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18 Reviews
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124 of 129 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Comparison,
By Die Morgenröte (NYC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy (The Complete Idiot's Guide) (Paperback)
Some time ago I sat down and read through "Philosophy for Dummies" and "The Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy." My intentions were to find a book that I might recommend to friends who have a passing interest in the subject, so that I might encourage their understanding and gain more people to discuss ideas with.Not only was I disappointed with "Philosophy for Dummies" but I found the presentation to be both offensive and underhanded. While appearing at first to be an introduction to the greater subject, it turns out to be a packaging of the author's own beliefs... heavily skewed and full of personal bias. Whole movements are passed over with little or nothing said, other than a dismissive comment from the author, who apparently does not think them worth mention because he does not agree. This is HARDLY proper for what is supposed to be an introduction to the subject. The novice reader is left with a lopsided, limited presentation that while written well enough, leaves him needing to go buy ANOTHER book so he can actually BE introduced to what this title led him to believe he would be -- the subject of philosophy in a wide ranging sense. In surfing Amazon tonight, I decided to look at the reviews for this book ("Philosophy for Dummies"). I was VERY glad to see that a number of people saw the same thing as I did in this. Pro-God or not, is not the point. The glory of philosophy is all the different views, and this is what an introduction should present. A book like this should be written with the intention of exposing the reader to the subject of philosophy itself, not just the author's step by step program of -- "This is what I think, so I am going to show you why you should think this way too. Don't worry about the other stuff, it's just nonsense, so we won't say anything much about that." "Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy" is a much better choice if we were to compare the two. It presents a wide variety of thoughts and explanations, leaving each person to think for himself and later search out more of what he finds speaks to him. The layout is well organized, and the progression of ideas fit well together, allowing the novice reader to not only see the varying concepts, but how each stage of thought fed into the next, and how differing theories challenge one another. The reader is exposed to the ideas themselves, as presented by the given philosophers, not as packaged by a single author who is spending less time introducing and more time selling his own views. Concepts are not examined in great detail, but then again, that is not what this book is trying to do. While "Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy" is not the best introduction to the subject, it is a good, concise volume of work. As its intention was to be just that, it does its job well. There are better introductions available, but these are often much longer with ideas being developed in greater detail... something that while would be sought by a true student of the subject, might turn off those just looking for a surface exposure. The examinations are cursory at times, but this is again understandable considering the breadth of the subject in relation to the attempt to introduce as much as possible in a limited space, in simple terms. If you are choosing between the two... Actually... check out "Thinking Through Philosophy" - Horner and Westacott - Cambridge University Press. The format and organization of this book is different from the two spoken of above, feeling less "rushed" though still concise and accessible... and the style of introduction is good for both casual readers and those seeking to later move into a deeper study.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good intro...,
By
This review is from: Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy (The Complete Idiot's Guide) (Paperback)
A basic, no-frills introduction to the bottomless chasm of philosphy. Light-hearted and none to serious for those of you who aren't into the deep introspectives, but wonder what it's all about. Who could ask for more? And who would expect more from a "Complete Idiot's" title? :-) If you want it light and easy, here it is.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
I thought it was good.,
By Grant Yeager (NJ United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy (The Complete Idiot's Guide) (Paperback)
I've never taken a class on philosophy or read any books on philosophy. Therefore, in the search for self, I found this book and its principles to be most interesting. I acknowledge the other reviewers' points that the lives of philosophers relative to their individual beliefs are not adequately recorded, but I nonetheless strongly recommend this book for anyone who desires to learn of the many philosophies of others.
24 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Useful if you have no knowledge of the topic,
This review is from: The Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy (2nd Edition) (Paperback)
I originally bought this book because I was supposed to supplement a creative writing class I was teaching with an occasional exploration of philosophy. I thought the book might present philosophy at a beginner's level that would make it interesting for my high school class. I never used it.This is a decent book though. I'm a little hesitant to applaud the author and recommend the book to just anyone. First, the author. Jay Stevenson does have a PhD, but not in philosophy. That worries me. Sure, he may know quite a bit about philosophy, I'm sure there are a lot of people without degrees in philosophy that know a lot about it, but why would The Complete Idiot's Guide people hire a non-PhD to write a book about philosophy when there are thousands of unemployed, professionally trained philosophers looking for work? Who knows. Maybe they thought Stevenson, whose credentials are in English, could do a better job getting his point across. Second, why I wouldn't recommend the book to just anyone. For two reasons. First, the writing is a little boring at times and for people that aren't interested in philosophy, this book probably won't suck you in and make you want to read it. Second, the philosophies are dumbed down almost to the point that it isn't really worth reading about them. The book turns into a nicely packaged dictionary with fun little explanations rather than a treatise on philosophy. But, what should we expect, right? This is, after all, The Complete Idiot's Guide. So, the book is boring and not a very detailed explanation of the philosophies that it attempts to discuss. However, for an introduction to someone that is interested but knows absolutely nothing, this book probably wouldn't be too bad a place to get ideas of where to look for more information. Overall, the book was semi-useful in exploring most philosophical perspectives but could have benefited from more depth in discussion of the philosophies and perhaps a history of philosophy (maybe even in some sort of graph-like form).
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Helpful for beginners,
This review is from: The Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy, Third Edition (Mass Market Paperback)
I love Philosophy and can't get enough of learning about it. This book is good for newbies to the subject and will give you an overall idea about many of the ideas of philosophy.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Good only for introduction,
By A Customer
This review is from: Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy (The Complete Idiot's Guide) (Paperback)
This book is good only if you want a quick glimpse of what philosophy is. A start, and that is about all you will get from the book. And regarding some of the chapters about Chinese philosophy, you probably would learn better with other books.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Kindle owners beware,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy, Third Edition (Mass Market Paperback)
Note that despite implications to the contrary, the Kindle version will not be the same as the paperback version sold through Amazon. The paper version is Third Ed, 2005. The Kindle version is Second Ed, 2002.
12 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Astrology is not philosophy.,
By
This review is from: Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy (The Complete Idiot's Guide) (Paperback)
This book is certainly worthy of its title. It is a book by an English professor that completely dismisses everything in 20th Century Anglo-American philosophy in a single sentence in order to focus on post-modernism and New Age thought as the culmination of philosophy. Complete rubbish, worse even than the cartoon book "Philosophy for Beginners" (which at least gets right most of what it does say, but has the same blindness towards analytic philosophy as "The Complete Idiot's Guide"). Get something else, like Joel Feinberg's "Reason and Responsibility", Robert Nozick's "Philosophical Explanations" or "The Examined Life", or Keith Lehrer's "Philosophical Problems and Arguments" (primary author James Cornman).
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very general, needs to focus less on "new-age".,
By A Customer
This review is from: Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy (The Complete Idiot's Guide) (Paperback)
This book was my introduction to philosophy. And, considering that I still read philosophy constantly, it must have done something right. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy does a good job of explaining multiple western and eastern philosophies, and is great for the beginner. However, the new-age philosophies detailed in the end chapters are too cultish for the likes of anyone seriously interested in the science.
4.0 out of 5 stars
A great book on the basics of Philosophy,
By Robert Kiehn "TheForthcoming1" (Alsip, IL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy, Third Edition (Mass Market Paperback)
This is a great book on the basic concepts of Philosophy
and covers everything from ancient Greek philosophy to Socrates, Plato, St. Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Jesus Christ Rene Descartes, Emerson, Wittgenstein, Sigmund Freud, and many other famous philosophers. It covers religion including but not limited to Judaism, Christianity, Islam, as well as the philosophy of science, naturalism, materialism, psychology, sociology, feminism, information theory, and new age concepts as well. A good book but not as good as Sophie's World though it does cover more topics and their are only a few pics throughout the whole book. I give it 4/5 stars. A good book for beginners. |
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Complete Idiot's Guide to Philosophy (The Complete Idiot's Guide) by Jay Stevenson (Paperback - March 17, 2003)
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