What philosophical books do you read?

  • Thread starter Thread starter alitaptap
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
A

alitaptap

Guest
I guess some CAF members have their favorite philosophical writings.Let’s share and make a sort of reading list, can we?

So, what philosophical books do you read? Do you have any favorite authors?
 
I guess some CAF members have their favorite philosophical writings.Let’s share and make a sort of reading list, can we?

So, what philosophical books do you read? Do you have any favorite authors?
Everything by Peter Kreeft!
 
I guess some CAF members have their favorite philosophical writings.Let’s share and make a sort of reading list, can we?

So, what philosophical books do you read? Do you have any favorite authors?
My top ten would be;;
  1. Bl. Duns Scotus
  2. St. Augustine
  3. Aristotle
  4. William of Ockham
  5. Francis Mayron
  6. St. Thomas Aquinas
  7. Emmanual Kant
  8. Alexander of Hales
  9. Henry of Ghent
  10. William of Alnwick
 
Saint Thomas Aquinas - Summae, De Ente et Essentia, Commentaries on Aristotle
Blessed Duns Scotus - Philosophical Writings
Aristotle - Metaphysics, Politics, Nicomachean Ethics, Organon
Plato - Timaeus, Republic, Laws
Seneca - On the Brevity of Life
Saint Augustine - Confessions
Dostoevsky - Brothers Karamazov
Jacques Maritain - Natural Law
Etienne Gilson - Aristotle to Darwin and Back, Christian Philosophy series
Mortimer J. Adler - How to Read a Book
Frederick Copleston - Aquinas
Alasdair Macintyre - After Virtue

Can’t really think of any more right now off the top of my head. I’m trying to read through the whole Great Books series, which has way more than these, mostly classics of philosophy.
 
I guess some CAF members have their favorite philosophical writings.Let’s share and make a sort of reading list, can we?
So, what philosophical books do you read? Do you have any favorite authors?
At this stage of my life I’m interested in making sense out of what I’ve devoted most of my life to–science–and what my new found faith is (Catholicism) so I’m reading books on the intersections of these. The papers given at the conferences called by JPII on science, philosophy and religion at Castle Gondalfo (sp?): “Physics, Philosophy and Theology–a Common Quest for Understanding”, “Quantum Mechanics–Scientific Perspectives on Divine Action”.“Cosmology (exact title escapes me and I’ve lent the book out)–Scientific Perspectives on Divine Action”; “On Physics and Philosophy” by Bernard d’Espagnat’; books by Keith Ward; “Divine Providence–the Molinist Account” by Thomas Flint; “Laws and Symmetry” by Bas van Fraassen, “Quantum Reality–Theory and Philosophy” by Jonathan Allday; books on the philosophical foundations of probability by Richard Jeffrey and Bas van Fraassen; “Studies in Scientific Realism” by Andre Kukla; books on scientific realism by Thomas Koons; “What happens after Pascal’s Wager–Living faith and rational belief” by Daniel Garber; books by Nancey Pearcey on the intersection of science and theology; books on the philosophy of mind by John R. Searle; and finally (and it isn’t exactly philosophy or theology) “Modern Physics and Ancient Faith” by Stephen Barr.
 
I’m not going to post the usual ones that are likely to be common to us, so here goes:

1} MJ Adler~***How to Read a Book ***(Because it’s useless to read if you can’t think critically)

2} G. Cerminara~***Handbook for Religious Sanity ***(The actual title is awful, but the contents vital.)

3} F Merrell-Wolff~***The Philosophy of Consciousness Without an Object ***(Because Christians/Catholics generally have no clue of what non-dualism is about and put their foot in their mouth about it all the way through.)

4} D Ladinski~***Love Poems from God ***(Because it anthologizes 12 Poets, 6 of them Catholic, 6 not, and they have an astounding congruency; have Kleenex handy.)

5} K. Wilbur~***A Brief History of Everything ***(Because it synthesizes much and demonstrates neglected connectivities, sequences, and categories.)

6} Dr. R. Smothermon~***Winning Through Enlightenment *** (Because it is the best thing I’ve ever read on personal responsibility, whatever you initially think about the title.)

7} PK Howard~***Thee Death of Common Sense ***(Because it gives concrete examples of how law is suffocating America.)

8} J Jacobs~***Dark Age Ahead ***(Because prophecy can be prophylactic; her analysis of why our culture is dying is both brilliant and unusual in perspective.)

9} B Katie~***A Thousand Names for Joy ***(Because it is good to feel how someone who embodies the Golden Rule thinks.)

10} T Harpur~***The Pagan Christ ***(Because, like it or not, it is good to know how some think of our Church and what their logic is. Don’t react to it; just read it. Be a good pathologist.)

11} Dr. KG Mills~***The Key: Identity ***(Because it is just so beautifully provocative.)

12} H Benjamin~***Basic Self Knowledge **(Because if you don’t know yourself, who or what do you know?

13} D Bohm~Wholeness and the Implicate Order (Because our language has inherent pitfalls that distort our clarity of understanding, our experience, and our world. There are more than 70 fallacies commonly used in every day speech that lead to lack of clarity before even examining the structure of our grammar itself and whether it corresponds to actuality.)

14} WA Henry III~In Defense of Elitism (Because it treats of egalitarianism and the deliberate dumbing down of America)
  • Interesting story about this book. An acquaintance who is an acknowledged genius, wanted to join a group that was studying this book. The first requirement, of course was to read it. He did, and reported to the group. He was told to go and read the book. Miffed, he read ti again, and again reported. He was again told to go and read the book. His ire was raise, but he did it. But once again he was told to go and read the book. He got really angry this time, and, true story, he ended up reading the book 26 times. Good thing it is very short. The thing was, it took him that many times to understand that he didn’t impartially understand the viewpoint of the book, whether he agreed with it or not. Once he saw that, he was a useful member of the discussion.
I tell that story because it impressed me. It impressed me because it reminds me of how adamantly habituated I am to my own perspective, to the point that it is remarkably difficult to clearly understand what someone from another perspective is saying, good, bad, or indifferent. Yet in the mean time, my brain is telling me “but you know that,” or “That’s wrong.” So I’ve already judged without having actually heard. And I think it is important for me to know that about myself, as I’m not exempt from the over-arching imperative of the human mind to make itself right at almost any cost. Hopefully all of you are way beyond that detriment. I find that I’m still not.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top