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The Bluffer's Guide to Philosophy (Bluffer's Guides)
The Bluffer's Guide to Philosophy - Bluffer's Guides
Author: Jim Hankinson
Historical forcesNo-one knows why philosophy started when it did: ambitious bluffers of a Marxist bent could try to account for it in terms of an inexorable dialectic of historical forces, but we wouldn't recommend it. This and thatOf course, any sensible theory is neither one thing nor the other; and it's generall...  more » The pleasure principalThe Epicureans, named after their founder Epicurus (342-270 B.C.), held that pleasure was the End and that this consisted in the satisfaction of desires, which was a good start. But then they had to foul things up by arguing that this didn't mean a lot of pleasure was a good thing: rather, one should limit the number of desires one had, so you didn't get left with as many unsatisfied ones. Kant or can'tOne should be very careful about committing oneself in regard to Kant, or indeed any other German philosopher. ContemplationIt is never out of order to remark, with an air of deep seriousness, that you will have to give the matter more thought. This is a doubly effective technique, in that it both does away with the obligation to say anything that might commit you to something, and also in that it tends to make your adversary feel intellectually inferior.
ISBN-13: 9781906042011
ISBN-10: 1906042012
Publication Date: 4/1/2007
Pages: 92
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Publisher: Oval Books
Book Type: Paperback
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