BookTenTiger
He / Him
Do you have a personal favorite philosophy / philosopher?Philosophy. I did four years of undergrad in it, then grad school to the PhD, then professorship right up until this past year.
Do you have a personal favorite philosophy / philosopher?Philosophy. I did four years of undergrad in it, then grad school to the PhD, then professorship right up until this past year.
Sort of, yeah. It's mostly between Bertrand Russell and Edmund Husserl for me.Do you have a personal favorite philosophy / philosopher?
Husserl is probably the most important philosopher since Heigl. Way more interesting and practical than Heigl, too.Sort of, yeah. It's mostly between Bertrand Russell and Edmund Husserl for me.
You?
I think the prof just liked me. I was pretty engaged, particularly in class discussion. I can only imagine what reading some of those other papers was like lol.The teachers liked my vocabulary. In grade 5 I tested at a grade 9 level. Big words meant big grades![]()
Russell is brilliant.Sort of, yeah. It's mostly between Bertrand Russell and Edmund Husserl for me.
You?
He changed my whole philosophy of math and, with it, my understanding of the metaphysics of logic.Husserl is probably the most important philosopher since Heigl. Way more interesting and practical than Heigl, too.
I suppose so, but think of it this way a moment: Russell borrowed greatly from Frege, right? And Frege and Husserl were not nearly so far from each other. Never mind the hardcore empiricism Russell is (rightly) famous for; just think of the method of philosophical analysis he used. That has Frege written all over it.Kind of an odd duck pairing, in a lot of ways, Russell and Husserl.
Aquinas is one of the great minds of all human history, and I say this as a man who also is not a Thomist. He truly was one of the all-time geniuses in human history. Even where I disagree with him, I cannot help but admire him and love the clarity and comprehensiveness of his mind.I'm not a Thomist by a long shot, but Aquinas is probably still one of my favorite philosphers to read to get a full interesting of an issue. Better to read in Latin, and requires some grounding in the Scholastic method of dialectic, but very fruitful even when he's wrong (which is not infrequently).
The teachers liked my vocabulary. In grade 5 I tested at a grade 9 level. Big words meant big grades![]()
My 6th grade teacher would send me off to one of the library resource rooms with page numbers from the dictionary from which I was to define words, using my own terms. It wasn't as punishment; he was allowing me to work beyond the rest of the class. The results made him remark that I was the "most succinct" student he had ever taught which, rather ironically, I had to look up in the dictionaryIn grade school, when we got in trouble we had to stay in from recess after lunch and copy pages out of the dictionary.
Between third grade and sixth grade, I'd read and copied Webster's 3rd Ed. Collegiate Dictionary cover-to-cover.![]()
How relevant is Sartre these days? Ever since reading "La Nausée" in French class, I've subscribed to his brand of Existentialism.Sort of, yeah. It's mostly between Bertrand Russell and Edmund Husserl for me.
You?