Philosophy Thursday: Mozi

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Click Here to Read: Mozi on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read:  Mozi on the Famous Philosophers.com website on August 1, 2013.

Click Here to Read: Mozi (Mo-tzu, c. 400s—300s B.C.E.) on the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy website.

Click Here to Read: Mohism on the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy website.

Click Here to Read:  Mozi on Wikiquote.

Click Here to Read: Mozi in with English translation  by W. P. Mebon the Chinese Text Project Website. Continue reading Philosophy Thursday: Mozi

Philosophy Thursday: Cornelius Castoriadis

Castoriadis-Cornélius

Click Here to Read: Cornelius Castoriadis on wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Cornelius Castoriadis (1922—1997) on the Internet Ecyclopedia of Philosopy website.

Click Here to View: Interview with Cornelius Castoriadis, conducted by Chris Marker (Engl. subtitles) on YouTube.

Click Here to View:  Cornelius Castoriadis – Interview on Autonomy and Democracy (1984) on YouTube. Continue reading Philosophy Thursday: Cornelius Castoriadis

Philosophy Thursday: Sidney Morgenbesser

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Click Here to Read: Sidney Morgenbesser on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: ‘Yeah, Yeah’: Eulogy for Sidney Morgenbesser, Philosopher with a Yiddish Accent: As his 10th yahrzeit nears, a remembrance of Sidney the teacher, Sidney the humorist, Sidney the arguer, Sidney the Jew By David Shatz on the Tablet on June 27, 2014.

Click Here To Read:  Sidney Morgenbesser’s Sense of Humor Thursday Posted by jrben on the Bully Pulpit website on October 2013.

Click Here to Read: Sidewalk Socrates By James Ryerson in The New York Times on Continue reading Philosophy Thursday: Sidney Morgenbesser

Philosophy Thursday: Robert E. Wood

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Click Here to Read: Robert E. Wood on the Constantine College website.

Click Here to Read:  The Beautiful, the True and the Good: Studies in the History of Thought by Robert E. Wood on the University of Notre Dame website.

Click Here to Read: Placing Aesthetics: Reflections on the Philosophic Tradition By Robert E. Wood on the Google Books Website.

Click Here to Read:  Toward an Ontology of Film: A Phenomenological Approach by Robert E. Wood in the Salon Journal, Vol. 5 No. 24, August 2001.

Click Here to Read:  Other Posts on Philosophy Thursday on this website.

Philosophy Thursday: Stanley Cavell

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Click Here to Read:  Stanley Cavell on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Must We Mean What We Say? On Stanley Cavell by Charles Petersen in the on the n + 1 website.

Click Here to View:  Conversations with History with Stanley Cavell on YouTube.

Click Here to Read: Stanley Cavell’s Wittgenstein By James Conant in THE HARVARD REVIEW OF PHILOSOPHY vol.XIII no.1 2005. Continue reading Philosophy Thursday: Stanley Cavell

Philosophy Thursday: Isaiah Berlin

Isaiah-BerlinClick Here to Read: Isaiah Berlin on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read:  Isaiah Berlin on the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy website.

Click Here to Read: Isaiah Berlin on the New York Review of Books website.

Click Here to Read: A Message to the 21st Century by Isaiah Berlin on the New York Review of Books website in the October 23, 2014 Issue. Continue reading Philosophy Thursday: Isaiah Berlin

Philosophy Thursday: Pythagoras

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Click here to Read: Pythagoras on Wikipdia.

Click Here to Read: Pythagoras on the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Click Here to Read: Pythagoras of Samos on the MacTutor History Website.

Click Here to Read:  The Life and Philosophy of Pythagoras on the Sacred Texts website.

Click Here to Read: The Death of Pythagoras: Bruce Pennington tells us how Pythagoras became a has-bean, while another Bruce Pennington drew the portraits on the Philosophy Now Website. Continue reading Philosophy Thursday: Pythagoras

Philosophy Thursday: Avicenna

Avicenna

Click Here to Read: Avicenna on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Avicenna (Ibn Sina) (c. 980—1037) on the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Click Here to Read: AVICENNA on the Greek Medicine website.

Click Here to Read: The Place of Avicenna in the History of Medicine by Jamal Moosavi in the Journal of Medical Biotechnology 2009 Apr-Jun; 1(1): 3–8. Continue reading Philosophy Thursday: Avicenna

Philosophy Thursday: Plato

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Click Here to Read: Plato on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Plato on the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy website.

Click Here to Read: Why I Teach Plato to Plumbers: Liberal arts and the humanities aren’t just for the elite by Scott Samuelson in The Atlantic Monthly on April 29, 2014.

Click Here to Read: Books by Plato on the Project Gutenberg website.

Click Here to Read: An interview with… Melissa Lane on Plato on the Five Books.com Continue reading Philosophy Thursday: Plato