"Harry G. Frankfurt, Charles Homer Haskins Prize Lecturer, American Council of Learned Societies"
"Winner of the Bestseller Award in Philosophy, The Book Standard"
"Immediately, I must say: read it. Beautifully written, lucid, ironic and profound, it is a model of what philosophy can and should do. It is a small and highly provocative masterpiece, and I really don't think I am bullshitting you here."---Bryan Appleyard, Sunday Times
"The droll prose is a tasty treat."---Richard Pachter, Boston Globe
"Spare yourself the annual round-ups in the newspapers or the boy-scout enthusiasm of podcasters. To understand the great political shift of this year, the work you need is a piece of philosophy called--what else?--On Bullshit."---Aditya Chakrabortty, The Guardian
"With its relevance to contemporary issues and culture, On Bullshit is well worth the read. . . . The analysis is strict and philosophical with the clear intention of seeking the truth."---Karen Boore, Michigan Review
"There are numerous problems which may be expanded, looked into and analyzed concerning bullshit. And I dare say that Frankfurt's little book is a nice starting point."---Petter A. Naessan, Philosophy Now
"Frankfurt's book should be required reading for anyone whose speech or writing are intended for public consumption. Despite his subject, he is definitely not full of it."---Kevin Wood, Japan Times
"A slim treatise on the pervasive, willful and devilish art of avoiding the truth."-- "Washington Post"
"[Frankfurt] attracted public attention on a scale unimaginable to most academic philosophers. The reason for his appearances on Jon Stewart's Daily Show, CBS's 60 Minutes and other US network TV programmes was On Bullshit, his brief but bestselling disquisition on what he described as 'one of the most salient features of our culture.'"-- "Financial Times"
"One of the most read works of public philosophy ever."---Nigel Warburton, New European