Philosophy is arguably the most famous legacy bequeathed by the classical world to the modern age. But what is 'philosophy'? Is it an intellectual discipline, as it tends to be categorised in today's academic departments of philosophy? Or is it a venerable and ultimately spiritual or psychological process of attaining the Good, however that is understood? For the ancient Greeks and Romans, 'philosophy' meant something very different and much broader than the present-day university discipline. In her lively and engaging new book, Emily Wilson shows that this amounts to more than just the philological change in a word. She points to fundamental differences between ancient and modern ideas about reason, wisdom, theology, science, psychology, ethics and what it is to be fully human. Exploring diverse thinkers like Socrates, Xenophanes, Thales, Plato, Aristotle, Protagoras, Heraclitus, Hobbes, Descartes, Kuhn and Popper, the author discusses broad themes and schools - including the pre-Socratics and Sophists - in the history of ideas. In a fascinating discussion Wilson concludes that antiquity, for all its impact on later ages, promoted a bolder kind of philosophical scepticism than anything common in modernity.
Discover how our big social, political and ethical ideas are formed with The Philosophy Book. Part of the fascinating Big Ideas series, this book tackles tricky topics and themes in a simple and easy to follow format.
A compact and straightforward guide to the skills needed to study philosophy - reading, listening, discussing and writing - aimed at anyone coming to the subject for the first time or just looking to improve their performance.
James W. Norwood to Walter W. Lenoir, March 26, 1877, Lenoir Family Papers, Southern Historical Collection, ... The most useful of these studies for the refashioning of memory in the postwar South are W. Fitzhugh Brundage, ed., ...
A work powerful and pervading in its implications not only for metaphysics but also for art, political science, and the philosophy of history.
By the time you finish reading this book, you will be able to answer questions like: • What is truth? • What can I really know? • How can I live a moral life? • Do I have free will?
The perfect introduction to philosophy, this is a great new way to learn about the most important philosophical ideas and concepts that makes them easy to recall even months after reading the book.
This book addresses the question What is Philosophy? by gathering together responses from philosophers working in a variety of areas.
Now in a special gift edition, and featuring a brand new foreword by Anthony Gottlieb, this is a dazzlingly unique exploration of the works of significant philosophers throughout the ages and a definitive must-have title that deserves a ...
New edition of the Meditations with introductions by John Cottingham and Bernard Williams.
Contrary to those proclaiming the end of philosophy, Badiou aims to restore philosophical thought to the complete space of the truths that condition it.