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Title The philosophy book / contributors. Marcus Weeks, Peter J. King, Will Buckingham, John Marenbon, Douglas Burnham, Clive Hill ; senior editor, Stephanie Farrow.

Publication Info. London : Dorling Kindersley Limited, 2024.
©2024

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Enfield, Pearl Street Branch Library - New Materials  100 PHI    DUE 07-23-25
 Newington, Lucy Robbins Welles Library - New Materials  100 PHILOSOPHY    DUE 07-08-25
Edition Second edition.
Description 360 pages : illustrations (chiefly colour), portraits ; 24 cm
Physical Medium polychrome rdacc
monochrome rdacc
illustration rdaill
portrait rdaill
Series Big ideas simply explained
Big ideas simply explained.
Note Includes index.
First published in Great Britain in 2011.
Summary "An essential introduction to the history, concepts, and thinking behind philosophy that demystifies what can often be daunting subject matter, laid out in DK's signature style. Are the ideas of Reň Descartes, Mary Wollstonecraft, John Locke, and Thomas Hobbes still relevant today? The Philosophy Book unpacks the writings and ideas of more than 100 of history's biggest thinkers, taking you on a journey from ancient Greece to the modern day. Explore feminism, rationalism, idealism, existentialism, and other influential movements in the world of philosophy. From Socrates to Confucius to Julia Kristeva, The Philosophy Book breaks down difficult concepts in an approachable style. Cutting through the haze of academia and untangling complicated theories to show how our social, political, and ethical ideas are formed, The Philosophy Book contextualizes the information around time periods, innovative thinkers, method, and philosophical approach. The Philosophy Book is a perfect and comprehensive introduction to a complicated and fascinating subject"--Amazon.
Contents Introduction -- The ancient world, 700 BCE-250 CE : Everything is made of water: Thales of Miletus ; The Dao that can be told is not the eternal Dao: Laozi ; Number is the ruler of forms and ideas: Pythagoras ; Happy is he who overcome his ego: Siddhartha Gautama ; Hold faithfulness and sincerity as first principles: Confucius ; Everything is flux: Heraclitus ; All is one: Parmenides ; Man is the measure of all things: Protagoras ; When one throws to me a peach, I return to him a plum: Mozi ; Nothing exists except atoms and empty space: Democritus and Leucippus ; The life which is unexamined is not worth living: Socrates ; Earthly knowledge is but shadow: Plato ; Truth resides in the world around us: Aristotle ; Death is nothing to us: Epicurus ; He has the most who is the most content with the least: Diogenes of Sinope ; The goal of life is living in agreement with nature: Zeno of Citium -- The medieval world, 250-1500 : God is not the parent of evils: St. Augustine of Hippo ; God foresees our free thoughts and actions: Boethius ; The soul is distinct from the body: Avicenna ; Just by thinking about God we can know he exists: St. Anselm ; Philosophy and religion are not incompatible: Averroes ; God has no attributes: Moses Maimonides ; Don't grieve; anything you lose comes round in another form: Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi ; The universe has not always existed: Thomas Aquinas ; God is the not-other: Nikolaus von Kues ; To know nothing is the happiest life: Desiderius Erasmus -- Renaissance and the age of reason, 1500-1750 : The end justifies the means: Niccoḷ Machiavelli ; Fame and tranquility can never be bedfellows: Michel de Montaigne ; Knowledge is power: Francis Bacon ; Man is a machine: Thomas Hobbes ; I think therefore I am: Reň Descartes ; Imagination decides everything: Blaise Pascal ; God is the cause of all things, which are in him: Benedictus Spinoza ; No man's knowledge here can go beyond his experience: John Locke ; There are two kinds of truths: truths of reasoning and truths of fact: Gottfried Leibniz ; To be is to be perceived: George Berkeley -- The age of revolution : Doubt is not a pleasant condition, but certainty is absurd: Voltaire ; Custom is the great guide of human life: David Hume ; Man was born free yet everywhere he is in chains: Jean-Jacques Rousseau ; Man is an animal that makes bargains: Adam Smith ; There are two worlds: our bodies and the external world: Immanuel Kant ; Society is indeed a contract: Edmund Burke ; The greatest happiness for the greatest number: Jeremy Bentham ; Mind has no gender: Mary Wollstonecraft ; What sort of philosophy one chooses depends on what sort of person one is: Johann Gottlieb Fichte ; About no subject is there less philosophizing than about philosophy: Friedrich Schlegel ; Reality is a historical process: Georg Hegel ; Every man takes the limits of his own field of vision for the limits of the world: Arthur Schopenhauer ; Theology is anthropology: Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach ; Over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign: John Stuart Mill ; Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom: Søren Kierkegaard ; The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles: Karl Marx ; Must the citizen ever resign his conscience to the legislator?: Henry David Thoreau ; Consider what effects things have: Charles Sanders Peirce ; Act as if what you do makes a difference: William James
The modern world, 1900-1950 : Man is something to be surpassed: Friedrich Nietzsche ; Men with self-confidence come and see and conquer: Ahad Ha'am ; Every message is made of signs: Ferdinand de Saussure ; Experience by itself is not science: Edmund Husserl ; Intuition goes in the very direction of life: Henri Bergson ; We only think when we are confronted with problems: John Dewey ; Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it: George Santayana ; It is only suffering that makes us persons: Miguel de Unamuno ; Believe in life: William du Bois ; The road to happiness lies in an organized diminution of work: Bertrand Russell ; Love is a bridge from poorer to richer knowledge: Max Scheler ; Only as an individual can man become a philosopher: Karl Jaspers ; Life is a series of collisions with the future: Još Ortega y Gasset ; To philosophize, first one must confess: Hajime Tanabe ; The limits of my language are the limits of my world: Ludwig Wittgenstein ; We are ourselves the entities to be analyzed: Martin Heidegger ; The individual's only true moral choice is through self-sacrifice for the community: Tesuro Watsuji ; Logic is the last scientific ingredient of philosophy: Rudolf Carnap ; The only way of knowing a person is to love them without hope: Walter Benjamin ; That which is cannot be true: Herbert Marcuse ; History does not belong to us but we belong to it: Hans-Georg Gadamer ; In so far as a scientific statement speaks about reality, it must be falsifiable: Karl Popper ; Intelligence is a moral category: Theodor Adorno ; Existence precedes essence: Jean-Paul Sartre ; The banality of evil: Hannah Arendt ; Reason lives in language: Emmanuel Levinas ; In order to see the world we must break with our familiar acceptance of it: Maurice Merleau-Ponty ; Man is defined as a human being and woman as a female: Simone de Beauvoir ; Language is a social art: Willard Van Orman Quine ; The fundamental sense of freedom is freedom from chains: Isaiah Berlin ; Think like a mountain: Arne Naess ; Life will be lived all the better if it has no meaning: Albert Camus -- Contemporary philosophy, 1950-present : Language is a skin: Roland Barthes ; How would we manage without a culture: Mary Midgley ; Normal science does not aim at novelties of fact or theory: Thomas Kuhn ; The principles of justice are chosen behind a veil of ignorance: John Rawls ; Art is a form of life: Richard Wollheim ; Anything goes: Paul Feyerabend ; Knowledge is produced to be sold: Jean-Fran̨cois Lyotard ; For the black man, there is only one destiny and it is white: Frantz Fanon ; Man is an invention of recent date: Michel Foucault ; If we choose, we can live in a world of comforting illusion: Noam Chomsky ; Society is dependent upon a criticism of its own traditions: J gen Habermas ; There is nothing outside of the text: Jacques Derrida ; There is nothing deep down inside us except what we have put there ourselves: Richard Rorty ; Every desire has a relation to madness: Luce Irigaray ; Every empire tells itself and the world that is unlike all other empires: Edward Said ; Thought has always worked by opposition: Ȟ̈lne Cixous ; Who plays God in present-day feminism?: Julia Kristeva ; Philosophy is not only a written enterprise: Henry Odera Oruka ; In suffering, the animals are our equals: Peter Singer ; All the best Marxist analyses are always analyses of a failure: Slavoj }i~ek ; Patriarchal domination shares an ideological foundation with racism: bell hooks -- Directory -- Glossary.
Subject Philosophy.
Philosophy -- Introductions.
Added Author King, Peter J., 1956- contributor. https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJxmCTX8hxjRTWkfcfkYyd
Buckingham, Will, contributor. https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJyWPWTJ87WqCPT39GcHG3
Marenbon, John, contributor. https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJc7X6JwFPcB9DhftVhJXd
Burnham, Douglas, contributor. https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCjChYjGJ8FJmT9kKJW3GH3
Hill, C. E. (Clive E.), contributor. https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCjCpD3YWyqjFHc9B7Fxfmb
Farrow, Stephanie, editor. https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCjvwGwvBwKJ6VTTGPYcJQq
Other Form: ebook version : 9780241677773
ISBN 9780241638668 (hardback)
0241638666 (hardback)
9780593847046 (paperback)
0593847040 (paperback)
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