Modern life encourages us to chase the perfect identity. Whether we aspire to be the best lawyer or charity worker, life partner or celebrity influencer, we emulate the exemplars around us--hoping it will bring us happiness. But this pursuit often leads to a complex game of envy and pride. We may achieve these identities, only to crave admiration from others. We clash with those whose identities oppose ours--fueling polarization and even violence. And when their blows land, we're left feeling hollow. In Against Identity, philosopher Alexander Douglas seeks a different kind of wisdom. Drawing on the ideas of three great thinkers--ancient Chinese philosopher Zhuangzi, Dutch Enlightenment thinker Benedict de Spinoza, and twentieth-century French theorist René Girard--Douglas explores how identity can become a form of spiritual violence that pulls us away from truth. ​Across their worlds and radically different cultures, we see how, in times of historical upheaval, our hunger for a fixed sense of self grows stronger. Yet it is precisely in these moments, Douglas argues, that we must make peace with uncertainty--and discover the freedom that comes from escaping the confines of identity itself.