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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.


The Fall of Google: Illich, Counterproductivity, and the Economics of Digital Decay
No one can name the date the search began to fail. The first result is no longer the right result. The user has learned to skip, to append reddit, to open three tabs — and the labor of finding has migrated from the platform to the person so gradually that most users absorb it as a personal skill rather than recognizing it as a systemic failure.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


3 French Classics That Built the Modern Literary Mind
Three French classics, three literary machines: Hugo’s cathedral of mercy, Balzac’s Paris of ambition, and Camus’s courtroom of meaning.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Little Prince Is a Grown-Up Book Disguised as a Children's Story
The Little Prince is often treated as a children’s fable about innocence. But its real force lies elsewhere: in the absurd comedy of adult life, the fragile burden of the rose, and the hidden well in the desert. Beneath the naïve tone is a grown-up book about care, loss, and the terrible beauty of making one ordinary thing irreplaceable.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


When Witness Is Not Enough: A Review of Samar Yazbek’s Planet of Clay
Samar Yazbek’s Planet of Clay begins with a powerful premise: a girl who cannot stop walking inside a world of rope, siege, war, and damaged perception. But does the novel turn that premise into literary pressure — or explain its strongest images before they can work?
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Smeared Skull at the Bottom of a Correct Life: Tolstoy, Mediocrity, and the Horror of Dying on Schedule
Tolstoy’s The Death of Ivan Ilyich exposes the horror of a life lived by social prescription—“simple and ordinary and therefore most terrible.” This essay traces the novella through Holbein’s anamorphic skull in The Ambassadors and Heidegger’s Das Man, arguing that approved mediocrity is the soul’s true enemy. A masterclass in literary philosophy for the Deep Reader who suspects that comfort and meaning are not the same thing.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


A Clockwork Orange Review: When Nadsat Fails
A Clockwork Orange is usually praised for its invented language and disturbing moral premise. But what happens when Nadsat stops sounding brilliant and starts sounding like Russian vocabulary in costume? This review argues that Burgess’s novel remains a clever moral machine, but not necessarily a great literary experience.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Financial Illusions You Only Notice After You Burn Them Down: Descartes’ Method of Doubt and the Controlled Demolition of Financial Certainty
Modern financial life runs on inherited sentences that sound like facts long before they have earned the right to be believed. Through Descartes, this essay treats budgeting, debt, investing, and security as questions of examined assent rather than polished habit.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


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
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