This classic introduction to philosophy explores the major fields, problems, theories, and personalities of philosophy through the biographies and writing of leading thinkers. Contemporary Applications sections in each chapter show how classic philosophy connects to contemporary issues. Each chapter begins with a biography of a great philosopher, combines simple, clear explanations with short selections from classic texts, and focuses on WHAT the great philosophers said, and WHY they said it. Theory of Knowledge. Philosophy of Science. Ethical Theory. The Ethical Dimensions of Medicine. Social and Political Philosophy. Philosophy of Art. Philosophy of Religion. For anyone interested in Philosophy.
Robert Paul Wolff was an American political philosopher and professor emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Wolff has written widely on topics in political philosophy, including Marxism, tolerance (against liberalism and in favor of anarchism), political justification, and democracy.
A solid intro to Philosophy. It introduced me to all of the basic subfields and their major contributors. One thing I was increasingly frustrated by was that (though not directly a fault of the author) all of the “worthwhile” philosophical thinking has been done by OLD WHITE MEN. I’m kind of tired of that. They definitely do have profound ideas about all sorts of everything—social justice, ethics, epistemology, art, being. But aren’t we limiting our horizon by only reading the thoughts of those who have been in power? That in mind, this book was liberal for its time. I think it was written in like the 70s. I read it, in spite of its antiquity, because it was my dads intro philosophy textbook. If we hope to understand our society and its problems today, it might help to know a bit about the societies and their problems then, for what is today but a subsequent iteration of yesterdays?