Posts

Showing posts with the label knowledge

#gabitaykoRefEd (Alexis Carrel)

[T]he slow progress of the knowledge of the human being, as compared with the splendid ascension of physics, astronomy, chemistry, and mechanics, is due to our ancestors' lack of leisure, to the complexity of the subject, and to the structure of our mind. Those obstacles are fundamental. There is no hope of eliminating them. They will always have to be overcome at the cost of strenuous effort. The knowledge of ourselves will never attain the elegant simplicity, the abstractness, and the beauty of physics. The factors that have retarded its development are not likely to vanish. We must realize clearly that the science of man is the most difficult of all sciences. —Alexis Carrel

#gabitaykoRefEd (David C. Schindler)

Ours is a decidedly non-philosophical, even anti-philosophical, age. This is not to say that we lack “philosophers,” of a certain sort; indeed, we have only too many. There is probably no age in history that has as many “professional philosophers” as we do, with scores of new PhDs waiting to compete for every slot that opens in the philosophy departments of scores upon scores of colleges and universities. Outside of the academy, we have an even greater array of “professional thinkers” of every sort. There is the novel phenomenon of the “think tank,” an institution whose employees are not paid to produce any tangible goods, but simply . . . to think. There is the rapidly growing sector of “white collar” labor, made up of those who work with their minds rather than with their hands, as do the “blue collar” workers. This sector includes, not only those whose thinking remains tied to industry in some respect—advertisement, management, and so forth—but those in more “liberal” fields, such...

Broadening Reason about

Image
Time [Read Full Text]

Books sorted (philosophy 1)

Image
The Metaphysical Presuppositions of Being-in-the-World by Caitlin Smith Gilson Human Cloning and Human Dignity by Leon Kass   The Recalictrant Art: Diotima's Letters to Holderlin and Related Missives by David Farrel Krell   Personal Knowledge by Michael Polanyi  A Treatise of Human Nature by David Hume   Poetics by Aristotle McLuhan: Pro and Con by Raymond Rosenthal Walden and Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau Understanding Media by Marshall McLuhan Robert Musil and the NonModern by Mark Freed     The Meaning of Love by Vladimir Solovyov

Library Booklist (L:iLB3)

Image
The Sacred Canopy by Peter Berger The Social Construction of Reality by Peter Berger  The Informed Heart by Bruno Bettelheim  Harvard Diary II by Robert Coles  Democracy in America Vol 1 by Alexis de Tocqueville  

Library Booklist (H:dS1b)

Image
The Friend and the Bridegroom by Sergius Bulgakov What the Heavens Declare by Lydia Jaeger   Science and Creation by Stanley Jaki   Newman to Converts by Stanley Jaki The Road to Science and the Ways to God by Stanley Jaki Paul Ricoeur and Narrative by Morny Joy  Personal Knowledge by Michael Polanyi  Oneself as Another by Paul Ricoeur  The Course of Recognition by Paul Ricoeur 

Library Booklist (H:bS2f)

Image
Whose Justice? Which Rationality? by Alasdair MacIntyre Modern Liberty and Its Discontent by Pierre Manent Tocqueville and the Nature of Democracy by Pierre Manent Memory, History, and Forgetting by Paul Ricoeur Anamnesis by Eric Voegelin Autobiographical Reflections by Eric Voegelin Modernity Without Restraints: Collected Works 5 by Eric Voegelin What is History and Other Late Unpublished Writings: Collected Works 28 by Eric Voegelin Hitler and the Germans by Eric Voegelin