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İnsan Yemenin Nesi Yanlış? : 33 Felsefi Muamma

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Peter Cave şaşırtıcı paradokslarla, mantık oyunlarıyla ve klasik muammalarla dolu kitabında hayatın en önemli sorularını mizahi bir üslupla önümüze getiriyor.

İnsan Yemenin Nesi Yanlış? Öyküler ve karikatürlerin yardımıyla elimize siyasetten aşka, ahlâktan sanata uzanan bir mönü tutuşturarak hepimizi şahane bir ziyafete davet ediyor.

Her derde deva bir hap olabilir mi?, Ölmüş bir tarihsel kişinin yeniden yaşama döndüğüne inanmak akla sığabilir mi?, Olacakları engelleyecek gücümüzün olmadığı doğru mudur?, Devlete ve yasalarına uymak zorunda mıyız?, Tehlikedeki türleri neden kurtaracakmışız?, Erkelerle kadınlar eşit... midir sahiden?, "Evet" ne zaman "Hayır" demektir?, Beyinlerimizden fazlası mı var bizde?, Şefkat bitti mi?, Ağustos böceği olmak daha mı iyi?, Nedir aşıkların arzuladığı?, Her istediğini elde etmenin yolu var mıdır?, Mucizelere inanmak rasyonel olabilir mi?, Irmak aynıyken su nasıl farklı olabilir?, Neyin doğru olduğu yargısına nasıl varırız?, Evren bizden ne kadar bağımsızdır?, Yaşamlarımızı nasıl anlayabiliriz?

216 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 2008

43 people are currently reading
318 people want to read

About the author

Peter Cave

61 books23 followers
Peter Cave lectures in philosophy for The Open University and New York University (London). He frequently contributes to philosophy magazines and journals, lectures around the world, and has scripted and presented philosophy programmes for the BBC. He is the author of eight books on philosophy, including Humanism: A Beginner’s Guide and the bestselling Can a Robot be Human?: 33 Perplexing Philosophy Puzzles.

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5 stars
26 (10%)
4 stars
51 (19%)
3 stars
102 (39%)
2 stars
60 (23%)
1 star
18 (7%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews
Profile Image for Nicky.
4,138 reviews1,115 followers
February 19, 2012
Another book of philosophical puzzles -- a lot of which I was familiar with, somehow, from doing Religious Studies at GCSE and A Level... It includes stuff like the Ontological Argument, anyway. Like the other book I've read by Peter Cave, it's interesting and presents difficult puzzles quite flippantly. It cross-references the puzzles, so if you're interested in a particular line of thought, you can follow it right through the book.
Profile Image for LKM.
384 reviews33 followers
April 19, 2014
Was it me or were most of those puzzles neither puzzling nor perplexing? Maybe I'm just not cut out for philosophy... Anyway, it wasn't a bad book, and the writing style was in between annoying me and trying to be funny (and sort of not managing, thus falling back on 'annoying me').
Profile Image for Solor.
165 reviews12 followers
August 20, 2012
Doc Cave manages to make those paradoxes even more puzzling than they actually are. I really couldn't follow most of his reasoning. I found Paradoxes from A to Z by Michael Clark a far superior insightful reading.
Profile Image for Martin.
27 reviews5 followers
June 11, 2012
Interesting ideas, however I did not enjoy the way the book was written.
Profile Image for Jay Sejpal.
28 reviews1 follower
November 30, 2016
some of the philosophical concepts are good and thought provoking however writing style of author makes it very difficult to understand the concept for the people who are naive to philosophy.
Profile Image for Chloe.
56 reviews1 follower
April 20, 2018
The setup of this book is: ' You think A don't you? Well what if you though B instead?!' - the issue being that in most cases I didn't think A to start with, so there was never a 'puzzle' moment or a shock at seeing the world in a new light.

I hated how the author tried to be funny, pages were wasted whilst he wrote 'witty' metaphors that often fell flat. I think it suffers from trying to make philosophy palatable for the masses - which it fails miserably at anyway.

Either philosophy isn't for me, or this is a terrible example of what it out there.
Profile Image for Himanshu Karmacharya.
1,158 reviews114 followers
April 24, 2018
Interesting title but no so interesting contents. There are many interesting ideas in the book but there are generally more questions than answers and some unnecessary paradoxes as well which are very convoluted.
17 reviews
May 27, 2020
作者的許多天馬行空例子讓腦袋動起來,思考起我們習以為常的事,但或許英式英文較不易翻譯,有些文句有點不易理解。
28 reviews7 followers
January 9, 2021
Yazar onemli felsefi konulara ve tartismalara cok anlasilir bir dille deginmiş, tavsiye ederim.
Profile Image for Mike McLean.
31 reviews2 followers
March 2, 2021
Not very impressed with this book, most of the paradoxes presented were neither puzzling nor profound.
Profile Image for Nour.
331 reviews90 followers
July 28, 2013
The book started really well, then it crashed downhill.

The author is pretty hilarious. I enjoyed his writing style very much.

The book speaks about paradoxes so it is fair to assume that the writer will speak from every possible angle, right? Well that was not the case. I felt that a lot of things have been left out. At the beginning, it was not as palpable as much as it was as I was reading further into it, but it reached a point where I could not ignore it anymore.
Maybe the author did that on purpose, who knows? But I think since the book speaks about paradoxes that these points should not be left out.

Another point is that he fails at comparing. He compares things together that... well cannot be compared together.
Are you an idiot or what?

Oh, and the author usually presents every chapter and paradox with an argument, and some of these arguments are very very poor. And in some points, I felt that the author failed at being objective. You are talking about PARADOXES, so when explaining the two points of view, you should NOT look biased, right? Well, his opinion generally matched mine, but that does NOT mean that I will ignore this point.

the book then started boring me out except the last chapter which was really good. And I think the end was a really good end.
Have a look:
When the mountain flowers are blooming,
Their scent carries their meaning
Profile Image for Sean Goh.
1,527 reviews90 followers
March 6, 2014
We often engage in activities, seeking achievements - reaching the mountain top, discovering how the story ends, satisfying yearnings of passion - yet we also resist reaching the ends, for having achieved them, there is the anti-climax, the sadness, the emptiness.


There's a charm in not saying or thinking, and merely experiencing.


I probably would have enjoyed KI.

Profile Image for Петър Стойков.
Author 2 books330 followers
January 26, 2015
Въпреки интересното си заглавие, въпреки ясно заявената неприязън на автора към постмодернизма във философията и въпреки моя нестихващ апетит към популярна философия, налага се да кажа, че това четиво не предлага нищо смислено и зслужаващо прочитане. Подходът към 33-те философски пъзела е плитък и елементарен.
Profile Image for Douglas Graney.
517 reviews6 followers
May 2, 2009
Fun read. Some useful essays for my Philosophy class.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
24 reviews
March 10, 2011
Not really that exciting, but pretty comical and thought provoking.
Profile Image for Jenny.
887 reviews11 followers
July 28, 2011
I have no patience for working through the nuts and bolts of philosophical puzzles, so I read this book very fast. Not as interesting as the title.
Profile Image for Kent.
107 reviews
January 10, 2013
Covered too much ground in too little space. I used it for a bathroom book, which was ideal since I got it a chapter at a time, in small doses.
Profile Image for BridgetT.
393 reviews12 followers
May 10, 2013
me thinks one really need to be in the mood to read this one. might enjoy it if i had a bit more time to ponder the dilemmas. i'll keep coming back to it. food for thought.
Profile Image for Christopher.
371 reviews12 followers
October 13, 2013
enjoyable little read. each chapter is about 6 pages long. some were quite provoking, others were only puzzles because the assumptions were odd.
Profile Image for Harley.
36 reviews
August 26, 2016
It got me thinking a little bit, but not on anything I haven't already spent time thinking on. Also, I've heard many of these topics discussed in a more interesting way. It was okay, though.
Profile Image for Neowuf.
45 reviews
August 8, 2014
This book is great for philosophers, not as deep, not a introduction, but something like a conversation I would love to have in a bar with a friend philosopher.
Profile Image for Lee Belbin.
1,291 reviews8 followers
November 30, 2014
A series of philosophical scenarios along the lines of "Have you stopped beating your wife?". Thought provoking at times. A fair read for those inclined.
Profile Image for Bülent Duagi.
86 reviews15 followers
March 20, 2015
So many puzzles, lots of food for thought.
Didn't enjoy the writing style though.
Profile Image for Carmen.
86 reviews
July 7, 2015
Two interesting chapters. The rest is verbal diarrhea.
Profile Image for Matt.
29 reviews
October 24, 2018
Good intro to philosophy reading. Fortunately the chapters are short and succinct, so if you don't like a chapter then an enjoyable one might only be a couple of page turns away.
Profile Image for Salem Lorot.
96 reviews29 followers
March 26, 2017
Well, I don't have philosophy background, therefore reading something on it has a way of changing the way I perceive things, something which this book does. It helps me question even the mundane. I like the style adopted of introductory stories in a number of chapters. Also, I appreciate that the book is written in plain language which I can follow well.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews

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