The Philosophical Dialogue PDF Download

Are you looking for read ebook online? Search for your book and save it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Download The Philosophical Dialogue PDF full book. Access full book title The Philosophical Dialogue.

The Philosophical Dialogue

The Philosophical Dialogue
Author: Vittorio Hösle
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Dialogue
ISBN: 9780268030971

Download The Philosophical Dialogue Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Hosle covers the development of the philosophical dialogue beginning with Plato to the late twentieth century, providing a taxonomy and doctrine of categories.


Philosophical Conversations

Philosophical Conversations
Author: Robert M. Martin
Publisher: Broadview Press
Total Pages: 353
Release: 2005-11-08
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1770482164

Download Philosophical Conversations Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Philosophical Conversations is a light, informal, and contemporary introduction to the study of philosophy. Using a dialogue format, Robert M. Martin delves into the traditional questions of philosophy in a manner that readers will find engaging. These substantive yet entertaining conversations emphasize that philosophical questions are contested and open-ended. The characters in each dialogue advocate different answers to questions on religion, ethics, personal identity, and other topics equitably and without naming any clear winners. Philosophic positions are presented with maximum clarity and persuasiveness, so that readers can appreciate all sides of an issue and make their own choices. An excellent tool for newcomers to philosophy, Philosophical Conversations provides the necessary background for further study while vividly portraying the back-and-forth argument that is essential to the philosophical method.


Philosophical Dialogues

Philosophical Dialogues
Author: Nina Witoszek
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 518
Release: 1999
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9780847689293

Download Philosophical Dialogues Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

This volume documents the progress of Arne Naess's ecophilosophy from its inception to the late 1990s. It includes Naess's most crucial polemics with leading thinkers, drawn from sources as diverse as scholarly articles, correspondence, TV interviews and unpublished exchanges. The book testifies to the sceptical and self-correcting aspects of Naess's vision, which has deepened and broadened to include third-world and feminist perspectives.


Socrates and Philosophy in the Dialogues of Plato

Socrates and Philosophy in the Dialogues of Plato
Author: Sandra Peterson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 311
Release: 2011-03-10
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1139497979

Download Socrates and Philosophy in the Dialogues of Plato Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

In Plato's Apology, Socrates says he spent his life examining and questioning people on how best to live, while avowing that he himself knows nothing important. Elsewhere, however, for example in Plato's Republic, Plato's Socrates presents radical and grandiose theses. In this book Sandra Peterson offers a hypothesis which explains the puzzle of Socrates' two contrasting manners. She argues that the apparently confident doctrinal Socrates is in fact conducting the first step of an examination: by eliciting his interlocutors' reactions, his apparently doctrinal lectures reveal what his interlocutors believe is the best way to live. She tests her hypothesis by close reading of passages in the Theaetetus, Republic and Phaedo. Her provocative conclusion, that there is a single Socrates whose conception and practice of philosophy remain the same throughout the dialogues, will be of interest to a wide range of readers in ancient philosophy and classics.


Conversation and Self-Sufficiency in Plato

Conversation and Self-Sufficiency in Plato
Author: Alex Long
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 193
Release: 2013-04-11
Genre: History
ISBN: 0199695350

Download Conversation and Self-Sufficiency in Plato Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

A. G. Long presents a new account of the importance of conversation in Plato's philosophy. He provides close studies of eight dialogues, including some of Plato's most famous works, and traces the emergence of internal dialogue or self-questioning as an alternative to the Socratic conversation from which Plato starts.


Dialectic and Dialogue

Dialectic and Dialogue
Author: Francisco Gonzalez
Publisher: Northwestern University Press
Total Pages: 429
Release: 1998-11-25
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0810115301

Download Dialectic and Dialogue Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Dialectic and Dialogue seeks to define the method and the aims of Plato's dialectic in both the "inconclusive" dialogues and the dialogues that describe and practice a method of hypothesis. Departing from most treatments of Plato, Gonzalez argues that the philosophical knowledge at which dialectic aims is nonpropositional, practical, and reflexive. The result is a reassessment of how Plato understood the nature of philosophy.


Radical Skepticism and the Shadow of Doubt

Radical Skepticism and the Shadow of Doubt
Author: Eli Hirsch
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2017-12-28
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1350033871

Download Radical Skepticism and the Shadow of Doubt Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Radical Skepticism and the Shadow of Doubt brings something new to epistemology both in content and style. At the outset we are asked to imagine a person named Vatol who grows up in a world containing numerous people who are brains-in-vats and who hallucinate their entire lives. Would Vatol have reason to doubt whether he himself is in contact with reality? If he does have reason to doubt, would he doubt, or is it impossible for a person to have such doubts? And how do we ourselves compare to Vatol? After reflection, can we plausibly claim that Vatol has reason to doubt, but we don't? These are the questions that provide the novel framework for the debates in this book. Topics that are treated here in significantly new ways include: the view that we ought to doubt only when we philosophize; epistemological “dogmatism”; and connections between radical doubt and “having a self.” The book adopts the innovative form of a “dialogue/play.” The three characters, who are Talmud students as well as philosophers, hardly limit themselves to pure philosophy, but regale each other with Talmudic allusions, reminiscences, jokes, and insults. For them the possibility of doubt emerges as an existential problem with potentially deep emotional significance. Setting complex arguments about radical skepticism within entertaining dialogue, this book can be recommended for both beginners and specialists.


Talking Philosophy

Talking Philosophy
Author: Bryan Magee
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2001
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9780192854179

Download Talking Philosophy Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Based on a highly successful BBC television series, this book presents fifteen dialogues between author and broadcaster Bryan Magee and some of the most important thinkers of the twentieth century. Isaiah Berlin considers the fundamental question, "What is philosophy?," A. J. Ayer reviews logical positivism, and Iris Murdoch talks about the relation between philosophy and literature. Moral philosophy, political philosophy, the philosophy of language, and the philosophy of science are all treated in depth by the thinkers who have shaped these fields--including Noam Chomsky, W. V. O. Quine, and Herbert Marcuse. Written in an informal, conversational style, even the most difficult philosophical ideas are made accessible to the general reader.


Imaginary Philosophical Dialogues

Imaginary Philosophical Dialogues
Author: Kenneth Binmore
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2020-12-23
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 3030653870

Download Imaginary Philosophical Dialogues Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

How would Plato have responded if his student Aristotle had ever challenged his idea that our senses perceive nothing more than the shadows cast upon a wall by a true world of perfect ideals? What would Charles Darwin have said to Karl Marx about his claim that dialectical materialism is a scientific theory of evolution? How would Jean-Paul Sartre have reacted to Simone de Beauvoir’s claim that the Marquis de Sade was a philosopher worthy of serious attention? This light-hearted book proposes answers to such questions by imagining dialogues between thirty-three pairs of philosophical sages who were alive at the same time. Sometime famous sages get a much rougher handling than usual, as when Adam Smith beards Immanuel Kant in his Konigsberg den. Sometimes neglected or maligned sages get a chance to say what they really believed, as when Epicurus explains that he wasn’t epicurean. Sometimes the dialogues are about the origins of modern concepts, as when Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat discuss their invention of probability, or when John Nash and John von Neumann discuss the creation of game theory. Even in these scientific cases, the intention is that the protagonists come across as fallible human beings like the rest of us, rather than the intellectual paragons of philosophical textbooks.


Plato's Philosophers

Plato's Philosophers
Author: Catherine H. Zuckert
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 898
Release: 2009-08-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0226993388

Download Plato's Philosophers Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Faced with the difficult task of discerning Plato’s true ideas from the contradictory voices he used to express them, scholars have never fully made sense of the many incompatibilities within and between the dialogues. In the magisterial Plato’s Philosophers, Catherine Zuckert explains for the first time how these prose dramas cohere to reveal a comprehensive Platonic understanding of philosophy. To expose this coherence, Zuckert examines the dialogues not in their supposed order of composition but according to the dramatic order in which Plato indicates they took place. This unconventional arrangement lays bare a narrative of the rise, development, and limitations of Socratic philosophy. In the drama’s earliest dialogues, for example, non-Socratic philosophers introduce the political and philosophical problems to which Socrates tries to respond. A second dramatic group shows how Socrates develops his distinctive philosophical style. And, finally, the later dialogues feature interlocutors who reveal his philosophy’s limitations. Despite these limitations, Zuckert concludes, Plato made Socrates the dialogues’ central figure because Socrates raises the fundamental human question: what is the best way to live? Plato’s dramatization of Socratic imperfections suggests, moreover, that he recognized the apparently unbridgeable gap between our understandings of human life and the nonhuman world. At a time when this gap continues to raise questions—about the division between sciences and the humanities and the potentially dehumanizing effects of scientific progress—Zuckert’s brilliant interpretation of the entire Platonic corpus offers genuinely new insights into worlds past and present.