Re: hume, kant, and thoreau need a fourth
- From: kpnnews@xxxxxxxxx
- Date: Thu, 21 Jun 2007 03:12:46 -0700
On Jun 20, 11:59 am, "Neil X." <nei...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Jun 20, 11:48 am, mr rapidan <jmi...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Jun 19, 11:27 am, mr rapidan <jmi...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Imagine that Hume, Kant, and Thoreau need a fourth person at the table
to participate in an agreeable, but interesting conversation. Who
should it be?
The deal is I got a Barnes & Noble gift card for Father's Day. I
already know you motherfuckers are smart and funny, what I was hoping
was that someone smart and helpful would pop up - and it could still
happen, right? I'm looking to read a book either by or about another
dead, white, European man. Someone who might fit as an answer to my
original question and/or be a good answser for this fill-in-the-blank:
Hume, Kant, and _______. I suppose Nietzsche is a good and fitting
suggestion, and I don't really know what I'm talking about, but I
really thought that I had previously settled on a third philospher to
read (either primary or secondary source) after Hume and Kant - who
would be appropriate to read before Nietzshe - I just forgot who it
was. I guess if the "answer" isn't obvious to you folks, then my
forgotten choice wasn't really a good one. This is all new to me, I
don't pretend to know much, if anything, and I don't pretend to
understand and/or be using these terms correctly, but what I'm looking
for is naturalist, humanist and/or non-religious foundations /
orgins / examination of/for morality, consciousness, etc.
On Jun 20, 11:48 am, mr rapidan <jmi...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Jun 19, 11:27 am, mr rapidan <jmi...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Imagine that Hume, Kant, and Thoreau need a fourth person at the table
to participate in an agreeable, but interesting conversation. Who
should it be?
The deal is I got a Barnes & Noble gift card for Father's Day. I
already know you motherfuckers are smart and funny, what I was hoping
was that someone smart and helpful would pop up - and it could still
happen, right? I'm looking to read a book either by or about another
dead, white, European man. Someone who might fit as an answer to my
original question and/or be a good answser for this fill-in-the-blank:
Hume, Kant, and _______. I suppose Nietzsche is a good and fitting
suggestion, and I don't really know what I'm talking about, but I
really thought that I had previously settled on a third philospher to
read (either primary or secondary source) after Hume and Kant - who
would be appropriate to read before Nietzshe - I just forgot who it
was. I guess if the "answer" isn't obvious to you folks, then my
forgotten choice wasn't really a good one. This is all new to me, I
don't pretend to know much, if anything, and I don't pretend to
understand and/or be using these terms correctly, but what I'm looking
for is naturalist, humanist and/or non-religious foundations /
orgins / examination of/for morality, consciousness, etc.
I think Descartes is a natural place to start--he set the foundation
for modern scientific thought, and the way we view ourselves in the
world. Much of what came after Descartes is a response, an extension,
or a repudiation, of what he began. He tries to reconcile the
spiritual with the natural world (albeit via the pineal gland, not his
best idea)
However, this topic can be further explored via viewing the video From
Beyond. This film explores the abuse and repurcussions of said pineal
gland. Recommended.
Kurt
.
- References:
- hume, kant, and thoreau need a fourth
- From: mr rapidan
- Re: hume, kant, and thoreau need a fourth
- From: mr rapidan
- Re: hume, kant, and thoreau need a fourth
- From: Neil X.
- hume, kant, and thoreau need a fourth
- Prev by Date: Re: The most compelling reason for not voting for Hillary
- Next by Date: Re: The most compelling reason for not voting for Hillary
- Previous by thread: Re: hume, kant, and thoreau need a fourth
- Next by thread: Re: hume, kant, and thoreau need a fourth
- Index(es):