A basic 170-page primer of the main divisions of philosophy, and their progenitors and current leading lights. Knowledge; ethics and morality; metaphysics and spirituality; logic and infinity. Exercises and puzzles make you think, but the tone and content get too unnecessarily stiff for the interested but non-specialist readership aimed-at.
Good for the layman (me) and the academic. I learnt a lot from this book. It told me what I wanted to know and explained it clearly. It starts to ease you into the subject and gets deeper and more academic as you go further into the book. By two thirds in it was losing me a little as the maths concepts began to build, but by this time I had gained enough to be happy with my purchase of this book. It is a very good introduction to the subject and gives you enough information to investigate the different aspects from other sources if you so wish. It makes a good companion volume to the Bedside Book Of Paradoxes which I read prior to this. There are repetitions of some of the paradoxes covered in both books but this probably is hard to avoid as they are classic examples.
A decent book that is nicely written in two page bits. I found that the content got a little more difficult as I went (but logic isn't really my thing). A good book if you want to delve into philosophy a little bit at a time.