Changes

From TheBookbag
Jump to navigationJump to search
no edit summary
{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=Why We Think the Things we Think: Philosophy in a Nutshell
|author=Alain Stephen
|date=September 2015
|isbn=9781782434139
|website=|videocover=1782434135|amazonukaznuk=<amazonuk>1782434135</amazonuk>|amazonusaznus=<amazonus>1782434135</amazonus>}}
Way back when, when I started back on adult education having finished my university life (I know, it's hard to believe sometimes, but bear with me) I was asked if I was going to do a philosophy A-level. No, I said – there was no point in studying something nobody can agree about. The introduction to this book raises much the same point – the solution to philosophical questions and study is only ever going to be more questions. It says that Kant thought the study of thought, ''or, more precisely, how ideas are formed'' was the highest science, although that sounds like the psychology that I did indeed study. Still, study it many people do do – and probably a far greater number would wish to read around it and find out what it might be like to sound as if you have studied it – hence books like this.

Navigation menu