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A carregar... The Heart of Things: Applying Philosophy to the 21st Centurypor A. C. Grayling
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In this new collection A.C. Grayling adds to the variety of discussion and insight in his previous three essay collections. He returns to questions of personal ethics and the problems of the contemporary world, but also looks at the lives and ideas of great thinkers, the role of the arts in civilisation, and the need for reason everywhere Anthony Grayling illustrates in his celebrated accessible prose what each area offers to thought. In a wide-ranging array of illuminating topics, THE HEART OF THINGS shows how far-reaching Grayling's masterly, and timely, commentary on the humanities is to general readers. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — A carregar... GénerosSistema Decimal de Melvil (DDC)121Philosophy and Psychology Philosophy Of Humanity EpistemologyClassificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos EUA (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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Again this is a collection of a series of newspaper columns, from various publications squashed together as if this makes them more worthy of consideration. Grayling cover much the same set of topics, but includes the added bonus of a few vinegrettes about the various famous philosophers of history and what makes them special. Mostly however this is once again Grayling offering his unsolicited and unsubstantiated opinion on ethics, which he defines as how to live a good life.
He covers a few topics like liek war, love and cheating and has managed to make the Reading, that he covered previously slightly less random. This is true of all his articles, they are just better written than in the Meaning of things. Grayling often manages to leave the question open with a provocative twist at the end which does suceed (where Meaning failed) in encouraging at least some further thought on the matter.
However this work does also suffer from many of the same failings, namely assumption of 'facts' that are debatable at best. There is one single solitary source quoted in the entire book. The rang eof themes has broadened slightly to look at some of the wider societal considerations, but by nowhere near enough when considering topics such as family planning. There is also massive and unsupported extrapolation from small events to wider conclusions. They may be just, but then again they may be nothing more than cloud castles in cuckoo land, there is no information to say.
The profiles of the various philosophers do more to indicate why there views should be ignored -based in societies hundred of thousands of years removed from our own-, rather than as Grayling seems to be attempting to do, marking them as noteworthy.
Less dull and less annoying than the Meaning of Things, this still is not recommended. ( )