I was reading Eduard Spranger’s Types of Men recently, and I found something I wasn’t expecting. I had picked up the book thinking it would simply introduce another psychological theory, one more attempt to explain why people behave differently. Instead, I found myself reading a work that felt less like a textbook and more like a mirror. Every few pages, I had to pause, not because the language was difficult, but because the ideas quietly demanded reflection. It is remarkable how some books refuse to age. They may have been written decades, even centuries ago, yet they continue to speak with surprising clarity. While technology transforms almost everything around us, the human mind seems to remain fascinated by the same questions. Why do people think differently? Why do two individuals react so differently to the same situation? Why do some dedicate their lives to knowledge while others pursue wealth, beauty, power, compassion, or faith? We often search for complicated e...
As you know more, you grow more