The book is structured around six major "hammer blows" (lectures), each tackling a fundamental pillar of human experience:

He examines the "death of God" not just as an atheist stance, but as the loss of an absolute foundation for our values.

Unlike traditional academic texts, this is based on his live lectures. The tone is conversational, urgent, and often poetic. He weaves together pop culture, personal anecdotes, and heavy-hitters like Heidegger, Derrida, and Foucault without making it feel like a dry history lesson. 4. Why it Resonates

He challenges the modern obsession with being "happy" as a form of social control. 3. The Style: Accessible yet Deep

If you’re looking for a book that tells you "how to live," this isn't it. But if you want to feel the floor move beneath your feet and start seeing the world as a stranger, more complex place, Filosofía a Martillazos is a masterclass in productive discomfort.