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Post by deuceswild on Oct 13, 2004 11:52:17 GMT -5
Open topic. Tell us who your favorite philosopher is and why. I'm bringing up this subject since the announcement that Jacques Derrida passed away last week. www.hydra.umn.edu/derrida/I'm not personally familiar with his philosophy, but from what I understand he had a reputation for being a very complex thinker.
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Post by eufrenio on Oct 27, 2004 14:34:26 GMT -5
Nietzsche.
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Mutt
New Member
Mongrels have more fun
Posts: 25
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Post by Mutt on Oct 27, 2004 18:49:13 GMT -5
Rene Descartes
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Post by Artemisia on Oct 27, 2004 19:05:38 GMT -5
I like two philosophers who have very different viewpoints - Epicurus and Plato.
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Post by Igu on Oct 28, 2004 18:36:20 GMT -5
Nietzsche.
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Post by deuceswild on Oct 28, 2004 23:33:12 GMT -5
Come on...you didn't think it would be that easy did you? Why are these thinkers so important?
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Post by One Humanity on Oct 31, 2004 23:17:20 GMT -5
Till now: Plato, Aristotle, Kant and Schopenhauer.
There is much philosophy in "rhetoric" aphorisms as well, though,
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Post by Faelcind on Oct 31, 2004 23:26:03 GMT -5
Lao Tzu. I beleive that there is an internal truth like the tao that all humans share, a innate of the truest truth, as it where.. A moral sense to guide us If we listen to the best parts of our selves. I love the concept of wu wei especial as martial artist. Finally I love the idea of looking to nature as way to find the way the truth.
Kahlil Gibran. I am an atheist but the his book the prophet and the Tao Te Ching deeply inform my personal philosophy of life. His words are poetic and beautifull and his philosophy of accepting totally life and engaging in it with all your self is as close to the truth as I see it as anything I have ever read.
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Post by vela on Nov 19, 2004 20:52:52 GMT -5
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Post by Igu on Nov 22, 2004 5:50:40 GMT -5
-Nieztsche, Cause he's the best Just read his books. -Nieztsche did not fall in the christian trap by follwing blindessly the moral of his time, He was the first philosopher to re-define the good and the evil, he took back these two concepts to their original meaning, the one that prevailed before God fornicates with Mary. -There's a sort of Social darwinism in his ideology. -He's anti-communist. -He lifts up the postion of the elite -morally- where these people had -and still have- a big feeling of guiltiness.
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Post by polyglotUSA on Nov 27, 2004 9:45:33 GMT -5
Marx, most absolutely.
As did the main character in LeGuins' "The Disposessed", he turned the fascist/elitist ideas of Nietszche(Rand)on its head, stating that the "gifted" had the responsibility to be fully integrating themselves into society in order to become an ACTIVE part of the dialectic, rather than becoming fascist/"individualist" tyrants hovering above the rest of society as if they were gods.
Fascism and "individualism" are but two sides of the same coin, anyway.
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Post by Melnorme on Nov 27, 2004 10:32:45 GMT -5
Marx, most absolutely. As did the main character in LeGuins' "The Disposessed", he turned the fascist/elitist ideas of Nietszche(Rand)on its head, stating that the "gifted" had the responsibility to be fully integrating themselves into society in order to become an ACTIVE part of the dialectic, rather than becoming fascist/"individualist" tyrants hovering above the rest of society as if they were gods. Fascism and "individualism" are but two sides of the same coin, anyway. Ha, it's about time we had a designated forum Marxist.
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Post by Dienekes on Nov 27, 2004 18:16:24 GMT -5
My favorite philosopher is Aristotle, the inventor of logic and the founder of biology.
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Post by pconroy on Dec 1, 2004 16:52:38 GMT -5
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Post by Italianissimo on Dec 1, 2004 19:06:11 GMT -5
I prefer Heidegger and Baudrillard. They both root back to Nietzsche, though. St. Thomas Aquinas is my all time favorite, although his influence was most definitely Aristotle.
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