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DAVID LAPADAT
WRITER · RESEARCHER · SONGWRITER · CULTURAL JOURNALIST

David Lapadat holds degrees in music and history, earned a PhD in Music from the National University of Music Bucharest, and has published more than 150 cultural essays for Actualitatea Muzicală. His essays bring literature, philosophy, music, and history into one house.


Jerusalem by Gonçalo M. Tavares: When a Novel Mistakes Darkness for Depth
Gonçalo M. Tavares’s Jerusalem has ambition, structure, and moments of real symbolic force. But its darkness often feels arranged rather than alive. This essay argues that the novel’s closed church, sick body, pornographic imagery, and biblical title promise desecrated holiness, while too much of the prose collapses into explanation, repetition, and conceptual grotesque.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Neuralink Illusion: Descartes, Mind-Body Dualism, and Transhuman Economics
A wire enters the skull. Sixty-four threads, each thinner than a human hair, thread into the motor cortex. Eighty-five percent retract within a month. The brain pushes the upgrade out — and the question that follows the wire into the skull is not about the patient.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Dark Narcissus: Erich Fromm, the Death of Loving, and the Corporate Soul That Ate Itself
Dark Narcissus reimagines Erich Fromm’s The Art of Loving for 2026, exposing how modern romance has collapsed into corporate solipsism—partners reduced to teammates, love reduced to logistics. Drawing on Ovid’s myth of Narcissus, the philosophy of Alan Watts, and Johnny Cash’s advice about separate bathrooms, this essay argues that love is not a destiny to be found but a discipline to be practiced.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


What Is Literary Existentialism? A Beginner’s Guide
Literary existentialism is not just a philosophy term. It is a way fiction, drama, and prose show freedom, absurdity, identity, and meaning under pressure.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Existential Cost of Lifestyle Inflation: Sartre, Bad Faith, and the Freedom Hidden Inside Every Raise
A raise looks like freedom, but it can quietly become a trap. Through Sartre’s idea of bad faith, this essay examines how lifestyle inflation turns extra income into identity drift, fixed costs, and a subtler form of dependence.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Françoise Sagan’s That Mad Ache: The Love Triangle Was Never the Subject
Françoise Sagan’s That Mad Ache looks like a familiar love triangle, but its real subject is stranger and colder: whether passion can free a person from the social world that has already taught them how to live. Lucile’s choice between Charles and Antoine becomes a question of comfort, class, dependency, and the forms of love one can actually survive.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Tinder Matrix: Zygmunt Bauman, Liquid Modernity, and Commodifying Romance
The face arrives before the name. The thumb decides before the mind objects. Tinder translated Bauman’s liquid modernity into behavioral grammar so fluent the body learned it first — where exit is always effortless, duration feels risky, and patience has started to look naive.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Only Bulletproof Security Is Death: Alan Watts and the Paradox Destroying Your Mind
Alan Watts’s The Wisdom of Insecurity reveals a devastating paradox: the desperate pursuit of certainty is the engine of modern anxiety. This essay explores Watts’s law of reversed effort alongside Keats’s Negative Capability to argue that insecurity is not the obstacle to a meaningful life — it is the entrance fee. A deep literary meditation on surrendering the need for guaranteed outcomes and learning to dance with uncertainty.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Wound the Modernists Named: Five novels that still describe us — and one question they won’t answer
Five novels that still describe the modern wound: isolation, bureaucracy, absurdity, divided identity, and the social mask.
David Lapadat | Music PhD
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