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Some Interesting Memories: A Paradoxical Life [Paperback]

Raymond Smullyan (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Book Description

1888710101 978-1888710106 November 2002
Can a lady be kissed without being touched? Raymond Smullyan has been providing the world with such puzzle fun, chess problems, and logic quizzes for a long time. Now, he reviews his life and how all of this got started in a way that is just as interesting as his previous entertainments.

Not surprisingly, there are more puzzles, but there are also new stories, many photos, and a look inside the many hobbies of the many personalities that is Raymond Smullyan.

Some Interesting Memories is a "rambly" account taking you inside university life, meeting musicians, mathematicians, magicians, then, off to Eastern Philosophy, making stereoscopic viewers, or installing a 40-speaker sound system.


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About the Author

There is not much Raymond Smullyan has not done. He is a philosopher, logician, mathematician, musician, magician, humorist, writer, and maker of marvelous puzzles. He lives in the Catskills with his wife.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 160 pages
  • Publisher: Thinkers' Press (November 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1888710101
  • ISBN-13: 978-1888710106
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.3 x 0.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #692,702 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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23 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Some Interesting Memories, June 19, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Some Interesting Memories: A Paradoxical Life (Paperback)
I have been a fan of the wonderful Raymond Smullyan for over 20 years, since "What is the Name of This Book?", and I was glad to find that this book is indeed more than a simple compendium of Smullyan's previous books (though, honestly, not all THAT much more than that). My first pleasant surprise was seeing that this book was published by Thinkers' Press, a noted chess book publisher (I am very partial to chess). Sadly, though, there were none of Smullyan's excellent retrograde analysis chess problems in this book (except for the ones on the pictured covers of his other books "Chess Mysteries of Sherlock Holmes" and "Chess Mysteries of the Arabian Knights"), and this book implied that Smullyan hadn't created any such problems since the 1950s. (Smullyan's last puzzle book, "The Riddle of Scheherazade", was rather a let-down on this score too since it had a chess diagram on its cover but no chess problems inside!)

I was also disappointed to read in this autobiographical work simply that he was born "in 1919" without a birthdate. Ever since "WitNoTB?", when Smullyan joked that he did not believe in astrology because he was a Gemini, I've been wondering when his birthday was since I too am a Gemini and I would be proud if our birthdays coincided!

And I was disappointed that Smullyan repeated a lack of rigor that he had made in "WitNoTB?" on the problem of what happens if an irresistible cannonball hits an immovable post. His answer, then and now, is that it is logically impossible for the two to exist in the same universe (the former is defined as a cannonball that knocks over everything it hits and the latter is defined as a post that is not knocked over by anything that hits it). Well, it's true that it is logically impossible for the former to hit the latter, but it hardly follows that it is logically impossible for both to exist in the same universe! It is perfectly possible for both to exist side-by-side in the same universe, just as long as the former never actually hits the latter. Indeed, in our very own real-life universe, there are plenty of both irresistible cannonballs (every cannonball that never hits anything at all, or knocks down what it does hit) and immovable posts (every post that is never hit by anything, or is not knocked down by what does hit it).

And finally, I was bothered by Smullyan's characterization of atheism as blind and static while religions have vision (albeit very distorted) and are dynamically growing toward the truth. Then, in the very next paragraph, Smullyan states that his favorite philosophical view along these lines is Cosmic Consciousness (that certain humans have evolved or developed great spiritual harmony and ability to directly see the truth and beauty in the cosmos), an atheistic philosophy (or at least one not inconsistent with atheism)! (The only example Smullyan gives in this book of someone who actually had Cosmic Consciousness (he elaborates on this in his latest book "Who Knows?") is Walt Whitman. It is interesting to contrast Smullyan's praise of Whitman's Cosmic Consciousness with Isaac Asimov's essay "Science and Beauty", reprinted in Smullyan's friend Martin Gardner's book "The Sacred Beetle and other Great Essays in Science", which chides Whitman for his disdain for the science of the "learn'd astronomer" that discovered vastly more truth and beauty in the Cosmos than Whitman was ever Conscious of.) So, would Smullyan state that an atheist who believes in Cosmic Consciousness is blind? What about an atheist who actually HAS Cosmic Consciousness? Actually, my characterization would be the exact opposite of Smullyan's: it is the religions that are static dead-ends, while it is atheism and science that have vision and are dynamically growing toward the truth! But I can live that discrepancy, since I guess it all depends on what kind of "truth" you are interested in (spiritual serenity and awareness or factual knowledge and awareness).

Don't get me wrong -- overall my impression of this book was quite positive (I hope Smullyan was at least a little bit embarrassed by the cheesy cover, though!), and Smullyan is a towering intellect who could poke a lot more holes in my logical thinking than I could ever quibble in his! The encomiums by other authors didn't add all that much to the book (though I quite liked Douglas R. Hofstadter's, as I am a fan of his as well). If you like Smullyan, or like thinking about mathemetical logic, I would definitely recommend this book.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A collection, not an autobiography, July 3, 2006
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This review is from: Some Interesting Memories: A Paradoxical Life (Paperback)
Smullyan is a very likeable character and that shows in this collection of random thoughts/bits/incidents/jokes/etc. from his life. But it's not an autobiography; there are too many gaps and missing details, as well as a general disorganized approach. More than anything, Smullyan needed a strong editor to ask the important questions, organize the material, and help turn his memories into his life's story. So 3 stars, and if you want to get a better sense for what Smullyan is like, watch the movie "This Film Needs No Title" by Tao Ruspoli.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable, but not so much original., August 29, 2006
This review is from: Some Interesting Memories: A Paradoxical Life (Paperback)
I read "What is the Name of This Book?" when I was thirteen, since then I have bought several of Smullyan's books, and every time I have fun reading his works. However this book is, as for originality, not up to my expectations.
As "rambly" account of Memories it is enjoyable but, as puzzle collection, suffers, honestly, a little excessive reintroduction to his main themes.
I would particularly recommend this book to every logic puzzles fan that doesn't know Smullyan yet
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
following true incident, retrograde analysis, logic puzzles, chess books, normal game, absolute pitch
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Martin Gardner, Sherlock Holmes, Raymond Smullyan, Cosmic Consciousness, Indiana University, Santa Claus, April Fool, Mark Twain, Professor Smullyan, Walt Whitman, Arabian Nights, Bertrand Russell, Far Rockaway, Leon Kirchner, Melvin Fitting, San Francisco, Scientific American, Elka Park, Manchester Guardian, University of Chicago, John Stuart Mill, Oscar Wilde, Professor Cohen, Roosevelt College
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