What nonfiction book are you currently reading?

hardheadjarhead

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arnisador said:
Introducing Bertrand Russell, by Dave Robinson


Oh yes...OH YES...I knew there was something I liked about you, Arnisador. I sensed it. You're a closeted Russell fan.

I just got his four part interview with Alan Watts. Excellent interview. The man was brilliant.



Regards,


Steve
 
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arnisador

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Every mathematician knows his work, of course, and I liked his "The Problems of Philosophy," but I decided to get an overview before deciding where to go next. I hadn't realized how big an influence he and Wittgenstein had been on one another!
 

hardheadjarhead

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arnisador said:
Every mathematician knows his work, of course, and I liked his "The Problems of Philosophy," but I decided to get an overview before deciding where to go next. I hadn't realized how big an influence he and Wittgenstein had been on one another!


The man was truly a polymath...he was one of those few intellectuals that read everything, retained what they read, and could debate it as a topic. Take a smart man and give him a classical education...then watch out.

Tolkien was another one like that...so was Oscar Wilde.

I'm trying to think of Americans of that caliber...there aren't many.


Regards,


Steve
 

tradrockrat

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hardheadjarhead said:
The man was truly a polymath...he was one of those few intellectuals that read everything, retained what they read, and could debate it as a topic. Take a smart man and give him a classical education...then watch out.

Tolkien was another one like that...so was Oscar Wilde.
C.S. Lewis and to certain extent, Mark Twain
 

bignick

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I was in Barnes and Noble the other day and almost bought Bertrand Russell's Principles of Mathematics out of sheer curiousity, but grabbed PHP5, Apache, and MySQL Web Development along with A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking instead.
 

hardheadjarhead

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Being innumerate, I will avoid his mathematics books and concentrate on his philosophy books and works concerning religion and politics.

"Religion and Science" is very good. I loaned it to one of the MT'ers here and he read it two and a half times...finally got it back from him. Now I can't find it. It is an interesting read when put in a modern context now that the I.D. argument (intelligent desing) is being debated. Much of Russell's stuff is simply timeless.


Regards,


Steve
 

bignick

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Kodokan Throwing Techniques by Toshiro Daigo, made even more interesting considering the tori in the book is one my jujutsu instructors first instructors..
 

Flying Crane

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The Western Way of War, Infantry Battle in Classical Greece, by Victor Davis Hanson. It examines what life was like for the Greek hoplite in the phalanx. very interesting, but in a somewhat dry and academic way.
 
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arnisador

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A Darwinian Left, Peter Singer

A brief book that I figured would introduce me to this controversial figure.
 

hardheadjarhead

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"The End of Faith," by Sam Harris.


Interesting...the guy manages to offend people from across the religious and political spectrum...and gets a best seller out of it.


Regards,


Steve
 

Jonathan Randall

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bignick said:
I was in Barnes and Noble the other day and almost bought Bertrand Russell's Principles of Mathematics out of sheer curiousity, but grabbed PHP5, Apache, and MySQL Web Development along with A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking instead.

There's some light reading... :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
 

Jonathan Randall

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"Make a Real Living as a Freelance Writer", by Jenna Glatzer. It is very well written and I'm enjoying it.
 

terryl965

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Jonathan Randall said:
"Make a Real Living as a Freelance Writer", by Jenna Glatzer. It is very well written and I'm enjoying it.

Yes that is a good read.
Terry
 

terryl965

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I'm in the process of re-reading living the Martial Way, it is amazing how much you gain every time you read it.
Terry
 
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arnisador

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Life, Sex and Ideas: The Good Life Without God, by A. C. Grayling

A collection of short philosophical essays that originally appeared in a U.K. periodical.
 

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