The Lemonade Ocean
Fourier and the Quiet Art of a Good Day
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3 Months Free
Buy Now for £13.79
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Narrated by:
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Kara Sue Gelaides
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By:
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Boris Kriger
Every social thinker in history has started from the same assumption: something is wrong with people. Religion says suppress your desires. The Enlightenment says discipline your mind. Marx says transform your consciousness. Liberalism says compete harder. The prescription changes; the diagnosis never does. The patient is always the problem.
Then along came Charles Fourier—a mild-mannered French clerk who, in the early nineteenth century, said something no one had said before and almost no one has said since: there is nothing wrong with humans. The world is badly designed. Redesign the world.
The Lemonade Ocean follows Fourier's extraordinary idea—that civilization should be engineered around people rather than people engineered to fit civilization—from its eccentric origins through its spectacular failures, its quiet vindications, and its startling relevance to a world of artificial intelligence, vanishing jobs, and the uneasy suspicion that we have been measuring success all wrong.
Along the way, the book explores Fourier's magnificent obsessions—his twelve passions, his architectural dreams, his fixation on communal dining, his prophecy that the seas would turn to lemonade—and asks a question he never quite answered: What is the difference between what we want and what we actually need? And what happens when a society can't tell the two apart?
This is a book about the most dangerous idea in the history of social thought: that a good day—a single day in which no one was harmed, no one was humiliated, and nothing was destroyed—might be the highest achievement a civilization can aspire to.
©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger