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Years ago, when I began engaging others in Internet discussion forums, I found myself groping for tools to analyze arguments. As a sad statement of my college education, the logic course I took as a freshman only focused on "truth table" construction and never discussed the powerful body of informal fallacies compiled over the centuries. A trip t... (See the whole review) (Added by Luke Setzer on 9/29, 6:14am)Discuss this Book (19 messages) Aristotle’s PHYSICS, translated by Joe Sachs. Rutgers University Press, 1994, 260 + xi. Include Introduction, Commentary, Glossary and Index. Aristotle was Ayn Rand’s favorite philosopher and it is a pity that she had to read him through Latinized spectacles, rather than in an English translation that tries to be as true to Aristotle’s G... (See the whole review) (Added by Fred Seddon on 4/26, 2:35pm)Discuss this Book (4 messages) ![]() This book by the late millionaire Charles Givens, though not a formal philosophical treatise, bursts forth with Success Principles that the author argues "work, work every time, and work for everyone." He employs these to outline an integrated body of Success Strategies which he argues persuasively meet that three-fold requirement. Objectiv... (See the whole review) (Added by Luther Setzer on 3/11, 12:39pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() This is a truly great book. The title says it all. ... (See the whole review) (Added by Danny Silvera on 1/31, 11:17pm)Discuss this Book (2 messages) ![]() I have just begun to read this book, spurred on by recent discussions on SOLO. In what has become his trademark, this elegant, and well argued book is a must read for anyone interested in our most distinguishing feature, FREE WILL. It is not a debate for the academics alone, but has implications for our culture, and our future. A full descr... (See the whole review) (Added by John Newnham on 12/02/2004, 7:25am)Discuss this Book (2 messages) ![]() I first read this years ago while in graduate school. It was one of the few I carried around with me in my backpack. Today, Classical Individualism is one of only a handful that I re-read every now and then, to refresh my mind and spirit. I say refresh, because in an age where communitarianist and socialist denial of true human liberty and flourish... (See the whole review) (Added by John Newnham on 10/22/2004, 1:09pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() No matter your age, September signals a return to the shark-infested waters of school or workplace. Here is a darkly comic and enticingly designed primer for survival. Right in tune with the millennial thirst for power and sanctimonious view of children, A Child's Machiavelli -- distilled from the sixteenth-century Italian political philos... (See the whole review) (Added by Orion Reasoner on 10/17/2004, 2:04am)Discuss this Book (1 message) ![]() Self-proclaimed lesbian pro-choice feminist Bruce, ex-president of the Los Angeles chapter of NOW and author of The New Thought Police, blames the decline of civilization on other lesbian pro-choice feminists in this lurid right-wing screed. Bruce argues that multiculturalism, identity politics and "relativism" have turned American society into a "... (See the whole review) (Added by Orion Reasoner on 10/12/2004, 11:03pm)Discuss this Book (2 messages) ![]() This book should be in every student’s backpack. In the post-modern intellectual battleground in which each student find himself submerged – and sometimes drowning - this book offers essential intellectual self-defence for every student who still cares to think. No matter if you already know every answer to all the sundry irrationalities y... (See the whole review) (Added by Peter Cresswell on 9/07/2004, 5:25pm)Discuss this Book (14 messages) ![]() Civil War veteran, successful lawyer, spellbinding orator, and controversial iconoclast, Robert G. Ingersoll (1833-1899) was one of the best-known intellectuals of the nineteenth century. He rose to national prominence through his oratorical skills, which he publicly displayed on numerous lecture circuit tours. For almost twenty years this dedicate... (See the whole review) (Added by Orion Reasoner on 8/27/2004, 2:22am)Discuss this Book (4 messages) ![]() Capitalism and Commerce provides an outstanding and accessible introduction to the best philosophical , moral, and economic arguments for capitalism. This excellent and interesting work makes a convincing case that capitalism is the only moral social system because it protects a man's mind, his primary means of survival and flourishing.Younkins tho... (See the whole review) (Added by Karen Marie Phillips on 8/10/2004, 6:21pm)Discuss this Book (1 message) ![]() With all the talk of failing schools these days, we forget that schools can fail their brightest students, too. We pledge to "leave no child behind," but in American schools today, thousands of gifted and talented students fall short of their potential. In Genius Denied, Jan and Bob Davidson describe the "quiet crisis" in education: gifted students... (See the whole review) (Added by Orion Reasoner on 7/02/2004, 5:53pm)Discuss this Book (6 messages) ![]() Dedicated as few men have been to the life of reason, Bertrand Russell has always been concerned with the basic questions to which religion also addresses itself -- questions about man's place in the universe and the nature of the good life, questions that involve life after death, morality, freedom, education, and sexual ethics. He brings to his t... (See the whole review) (Added by Orion Reasoner on 6/16/2004, 11:55pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() The complete text of several of Aristotle's most important and influential works, in the famous and authoritative Oxford translations by W. Rhys Roberts and Ingram Bywater. Complete texts include: "Categories," "On Interpretation," "The Posterior Analytics," "On the Soul," "Metaphysics," "Nicomachean Ethics," "Politics" and "Poetics." It also has t... (See the whole review) (Added by Barry Kayton on 3/01/2004, 1:59pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) |