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Loading... The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Changeby Randall Collins
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. An adequate reviewer of this book would be well rehearsed in the histories of Asian, Indian, and Ancient and late western philosophies. I am not that person. I read philosophy for the same reason the great philosophers studied it: to learn to lead the good life. I am very much not academic-like in my taking on philosophy. The author proposes that there are significant interactions among the personalities in a particular philosophical nation, so to speak. Some personalities wield more power than others. There is room in the attention space for a limited number of ideas to be considered. The author draws diagrams of personal connections and reviews a whole lot of philosophy to a depth to which I have never been. I have, however, done some serious reading of philosophy, so I could understand it, although I, shudder, had to work at it. I have noticed that Plato and much of Hinduism have similar takes on the cyclicality of things that is not in, say, the Bible. From the table of contents of this book, I thought that it might address the possibility of connection between Greek and Indian thinking. He treated each national, so to speak, area as independent or largely independent. That is to say, my interest was not addressed. Nevertheless he had enough to say of each area that my attention returned every evening to the book until I was through it, and I feel well served by it. He is a sociologist so he can mention the social construction of mathematics with a straight face, but there is no gobbledygook. His sentences take more work than the sentences of, say, Bertrand Russell, but they make sense as for example, "Along with the rise of Vaishnavism and its inner splits and its polemics with Advaita had come the spread of argument about epistemological validity into every intellectual camp." I am finding that the book that does address my interest in the Indian and Greek connection, The Shape of Ancient Thought, is as difficult to read, again because of the long sentences and the number of new ideas to be juggled. The well rehearsed reader should not have as hard a time with either. no reviews | add a review
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General readers may be put off by a hefty tome with chapters given such titles as "The Post-revolutionary Condition: Boundaries and Philosophical Puzzles" (which includes the subsection "The Vienna Circle as a Nexus of Struggles"), but those with a dedicated interest in the history of philosophy will find much to enjoy in the multicultural examples Collins draws upon. Ancient China, classical Greece, medieval Islam, and the French existentialists are just the tip of the iceberg illustrating his theory that intellectual progress is made through the personal interaction of philosophers and other thinkers. "Great intellectual work," Collins writes, "is that which creates a large space on which followers can work," and The Sociology of Philosophies certainly qualifies. --Ron Hogan
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:54 -0400)
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The title is a bit misleading, though. The vast majority of the words in this tome are devoted to a history of philosophy rather than a focus on the sociology of this field. The diagrams showing linkages between major and minor philosophers are very much an integral part of the text, but a description of oppositions between varying factions according to the law of small numbers could just as well be a historical treatment as a sociological one. The epilogue of the book does come closer to sociological analysis, but unfortunately prior to that epilogue is a "meta-reflections" section which gets a bit repetitive, echoing sociological observations made elsewhere in the text.
I am glad to have read this book. Given the complexity of the material, the author conveys things well. Maybe 10-15 years from now when I've read from more thinkers I'll undertake this book again and gain insights missed the first time around. But I don't recommend a work of this magnitude lightly, and I'm afraid that those without a significant philosophical background will not find it worth the trouble, as it won't be understandable.