View Poll Results: Vote for your favourite philosopher

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  • Plato

    34 28.81%
  • Descartes

    9 7.63%
  • Kant

    21 17.80%
  • Sartre

    27 22.88%
  • Russell

    13 11.02%
  • Never met any of them!....

    14 11.86%
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Thread: Vote for your favourite philosopher!

  1. #16
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    Just not realistic for one person to know all of them. And even they are philosophers, they were talking about different stuff. They are all dead right now, and we need a good philosophical view of current situation in the world. No one is ever going to be able to read everything from every single known philosopher. How can you pick and choose from limited offer? And is it really possible to put them down, one by one? And by whose criteria?
    Last edited by XY&Z; 06-07-2007 at 11:30 PM.

  2. #17
    X (or) Y=X and Y=-X Jean-Baptiste's Avatar
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    Hurray for Kant! He's my hero of thought. He saved us all from that nasty David Hume, and reestablished the possibility of causality with a little thing we like to call synthetic a priori judgments, or non-experiential judgments of amplification. Wasn't that a nice thing for him to do?

    Quote Originally Posted by XY&Z View Post
    Just not realistic for one person to know all of them. And even they are philosophers, they were talking about different stuff. They are all dead right now, and we need a good philosophical view of current situation in the world. No one is ever going to be able to read everything from every single known philosopher. How can you pick and choose from limited offer? And is it really possible to put them down, one by one? And by whose criteria?
    I suppose it's not realistic for one person to know every philosopher ever, but there certainly are some major ones, and for a student of philosophy it should not be too much to expect to know a great deal about a great many of them. In any case, many philosophers that we study have been dealing with a very few fundamental questions about the nature of things and what ought to be, so once you know what the questions are, it's not a big step to finding out what each philosopher contributed to the discussion. As for a philosophical view of the current situation, I think we can easily dust of a number of philosophical views of past situations to apply. Do you really think that human nature has changed so drastically that the past cannot possibly answer for us now?

    Anyway, yes, Kant is the man. He essentially established a philosophical basis for Faith (not as the merely religious concept, but as the functional basis of existence and knowledge.)
    These fragments I have shored against my ruins

    James Joyce, the pirate. Why don't you write books people can read? -Nora Barnacle

    Insupportable claim: Reading my stories will make you a better person. Do your best to prove me right. http://www.online-literature.com/for...ad.php?t=20367

  3. #18
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    Haha you are awesome Hyperborean.

    I think Descartes my favourite.

  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jean-Baptiste View Post
    I suppose it's not realistic for one person to know every philosopher ever,
    I meant their work, not them personally.


    Quote Originally Posted by Jean-Baptiste View Post
    and for a student of philosophy it should not be too much to expect to know a great deal about a great many of them.
    Do you really think that one student from New York and one from Madrid have same curriculum? And what do you and what can you know about one philosopher? The way he likes to take his tea in the afternoon? It’s not really important to know about them (and how much we can rely on such information) but more about their work.


    Quote Originally Posted by Jean-Baptiste View Post
    In any case, many philosophers that we study have been dealing with a very few fundamental questions about the nature of things and what ought to be, so once you know what the questions are, it's not a big step to finding out what each philosopher contributed to the discussion.
    Do you ever feel that their thoughts are repeating? You know; Great Minds Think Alike ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Jean-Baptiste View Post
    As for a philosophical view of the current situation, I think we can easily dust of a number of philosophical views of past situations to apply. Do you really think that human nature has changed so drastically that the past cannot possibly answer for us now?
    Unfortunately I’ve lost fate in human kind. So much evil in such civilized world. What a shame. Maybe we could seek answer in old books using old intelligence but who would listen? Even global warming is not considered seriously.

    I goggled essential thinkers and result shows book where 100 of them are listed. Why 100? Simply because you cannot take just 5 or 6 of them for such a long period of time as is human existence.

  5. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bii View Post
    My personal fave has to be Bertrand Russell.
    I, too, am very fond of Russell! I felt sorry when I read that, after years of working on a book about mathematics with Whitehead, Goedel came along and made the whole thing moot. But Russell was good enough to admit when he was wrong.
    "Ideas have consequences, and totally erroneous ideas are likely to have destructive consequences."
    Steve Allen

  6. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by XY&Z View Post
    Unfortunately I’ve lost fate in human kind. So much evil in such civilized world. What a shame. Maybe we could seek answer in old books using old intelligence but who would listen? Even global warming is not considered seriously.
    So much evil..do you know that Walt Whitman thought that civilization was the cause of evil? That man left alone should be natural and good, but civilization corrupts him?

    Lots of evil, true, but who knows exactly how much? Let's just hope it gets better.

    One reason I love Descartes so much is just the way he writes. I mean, even look at just the first sentence of his meditations on philosophy - it's so honest! I love it, and for me it illustrates the connection between literature and philosophy. Philosophy is nothing if it is not great literature. So much of it is rhetoric, and even poetry, I think it does better to acknowledge the connection, and consider it a good thing. Philosophy is good if it is beautiful phrases, beautiful paragraphs, and ones that have connected arguments, and can keep it interesting, etc. etc. It is the reason I consider Dostoyevsky and Nietzsche philosophers.

  7. #22
    Registered User linz's Avatar
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    We are our own best Philosopher
    "Why describe the hole, I mean it is a hole; So why describe it?" - Anonymous

  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil View Post
    Yeah, where's Aristotle?
    I agree!! My vote would have to be for Aristotle..

  9. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by NikolaiI View Post
    do you know that Walt Whitman thought that civilization was the cause of evil? That man left alone should be natural and good, but civilization corrupts him?
    Honestly, I didn’t know that was his theory. But I find it valid.
    I just love his Song
    (http://www.princeton.edu/~batke/logr/log_026.html)


    Quote Originally Posted by NikolaiI View Post
    Lots of evil, true, but who knows exactly how much? Let's just hope it gets better.
    Amen.

    Man is gifted with reason; he is life being aware of itself.
    Erich Fromm

    Maybe there is a key. Intelligence and civilization are recipes for final disaster of the world known to us. We are not first or least, but can we make a difference? Just because we know.

  10. #25
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    If you all are going to vote your favorite philosopher, then you must add more of them to your list or create a "write me in" option. quasimodo1

  11. #26
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    Without exception, my favourite is one that is not particularly recognised as a philosopher, yet his down to earth philosophy, and profound understanding of life, and human nature, oozes from almost every line of his prolific writings.

    He entertains while he teaches.

    His name: William Shakesepeare.

  12. #27
    Ludmila607
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    Favourite Philosophers?

    1-Pascal he was a mistic who experience thoughts on its most meaningful way.He can express beautifully talking about maths, Gods nature, human signs and philosophical questions.Lonely and forgotten , died in misery.
    2-Spinoza is another one wich live and writing can be very interisting.He wondered about human nature, proposites, relation to a God creator...find unity at plurallity.¨He is enjoyable to read.
    3-Nietszche is great for his style.He dares to say everything to be offending and unreasonable honest.He contructs a phylosophy as an act of creationAs an artist.I think he was an Artist and a rebel.Misunderstood and judged as many few..will always capture attention from curious minds.
    4-Wittgenstein.He was tremendous logical and analithical author who has turned almost mistical at the end.Modest, corageous,mind gifted...he aported to Analythic Philosophy to Logic, to Semiotic and to Metaphisych.He was at the front(War) .He moved to Ireland and die at 40 something of Cancer.
    5-Marx.I am sorry!it is not a polithical thing.Only that he has made the most tremendous analysis of the material and social history af the world.Even his detractors give him the reason...I mean capitalists give him the reason(plusvally, human allienation, explotation, social structures,ideology ,class hate)and even the countries who aware from class worker revolution did it through the atention of that class requirements(Give the working men nice houses and salaries who aloud them taking a holiday and a nice car and will through away revolutionary ideas)The English handled it very well...the the post industrial societies keep giving marx the reason.THE PREDOMINANT IDEOLOGY IT IS THE DOMINANT CLASS IDEOLOGY....tell me is not true!
    I am talking about his analisis of the material history.I do not agree with his atheism or his proletary dictature.

  13. #28
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    Why isn't Nietzsche there?
    Shall these bones live?

  14. #29
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ludmila607 View Post
    5-Marx.I am sorry!it is not a polithical thing.Only that he has made the most tremendous analysis of the material and social history af the world.Even his detractors give him the reason...I mean capitalists give him the reason(plusvally, human allienation, explotation, social structures,ideology ,class hate)and even the countries who aware from class worker revolution did it through the atention of that class requirements(Give the working men nice houses and salaries who aloud them taking a holiday and a nice car and will through away revolutionary ideas)The English handled it very well...the the post industrial societies keep giving marx the reason.THE PREDOMINANT IDEOLOGY IT IS THE DOMINANT CLASS IDEOLOGY....tell me is not true!
    I am talking about his analisis of the material history.I do not agree with his atheism or his proletary dictature.
    I say it's not true. His concept of material history is nonsense. No historian today worth anything believes that history evolves according to laws. History is events, not forces. Marx was wrong about economics, wrong about history, and people still follow him as if he's some god. It's a religion based on faith, rediculoous faith at that.
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

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  15. #30
    Torchbearer Demian's Avatar
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    I would have to put Marx right up there too. Even though Communism seems to be dead and his ideal state was never realized his critique of capatalism was right on the money. Capatalism is not the savior of the world any more than democracy (Plato said that the natural end of any democracy was despotism). With the earth heading toward ecological disaster and companies being given free reign to operate at will it would do us some good to go back to Marx and examine the beginnings and ends capatalist societies.

    "When you listen to the radio you are a witness of the everlasting war between thing and idea, appearance and reality--the human, and the divine."
    -Hermann Hesse

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