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1. How did you come away
feeling, after reading this book? Upset? Inspired? Anxious? Less
afraid?
2. What did you think of Paul’s exploration of the relationship between
science and faith? As Paul wrote, "Science may provide the most useful
way to organize empirical, reproducible data, but its power to do so is
predicated on its inability to grasp the most central aspects of human
life: hope, fear, love, hate, beauty, envy, honor, weakness, striving,
suffering, virtue. Between these core passions and scientific theory,
there will always be a gap. No system of thought can contain the
fullness of human experience." Do you agree?
3. How do you think the years Paul spent, tending to patients and
training to be a neurosurgeon, affected the outlook he had on his own
illness? When Paul wrote that the question he asked himself was not "why
me," but "why not me," how did that strike you? Could you relate to it?
4. Paul had a strong background in the humanities, and read widely
throughout his life. Only after getting a Master’s in English Literature
did he decide that medicine was the right path for him. Do you think
this made him a better doctor? A different kind of doctor? If so, how?
How has reading influenced your life?
5. What did you think of Paul and Lucy’s decision to have a child, in
the face of his illness? When Lucy asked him if he worried that having a
child would make his death more painful, and Paul responded, "Wouldn’t
it be great if it did," how did that strike you? Do you agree that life
should not be about avoiding suffering, but about creating meaning?
6. Were there passages or sentences that struck you as particularly
profound or moving?
7. Given that Paul died before the book was finished, what are some of
the questions you would have wanted to ask him if he were still here
today?
8. Paul was determined to face death with integrity, and through his
book, demystify it for people. Do you think he succeeded?
9. In Lucy’s epilogue, she writes that "what happened to Paul was
tragic, but he was not a tragedy." Did you come away feeling the same
way?
10. How did this book impact your thoughts about medical care? The
patient-physician relationship? End of life care?
11. Is this a book you will continue thinking about, now that you are
done? Do you find it having an impact on the way you go about your
days?
12. Lucy also writes that, in some ways, Paul’s illness brought them
closer – that she FELL feel even more deeply in love with the "beautiful
, focused man" he became in the last year of his life. Did you find
yourself seeing how that could happen?
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