Alright, time for a brief introduction to one of the most influential thinkers of Western Political Thought. Bear with me, I am by no means an expert and all of what I have to say comes from individual learning as opposed to being taught in a formal setting. Teachers and philosophers out there, please offer [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Philosophy’
Plato: A Primer
Posted in Intellectual History, Philosophy, The Ancients, tagged dialogues, ideal society, philosopher king, Philosophy, plato, socrates, The Ancients, the republic, theory of forms on October 5, 2009 | Leave a Comment »
The Influence of the Ancients
Posted in Intellectual History, Philosophy, The Ancients, tagged ancients, athens, bruce thornton, capitalism, free market, greeks, history, influence, ISI, pericles, Philosophy, rational thought on September 27, 2009 | Leave a Comment »
Keeping in touch with my earlier post on Plato’s virtue and justice and his notion of the Philosopher-King, take a look at this lecture from the Intercollegiate Studies Institute titled “What Hath Athens to do with Wall Street?: How the Ancients Help us to understand the Free Market” In it, Classics and Humanities Professor Bruce [...]
From ‘The Proper Study of Mankind’
Posted in Intellectual History, Philosophy, tagged intellectual inquiry, isaiah berlin, Philosophy, the proper study of mankind, two concepts of liberty on September 26, 2009 | 1 Comment »
To all those who shun politics or poltical theory as an idle endeavor relegated to the power hungry, I offer the following excerpt from a brilliant essay we’ll be reading titled “Two Concepts of Liberty” by intellectual historian and philosopher Isaiah Berlin. “Our philosophers seem oddly unaware of these devastating effects of their activities. It [...]