A Terribly Serious Adventure
Autor Nikhil Krishnanen Limba Engleză Hardback – 4 iul 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780525510604
ISBN-10: 0525510605
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 162 x 244 x 38 mm
Greutate: 0.64 kg
Editura: RANDOM HOUSE CHILDREN'S BOOKS
ISBN-10: 0525510605
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 162 x 244 x 38 mm
Greutate: 0.64 kg
Editura: RANDOM HOUSE CHILDREN'S BOOKS
Notă biografică
Nikhil Krishnan was born in Bangalore, India. He attended the University of Oxford as a Rhodes scholar and went on to complete a doctorate in philosophy. He now teaches at the University of Cambridge, where he is a fellow of Robinson College. His essays have appeared in several publications, including The New Yorker, The New Statesman, and n+1.
Recenzii
Ordinary Language can hardly convey how much I loved this book. I golloped it down like a pot of honey, then started again
An account of thought at Oxford from 1900-1960 that weaves biography with philosophy and somehow attains a pellucid clarity ... spirited, though frequently wry ... in passage after passage of fierce analysis, Krishnan offers a fresh justification of a fiercely practical project
Part of what makes [A Terribly Serious Adventure] so winning is that [Krishnan] treats his reader like a partner, presenting a range of ideas with the respect they deserve, so that we feel as if we are thinking alongside him
An entertaining and informative homage to philosophers at Oxford
One of the finest writers we have ... [Krishnan] writes with the discipline of a scholar and the story-telling skill of a novelist, with empathy, humour, and a ringing clarity
Nikhil Krishnan's terrific new book, A Terribly Serious Adventure, tells the story of the heyday of linguistic philosophy
A Terribly Serious Adventure beautifully portrays - and exemplifies - the combined wit and profundity, exuberance and rigour, of Oxford analytic philosophy
Krishnan has succeeded in bringing these men and women and their complex and intense relations to life - which is a real achievement
Enjoyable ... [Krishnan] recognises that Oxford philosophy is sometimes reproached for its frivolity, but maintains that the 'jokiness' was in fact a mask for 'something deeper'
A love letter, written by someone who knows what it means to fall in love with philosophy
Fascinating
In tracing the careers of a whole host of prominent twentieth-century philosophers ... Krishnan aims not only to offer a basic overview of the philosophical developments of the period, but also to explain what these philosophers were doing in espousing their views and what effects those acts of espousal had ... a valuable contribution ... highly amusing
Part of the delight of Krishnan's book, then - with its focus on highly entertaining personalities, career achievements, and relationships - is to realise how utterly contingent the intellectual trajectory of analytical philosophy has been: dependent all the while on the character traits, foibles, and personal obsessions of a particular group of people
A very thorough account of English intellectual life in the middle of the last century ... as intellectual life has become more specialised and fragmented, this account is a reminder of how important clear, ordinary language is to explain things ... a great introduction to a modern phase of philosophy
As Cambridge undergraduates we read Ryle, Williams, Wittgenstein, Anscombe, Ayer... some we heard in lectures, others we read in books; but we never saw them as a tribe, widely differing but part of the same association of human beings on the same adventure: people who knew each other. Krishnan brings that association - its ideas, of course, but its characters too - wonderfully to life
This is a beautiful gift of a book, most especially at the moment, when truth is not at a premium. It's easy to trivialize what these philosophers were doing, in their endless parsing and puzzling. But in their collective activity they were asserting that truth is as subtle as it is essential. Nikhil Krishnan has managed to tell us a wonderful story, filled with one-of-a-kind characters, while doing justice to a terribly serious adventure
A compelling story-teller, Krishnan brings human sympathy and acuity to his very readable book. Past debates spring vividly to life, with all their drama and comedy: so we understand how philosophers walked-and-talked, suffered and interacted. Recommended to everyone interested in ideas, not just students of philosophy
This riveting and beautifully written book offers a compelling insight into the various ways in which philosophy developed in Oxford in the first half of the twentieth century. Anyone with a specialist interest in philosophy during this period is sure to be captivated by the book, but there will be plenty of interest for others too, as Krishnan expertly sets his narrative in the context of the two wars and the surrounding political turmoil
This is Oxford philosophy in the round. The philosophical arguments (clearly explained), the personal lives, the colourful quotes, the elbow patches and buttered crumpets. Brilliantly written
There is a rumour that philosophy in the twentieth century detached itself from the flesh and blood realities of the world. In this meticulous study, Krishnan argues something quite different occurred: a deranged world - shot through with violence, ideology and injustice - turned its back on the love of wisdom. And a small band of philosophers stood in enduring protest.
Krishnan accomplishes the feat of seamlessly interweaving the story of the colourful characters who made up the world of twentieth-century Oxford philosophy with a cogent account of the theoretical controversies that roiled them. We are given first-row seats to the brilliance, obstinacy, jousting, and intellectual enthusiasms that marked that legendary academic circle
An account of thought at Oxford from 1900-1960 that weaves biography with philosophy and somehow attains a pellucid clarity ... spirited, though frequently wry ... in passage after passage of fierce analysis, Krishnan offers a fresh justification of a fiercely practical project
Part of what makes [A Terribly Serious Adventure] so winning is that [Krishnan] treats his reader like a partner, presenting a range of ideas with the respect they deserve, so that we feel as if we are thinking alongside him
An entertaining and informative homage to philosophers at Oxford
One of the finest writers we have ... [Krishnan] writes with the discipline of a scholar and the story-telling skill of a novelist, with empathy, humour, and a ringing clarity
Nikhil Krishnan's terrific new book, A Terribly Serious Adventure, tells the story of the heyday of linguistic philosophy
A Terribly Serious Adventure beautifully portrays - and exemplifies - the combined wit and profundity, exuberance and rigour, of Oxford analytic philosophy
Krishnan has succeeded in bringing these men and women and their complex and intense relations to life - which is a real achievement
Enjoyable ... [Krishnan] recognises that Oxford philosophy is sometimes reproached for its frivolity, but maintains that the 'jokiness' was in fact a mask for 'something deeper'
A love letter, written by someone who knows what it means to fall in love with philosophy
Fascinating
In tracing the careers of a whole host of prominent twentieth-century philosophers ... Krishnan aims not only to offer a basic overview of the philosophical developments of the period, but also to explain what these philosophers were doing in espousing their views and what effects those acts of espousal had ... a valuable contribution ... highly amusing
Part of the delight of Krishnan's book, then - with its focus on highly entertaining personalities, career achievements, and relationships - is to realise how utterly contingent the intellectual trajectory of analytical philosophy has been: dependent all the while on the character traits, foibles, and personal obsessions of a particular group of people
A very thorough account of English intellectual life in the middle of the last century ... as intellectual life has become more specialised and fragmented, this account is a reminder of how important clear, ordinary language is to explain things ... a great introduction to a modern phase of philosophy
As Cambridge undergraduates we read Ryle, Williams, Wittgenstein, Anscombe, Ayer... some we heard in lectures, others we read in books; but we never saw them as a tribe, widely differing but part of the same association of human beings on the same adventure: people who knew each other. Krishnan brings that association - its ideas, of course, but its characters too - wonderfully to life
This is a beautiful gift of a book, most especially at the moment, when truth is not at a premium. It's easy to trivialize what these philosophers were doing, in their endless parsing and puzzling. But in their collective activity they were asserting that truth is as subtle as it is essential. Nikhil Krishnan has managed to tell us a wonderful story, filled with one-of-a-kind characters, while doing justice to a terribly serious adventure
A compelling story-teller, Krishnan brings human sympathy and acuity to his very readable book. Past debates spring vividly to life, with all their drama and comedy: so we understand how philosophers walked-and-talked, suffered and interacted. Recommended to everyone interested in ideas, not just students of philosophy
This riveting and beautifully written book offers a compelling insight into the various ways in which philosophy developed in Oxford in the first half of the twentieth century. Anyone with a specialist interest in philosophy during this period is sure to be captivated by the book, but there will be plenty of interest for others too, as Krishnan expertly sets his narrative in the context of the two wars and the surrounding political turmoil
This is Oxford philosophy in the round. The philosophical arguments (clearly explained), the personal lives, the colourful quotes, the elbow patches and buttered crumpets. Brilliantly written
There is a rumour that philosophy in the twentieth century detached itself from the flesh and blood realities of the world. In this meticulous study, Krishnan argues something quite different occurred: a deranged world - shot through with violence, ideology and injustice - turned its back on the love of wisdom. And a small band of philosophers stood in enduring protest.
Krishnan accomplishes the feat of seamlessly interweaving the story of the colourful characters who made up the world of twentieth-century Oxford philosophy with a cogent account of the theoretical controversies that roiled them. We are given first-row seats to the brilliance, obstinacy, jousting, and intellectual enthusiasms that marked that legendary academic circle