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  LiveWire / Teen Forums / The Intellectual Forum / Viewing Topic

How many of you have actually read some or one of the following?
Replies: 59Last Post April 28 8:13am by Nikki
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Choice Votes Percent  
I've read more than one work by more than one of those listed authors. 30 32%
I've read more than one work by one of those authors. 9 9%
I've read one work by one of those authors. 20 21%
I've never read any of those. 18 19%
Who are those writers? 1 1%
I don't understand the poll I cheated to pass the Intellectual Test (which wasn't hard). 1 1%
I don't read. 1 1%
I've played with PlayDoh before. 11 12%
Vote Now! 91 Votes Cast
Blackadder


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Quote: from exceedinglyrare at 2:42 pm on Oct. 30, 2007

Quote: from Blackadder at 9:37 am on Oct. 30, 2007

the foundations of Philosophy are way before Plato's  time -- they probably sprout from the moment humans gained a consciousness -- the ability to think is philosophy's only pre-requisite.

And yet, if you do not study Plato, you don't really have a base to look at where much of modern philosophy stems from, nor do you really have a base to argue philosophy, particularly Platonic philosophy. It leads to a stunting of sorts.


I contend that children need not to read shakespeare to understand and appreciate the english language.  

there are blenty of tales by modern writers that are both more relevant, and more accessible (fuck "old english") to modern students.

'Of mice and men' is a nice example, about racism and the 1930's deppression, I  remember it being the only book I was forced to read for my lit class and actually enjoying.   --


Philosophy is much the same, Modern texts are (generally) more relevant and more accessible, If plato ever wrote something of value, then chances are some modern author has written of it nicely.

so in short, I completly disagree, idea's are completly independant of books, or thier authors.

when studying philosophy, the basic foundation should not be any words of philosophers, but your own ideas.

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9:44 am on Oct. 30, 2007 | Joined Oct. 2004 | 891 Days Active
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exceedinglyrare


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My main problem with your viewpoint isn't so much that I don't think you'll have a real basis for philosophy, but more that you're really limiting yourself by refusing to look at something and just arbitrarily dismissing it as unimportant and irrelevent. You'd be all up in arms if this was a topic about evolution and someone said, essentially, "fuck evolution and fuck Darwin, I don't need to learn either of them."

You don't need to read Plato or Aristotle, but you're doing yourself a great disservice by refusing to read them simply for the purpose of being contrary and controversial.

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9:50 am on Oct. 30, 2007 | Joined Oct. 2005 | 749 Days Active
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Blackadder


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Quote: from exceedinglyrare at 4:50 pm on Oct. 30, 2007

My main problem with your viewpoint isn't so much that I don't think you'll have a real basis for philosophy, but more that you're really limiting yourself by refusing to look at something and just arbitrarily dismissing it as unimportant and irrelevent. You'd be all up in arms if this was a topic about evolution and someone said, essentially, "fuck evolution and fuck Darwin, I don't need to learn either of them."  

You don't need to read Plato or Aristotle, but you're doing yourself a great disservice by refusing to read them simply for the purpose of being contrary and controversial.


1) As I said, Ideas Are independant from authorship.


2) Your example is also a bad one, who the hell quotes ancient sources when dealing with science?  --- needless to say modern works on evolution should be read over darwins account.

3) we all lack the time to do and be everything in our lives, I won't read plato not simply to be controversial, but rather because there are better things I can do with the limited time i have availible.


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1:18 pm on Oct. 30, 2007 | Joined Oct. 2004 | 891 Days Active
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1337 HAXXOR


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wow the op is a complete and utter fuck up

socrates and all that he wrote...

aristotle fucked up science for god knows how long making him the bigest fuck up of the bunch.

even still they do provide a decent starting point and a useful reference in thinking about philosophy


1:20 pm on Oct. 30, 2007 | Joined June 2006 | 42 Days Active
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exceedinglyrare


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I'm not even talking about the ideas presented, but rather how much you're limiting yourself by outright refusing to have anything to do with them in favor of more "modern" sources.

Furthermore, The Symposium (Plato) and The Poetics (Aristotle) are both less than 100 pages, so unless you are an excruciatingly slow reader, the "I have no time" excuse doesn't really fly. Magazines nowadays are longer than that.

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1:21 pm on Oct. 30, 2007 | Joined Oct. 2005 | 749 Days Active
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theatreminelli


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I read a bit of Aristotle for my degree. And I also read a lot on his coercive system of tragedy because I am a theatre geek, and I thought much of what he was saying especially about Catharsis, made quite a bit of sense.

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Heavenly Eve


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they can't rly be avoided... and also with Kant, Quine... and those guys, you know?

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yoursForeverxx


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I have never read any.  I have recently become interested in philosophy, and I want to read those books.  I think we may have to read them for our curriculum, and I fully expect to enjoy them.  

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Blackadder


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Quote: from exceedinglyrare at 8:21 pm on Oct. 30, 2007

I'm not even talking about the ideas presented, but rather how much you're limiting yourself by outright refusing to have anything to do with them in favor of more "modern" sources.  

Furthermore, The Symposium (Plato) and The Poetics (Aristotle) are both less than 100 pages, so unless you are an excruciatingly slow reader, the "I have no time" excuse doesn't really fly. Magazines nowadays are longer than that.


it took me 6 hrs to get through brave new world.

anyhow, this is all getting old hat



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6:11 pm on Oct. 30, 2007 | Joined Oct. 2004 | 891 Days Active
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branflakes


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Yeah, Socrates wasn't an author.. haha. 10char10char10char

6:40 pm on Oct. 30, 2007 | Joined Jan. 2007 | 429 Days Active
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exceedinglyrare


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Quote: from Blackadder at 9:11 pm on Oct. 30, 2007

it took me 6 hrs to get through brave new world.

 

anyhow, this is all getting old hat


And I'm pretty sure both of those works are shorter than Brave New World, and are written in dialogue form, so they're easier to read.

But you're right. Whatev.

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7:44 pm on Oct. 30, 2007 | Joined Oct. 2005 | 749 Days Active
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Amelle


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No I have never. I really don't have much of an interest in philosophy.

10:25 am on Nov. 19, 2007 | Joined Nov. 2007 | 129 Days Active
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Illyas


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The written discussions of Socrates are probably not completely representative of Socrates.

Actually not true. Plato studied under Socrates. Hence his theories, if vaguely different, were still of the same nature.

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and some days you're the statue"- DefaultTo0


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funkydancer


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I read Beowulf in tenth grade for school, but because of that I never liked it. Though, I admire the philosophers you've listed, and I plan on reading some of their work come college next year when I hopefull have time.

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Pisciculus


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ive read something by Socrates, but i am not at home and therefore can not remember what it was called.  Ive also read Beowulf.  

Is there any particular reason you are asking or just an interest in who's read them?

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