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Socrates Cafe: A Fresh Taste of Philosophy by Christopher Phillips
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Socrates Cafe: A Fresh Taste of Philosophy

by Christopher Phillips

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Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
Wonderful idea. I've participated with students in several Socartes Cafes--powerful results--meaningful experience for both students and myself. ( )
  Rosinbow | Aug 18, 2009 |
Phillips will bring back "salon" talk with this book! ( )
  verucas_chaos | Feb 21, 2009 |
Loved the theory and the idea behind the book; also greatly enjoyed many of the anecdotes regarding Socrates Cafe meetings. Very thought provoking. ( )
  kkkoob | Jan 10, 2009 |
Philosophy
  Budz888 | Jun 1, 2008 |
Let people who do not know what to do with themselves in this life, but fritter away their hope for eternal life. If one loves intensely, the time comes when death seems bliss... The life I want is a life I could not endure in eternity. It is a life of love and intensity, suffering and creation... As one deserves a good night's sleep, one also deserves to die. Why should I hope to wake again? To do what I have not done in the time I've had? All of us have so much more time than we use well... Lives are spoiled and made rotten by the sense that death is distant and irrelevant... But it makes for a better life if one has a rendezvous with death... There is nothing morbid about thinking and speaking of death. Those who disparage honesty do not know its joys.

pp160 ( )
  dvf1976 | Apr 23, 2008 |
Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0393049566, Hardcover)

For Christopher Phillips, philosophy is a passion: it is not so much a discipline to be learned as an experience to be lived. Taking his cue from Socrates, the inaugurator of the Western philosophical tradition, Phillips embarks on a search for truth and meaning through a series of conversations that is at once refreshing, humorous, troubling, confusing, encouraging, depressing, and provocative. What makes Plato's Socratic dialogues so enduring--and Phillips's book so intriguing--is that for both Plato and Phillips, philosophy is not something you read or study. It is something you do. Plato wrote in Parmenides that "without wandering around and examining everything in detail one is unable to secure understanding." Phillips takes this approach--the Socratic approach--to heart. In the course of Socrates Café, he travels around asking questions of everyone who's interested. Just like the real Socrates, who did not confine himself to the Athenian ivory tower, Phillips searches out public conversations--what he calls Socrates cafés--with children, seniors, psychiatrists, prisoners, ex-academics, students, lawyers, and everyday people. In a sense, the book is a series of short, modern-day Socratic dialogues interspersed with meditations on the nature of philosophical inquiry.

Phillips seizes upon what the Greeks called "elenchus," a method of inquiry that helps people see their own beliefs and opinions more clearly. In the course of the numerous Socrates cafés highlighted in this book, Phillips persistently reminds us that we ought to ask questions simply because the process is good for us. In each of the cafés, the participants vary as widely as the questions, and the dialogues are by turns candid, insightful, muddled, intelligent, bland, and piquant. The real meaning of Socrates Café lies in the contentious and wonderful space of human interaction. --Eric de Place

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:53 -0400)

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