Forward!. How to Use this Book.
Philosophical Illustrations.
The Tales.
I The Ancients.
1 Socrates the Sorcerer (469?399 bce).
2 The Different Forms of Plato (ca. 427?347 bce).
3 Aristotle the Aristocrat (384?ca. 322 bce).
II More Ancients.
4 Lao Tzu Changes into Nothing (6th?5th c. bce).
5 Pythagoras Counts Up to Ten (ca. 570?495 bce).
6 Heraclitus Chooses the Dark Side of the River (ca. 5th c.
bce).
7 Hypatia Holds Up Half of the Sky (ca. 370?415 ce).
III Medieval Philosophy.
8 Augustine the Hippocrite (354?430 ce).
9 St. Thomas Aquinas Disputes the Existence of God (1225?1274).
IV Modern Philosophy.
10 Descartes the Dilettante (1596?1650).
11 Hobbes Squares the Circle (1588?1679).
12 Spinoza Grinds Himself Away? (1632?1677).
V Enlightened Philosophy.
13 John Locke Invents the Slave Trade (1632?1704).
14 The Many Faces of David Hume (1711?1776).
15 Rousseau the Rogue (1712?1778).
16 Immanuel Kant, the Chinaman of Königsburg (1724?1804).
VI The Idealists.
17 Gottfried Leibniz, the Thinking Machine (1646?1716).
18 Bishop Berkeley?s Bermuda College (1685?1753).
19 Headmaster Hegel?s Dangerous History Lesson (1770?1831).
20 Arthur Schopenhauer and the Little Old Lady (1788?1860).
VII The Romantics.
21 The Seduction of Søren Kierkegaard (1813?1855).
22 Mill?s Poetical Turn (1806?1873).
23 Henry Thoreau and Life in the Shed (1817?1862).
24 Marx?s Revolutionary Materialism (1818?1883).
VIII Recent Philosophy.
25 Russell Denotes Something (1872?1970).
26 The Ripping Yarn of Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889?1951).
27 Heidegger?s Tale (and the Nazis) (1889?1976).
28 Benjamin Lee Whorf and the Color Pinker (ca. 1900?1950).
29 Being Sartre and Not Definitely Not Being Beauvoir (1905?1980
and not 1908?1986).
30 Deconstructing Derrida (1930?2004).
Scholarly Appendix: Women in Philosophy, and Why There Aren?t
Many.
Key Sources and Further Reading.
Acknowledgments.
Index
Martin Cohen is a teacher and writer specializing in philosophy, ethics and education, with a special interest in computing. His books include 101 Philosophy Problems (2nd edn., 2001), Political Philosophy (2001), 101 Ethical Dilemmas (2003), and Wittgenstein's Beetle and Other Classic Thought Experiments (Blackwell, 2005). He has been editor of The Philosopher since 1995.
?We need more stories in philosophy, and Martin Cohen aims to fill
this lacuna with Philosophical Tales. [This book] is intended for a
general audience interested in a satirical introduction to
overlooked aspects of Western philosophy and the lives of the great
philosophers. Philosophical Tales does tell a number of interesting
stories, and any instructor of philosophy will find it handy to
have these stories available to enliven a class. Instructors will
also find it valuable to use these philosophical tales to raise a
compelling question: is a philosophy only as good as the
philosopher who proposes it?? (Teaching Philosophy, December 2009)
"Great philosophers only become well known after their deaths.
Indeed, to speak of contemporary celebrity philosophers is
oxymoronic. Still, one can't help wondering who amongst living
philosophers will merit future Philosophical Tales. (The
Philosopher, Autumn 2008)
?A lover of philosophical ideas and practiced debunker of
intellectual sham, Martin Cohen knocks some thirty important
philosophers from Socrates to Derrida off their pedestals, and
presents in a series of philosophical tales various aspects of
their thought, life and personality which few of us ever
suspected.? Zenon Stavrinides, University of Bradford
Ask a Question About this Product More... |