An intelligent person's guide to philosophy
詳細書目:
書目記錄號碼
1934641

著者:
Scruton, Roger.

書名:
An intelligent person's guide to philosophy / Roger Scruton.

版本:
1st American ed.

出版者:
New York : Allen Lane/Penguin Press, 1998.

稽查項
168 p. ; 23 cm.

備註:
Originally published: London : Duckworth, c1996.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [165]) and index.
主題: Philosophy Introductions.

標準號碼 0713992263
圖書簡介:
In An Intelligent Person's Guide to Philosophy, Roger Scruton aims to present neither a history nor a survey of the subject (goals he's already met in his Modern Philosophy and A Short History of Modern Philosophy). Rather, he attempts to make philosophy interesting by showing why it is interesting to him. Thus the book's 12 short chapters deal not only with philosophy's old standards--truth, time, freedom, God--but also with topics that not all philosophers would regard as central, such as sex and music. The views of other philosophers peek through from time to time: several pages are devoted to savaging the French historian Michel Foucault and the American jurist Richard Posner, while the influences of Scruton's philosophical heroes, Kant and Wittgenstein, are detectable everywhere. Still, Scruton's primary concern is to present the problems and lay out their possible solutions as he sees them. True to the standards of the Anglo-American tradition of philosophy to which he declares allegiance, Scruton writes clearly, precisely, and honestly. At times he can be unnecessarily cagey: there is no telling, for example, on the basis of his chapter on God whether he in fact believes in God. But for the most part he is forthright, even when espousing controversial positions, such as claiming a uniquely privileged moral status for heterosexual monogamy. All in all, the intelligent person who reads Scruton's book can expect to learn how another intelligent person, who has thought long and hard, views philosophy.
 
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