Posted in Philosophers (Thursday, August 28, 2008)
Written by Philip Rushlow. By Writers Club Press.
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1 comments about Wars, Women & Other Wonders.
- Challenging, interesting, fun and just good reading. Keep this one handy because you will read it over and over. Excellent bedtime or any short time reading because each short item will bring you something to think about.
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Posted in Philosophers (Thursday, August 28, 2008)
Written by Perret-Clermont. By Psychology Press.
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No comments about Jean Piaget and Neuchâtel: The Learner and the Scholar.
Posted in Philosophers (Thursday, August 28, 2008)
Written by Robert Mackintosh. By Thoemmes Press.
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No comments about Hegel & Hegelianism: 1903 Edition (World's Epoch-Makers, 27).
Posted in Philosophers (Thursday, August 28, 2008)
Written by Anthony O'hear. By Routledge.
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No comments about Karl Popper: Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers.
Posted in Philosophers (Thursday, August 28, 2008)
Written by E.K. Willey. By AuthorHouse.
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3 comments about Cuss!.
- I have literally been in search of this book for years, and didn't even realize this till I was halfway through it. I've studied self-help books, religions, Yoga, acupressure, herbs and all sorts of means to improve my life, but when I read CUSS!, it came clear to me that my efforts were far too forced; that my very efforts to reach the goal were precisely what kept me from it. That goal being, simply, peace. But CUSS! is not just one of the greatest self-help books in disguise, it's a magnificent story to boot. Written in American slang, E.K. Willey takes us to the streets of America, as well as the mountains, canyons, caves, and deserts. A 12 year search for God, or at least a girlfriend. A crash course on American Zen, Shokya Candalla style, whom he considers to be his "true self". Throw one disposable god in for good measure - called the goc (the god of circumstance) - and now you have one of the most original books on the market today. I'm praying to God right now that this E.K. Willey is with us for many years, because if he is, methinks we're all in for a big surprise.
- Poverty, living on the streets, drug use, alcoholism, sex, laughter, poetry, a disposable god, a muse called Shokya Candalla -- this book has everything! E.K. Willey's prose is a new and bright light in the world of writing. No matter the tragic self-contradictory world he exploits, his humor is indeed its saving grace. If you don't mind a little cussing here and there, and a little dose of vulgarity mixed in with your common sense, then I implore you to read this book. If you're lucky enough to have friends, you'll be imploring them to do the same.
- Amazing how what can often be the most important and gives us the best lessons can be considered to be the mundane-this book immortalizes the everyday and its lessons that too many of us take for granted. This book speaks-it's real, it's honest and that is a hell of a statememt.
Highly recommended.
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Posted in Philosophers (Thursday, August 28, 2008)
Written by Arthur Edward Waite. By Kessinger Publishing, LLC.
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No comments about A Biography Of And An Introduction To Thomas Vaughan.
Posted in Philosophers (Thursday, August 28, 2008)
Written by Henry Grove. By Thoemmes Continuum.
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No comments about Ethical and Theological Writings (Thoemmes Press - Philosophy and Christian Thought in Britian 1700-1900).
Posted in Philosophers (Thursday, August 28, 2008)
Written by Kerry Walters. By University of Illinois Press.
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4 comments about Benjamin Franklin and His Gods.
- "An exceptionally fine piece of scholarship on an exceedingly complex figure and subject. Walters has done a superb job of assimilating an enormous body of scholarship on various aspects of Franklin's personal and intellectual life and an even more daunting body of Franklin's own prose. A remarkably clear, straightforward, and patient account of the extremely vexed issues surrounding Franklin's religious thought." Ronald A. Bosco, editor of The Complete Sermons of Ralph Waldo Emerson
- I've read a lot of books about Franklin, but this one is in a class of its own. It's a psycho-biography (kinda) that traces Franklin's religious development from his early childhood through the rest of his life. Nope, he's not the deist we learned about in school. Instead, he's what Walters calls a "perspectivist." If that sounds boring or dry, think again. The book reads like a novel. I definitely recommend this one. It puts a new spin on old Benjamin. My only objection is that sometimes you have to wonder how much of this is Walters, and how much Franklin. So it loses one star.
- I really like this book, even though I'm not sure I agree with its spin on Franklin's religion. Walters argues that Ben is a "perspectivist"--basically, a proponent of religious fictions that he knows have no objective basis, but which he thinks are necessary for psychological health and social stability. The case is well presented and nicely written. (Would that all historians wrote as well!) But I can't help thinking that Franklin comes out more of a twentieth-century existentialist than he is--complete with religious angst and identity crisis. What the heck, though. This is one good book. My guess is that it's going to make a lot of people mad--especially those good American Christians who want to think that all the "Founding Fathers" of the USA were also Christians. As Walters demonstrates, it just ain't so.
- Kerry S. Walters has written one of the best studies of 18th century religion yet produced. Benjamin Franklin is a difficult subject, in part because as Walters puts it, Franklin "wrote both too much and too little about his religious thought." (p. 4) Different historians read the same documents and come up with radically different interpretations of their meaning. Walters, however, has produced a nuanced study, sensitive to the wider religous context in which Franklin lived his life, and profoundly learned too in the cultural and intellectual developments of the Atlantic enlightenment. By meticuously locating Franklin within this larger context, he has written a work which sheds insight both into Franklin himself, as well as the larger society in which he lived. To do this in 151 pages of lucid and economical prose is quite a worthy achievement.
Walters argues that Franklin's religious views developed in tension between two ultimately irreconciliable religious traditions. On the one hand was the Calvinism of his native Boston, the faith of his father, with its sophisticated Augustinian piety. On the other hand was the "New Learning" which captivated so many polite and cultivated men and women on both sides of the Atlantic, the faith of men like Isaac Newton or John Locke, with its concomitant liberal Christian emphasis on the capacity of human reason to arrive at religous truth. As a young man, Franklin wavered, adhering first to the one and then the other. As a mature adult, however, Franklin came to accept the ambiguity of his earlier commitments. "Recognizing that a Newtonian-inspired deism was spiritually impoverished, but unable either rationally or emotionally to return to the orthodoxy of his boyhood, he was at loose ends for a few years," Walters argues. But in 1728 Franklin found a way to reconcile the contradiction. "The solution he arrived at--his doctrine of theistic perspectivism--enabled him to escape from the mechanistically sterile cosmos into which he had drifted without falling back into a Calvinist worldview whose central tenets he found unacceptable." (p. 12) As Walters explains, Franklin's perspectivism stemmed from a belief in an inaccessible God, which humans symbolically represent to themselves in order to establish an emotional and intellectual relationshop with the divine. This means that while God *is*, there are various human representations of God as well. "These anthropomorphized conceptions of the divine," Walters writes, "serve as the foci for personal adoration as well as sectarian theologizing." (p. 10) The result, then, is a commitment to religious toleration because human representions of the divine are culturally and historically bounded. Human religous traditions, to the extent that they share the same purposes, contain some worth. In arguing for this understanding of religion--an understanding which arises from the tension between the two religious traditions within which Franklin was working--Walters can explain Franklin's religous statements with a cogency missing from earlier accounts. While Walter's statement of Franklin's perspectivism may sound superficially anachronistic, that is a misreading of this work. This is a terrific exercise in intellectual and relgious history, and Walter's demonstrates convincingly the historical origins in Franklin's thought of the theology he discusses.
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Posted in Philosophers (Thursday, August 28, 2008)
Written by Karl Konig. By Floris Books.
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No comments about KARL KONIG: An Autobiography (Karl Konig Archive).
Posted in Philosophers (Thursday, August 28, 2008)
Written by John Spencer Clark. By Kessinger Publishing, LLC.
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No comments about The Life And Letters Of John Fiske V2.
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