Reddit Reddit reviews Philosophy Made Simple: A Complete Guide to the World's Most Important Thinkers and Theories

We found 6 Reddit comments about Philosophy Made Simple: A Complete Guide to the World's Most Important Thinkers and Theories. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Philosophy
Philosophy History & Survey
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Philosophy Made Simple: A Complete Guide to the World's Most Important Thinkers and Theories
Three Rivers Press CA
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6 Reddit comments about Philosophy Made Simple: A Complete Guide to the World's Most Important Thinkers and Theories:

u/hammiesink · 2 pointsr/DRReadingGroup

>Thank you (again!) but I probably require A Beginner's Guide to Aquinas: A Beginner's Guide. I'll see if I can source a copy though.

If that's the case, then just get this for a $1.73 in paperback. It does a decent job covering the main topics of philosophy (and, like most, it's Aquinas section is weak; but you can return to that later).

u/rocky13 · 2 pointsr/philosophy

>If I’m going to want to learn philosophy, I’m going to have to open a book and do it myself.


Hey, good for you! I'm working through Philosophy Made Simple.

https://www.amazon.com/Philosophy-Made-Simple-Complete-Important/dp/0385425333/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1519172180&sr=8-1&keywords=philosophy+made+simple

So far as I can tell it is doing a pretty good job of covering the basics.

Also, I'm sorry you had a bad experience. I agree a bad teacher does tend to put people off.

u/WaltWhitman11 · 1 pointr/philosophy

Richard Popkin's intro book Philosophy Made Simple is a pretty good resource I've found.

http://www.amazon.ca/Philosophy-Made-Simple-Richard-Popkin/dp/0385425333

u/xonoph · 1 pointr/philosophy

I recommend the Wadsworth website. This link is to their timeline series:
http://www.wadsworth.com/philosophy_d/special_features/timeline/timeline.html
They also have by topic and by philosopher.
Another good website, mentioned by others, is Squashed Philosophers, but it has a different purpose (to skim original works).

If you prefer audiobooks, there's a good lecture series, Great Minds of the Western Intellectual Tradition:
http://www.teach12.com/ttcx/coursedesclong2.aspx?cid=470
You probably don't need the whole 84 lectures, just a few of the bigger names like Plato, Descartes, Hume, Kant, Hegel, and Wittgenstein will give you a solid foundation.

For books, Philosophy Made Simple is a solid entry level intro,
http://www.amazon.ca/Philosophy-Made-Simple-Richard-Popkin/dp/0385425333

I also like from Socrates to Satre
http://www.amazon.com/Socrates-Sartre-Philosophic-Quest/dp/0553251619
Which goes in for just a few big names, and has a companion tv show.

There's no definitive anything, and probably better than these that I'm not aware of, but a good approach is to graze a little from a few different introductory books, aiming to familiarise yourself with terms and names - and then graze again to get a slightly deeper insight into how they connect etc.

u/[deleted] · 1 pointr/philosophy

Philosophy Made Simple

Pro tip: whenever reading philosophy, always have a dictionary (or mobile device) at the ready.

u/agnosgnosia · 1 pointr/IWantToLearn

Buy this book and [this book]9http://www.amazon.com/Informal-Logic-Pragmatic-Douglas-Walton/dp/0521713803/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1343375779&sr=1-2&keywords=informal+logic) and this book and this book.

I know that's a lot to read but you asked a question that has a really big answer to it. If you attempt to rush through a subject like "how to argue well" you'll just end up not achieving what you wanted to be able to do in the first place. I would start with Philosophy made simple first. It has summaries of major philosophical ideas and at the end introduces logic. Taht's where you'll get your feet with modus tolens, modus ponens, affirming the consequent, necessity, sufficiency and all that jazz. Good luck!