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Philosophy?


SonicAKG

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Anyone here who likes Philosophy? If so which philosophers would you count among your favorites? For me I would say:

1. Aristotle

2.Plato

3.Plotinus

4.Avicenna

5.Aquinas

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Plato was a fun read. Descartes had some interesting ideas. Albert Camus had some fun thoughts with the notion of Absurdism. No specific authors, but eastern philosophy in general is appealing to me. It was a fun study years ago. 

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I enjoy reading the works of most Philosophers to be honest, since I find their works to be enlightening in one way or another. I like reading as much of it as I possibly can in order to get a more well rounded view on things. I do have those that I favor over others and ones I find more applicable than others but I try to acknowledge all Philosophers with a certain degree of merit even if I may not agree with the majority of what they are saying. That's all part of the beauty of Philosophy. 

 

Among my favorites are Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, René Descartes, Immanuel Kant, The Stoics, Lao Tzu, Thomas Paine, Voltaire, Friedrich Engels, Karl Marx  Jean Paul Sartre and Simone De Beauvoir .

Edited by Seraph
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Friedrich Schiller all the way. I've found so much of the stuff he covers in his "Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man" everywhere else in the humanities. He's probably my favorite Enlightenment philosopher. I also like Theodor Adorno, Guy DeBord, Arthur Danto, George Dickey, John Dewey, and David Hume. (I'm pretty big into aesthetic philosophy.)

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  • 4 years later...

Voltaire. Although, I've always liked him more as a writer and for his wit. In general, I study and practice a lot of far eastern philosophy related to Buddhism and Taoism. I usually dabble a lot with Buddhist koans. They're usually fun for provoking philosophical thought.

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Karl Marx. I've known other philosophers but Karl is the one I'm more interested in. Even though his topic is mostly socialism and communism, I enjoyed the philosophical ideas behind politics and how history all ties to it.  

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(edited)

when I was studying historiography, I liked Foucault's idea of 'pouvoir-savoir'

power is based on knowledge and conversely power shapes knowledge according to its agenda. this is probably the most important issue with historiography; if the goal of an historian is to record the past "how it really was," according to Leopold von Ranke's scientific view of history, then Foucalt's 'pouvoir-savoir' makes this impossible. this therefore means that a recount of the past can never be objectively true, because an historian's motivations and resources are a product of their environment; how the established power structure influences them will in-turn affect their writings.

 

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