Oliver Leaman
Author of World Philosophies
About the Author
Oliver Leaman is Professor of Philosophy at University of Kentucky, USA.
Series
Works by Oliver Leaman
The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Jewish Philosophy (2003) — Editor; Contributor — 82 copies, 1 review
History of Jewish Philosophy (Routledge History of World Philosophies) (1997) — Editor; Contributor — 38 copies
Associated Works
Philosophy, Religion and the Spiritual Life (Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplements, Series Number 32) (1992) — Contributor — 15 copies
The Afterlife of the Platonic Soul (Studies in Platonism, Neoplatonism, and the Platonic Tradition) (2009) — Contributor — 13 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 20th Century
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of Cambridge
- Organizations
- University of Kentucky
- Nationality
- UK
- Places of residence
- Liverpool, Merseyside, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
I got like half way through where for various reasons I lost steam. I mean it's a perfectly good summary of a lot of different philosophical stuff from around the world but often because it can only be a very short summary of each it gets hard to keep up and it's very hard to keep track of many philosophies which clearly have big differences but which appear very similar if you don't understand the concepts well and when they're not explained in detail. So after a while a lot of what's show more written appears almost redundant because you can't really get a grasp on the differences between these philosophies. Which is frustrating. It's a lot my fault of course and I appreciate the effort and know it's a hard thing to do well. Oh well.
Couple of stunning lines in this that I want to remark on because my only philosophy knowledge is Marxism and that Nietzsche sucks.
He remarks of Nietzsche "It was as if Nietzsche anticipated Nazism (and he was of course falsely linked to the Nazi message, as if Goebbels and Goering and the like could possibly be mistaken for Nietzsche's classically inspired idea of the superior human being)" ! Apparently the Nazis were bad because they were not superhuman *enough*. The message of Aryan racial superiority would have been ok if it was true. This is some sick shit. He talks about Nietzsche's idea of "slave morality" but doesn't criticise it and doesn't mention his idea that it's all traceable to Jewish influence. Hmm.
The short Marx section is a pretty decent short summary. And then he mentions Lenin, and we get this:
"It is this system [Marxism-Leninism] which in 1989 largely collapsed amid disillusionment. One main reason for this is that Marx's own devaluation of legal institutions and democratic values paved the way for a ruthless State machinery and command economy which created a vast amount of human suffering...
One of the themes, specially of Lenin, was the importance of praxis for understanding. The way to the truth lay through Marxism. This doctrine made Marxism virtually unfalsifiable."
My problem isn't with the line about "ruthless State machinery" but the justification given for it is so weak. It's very hard to say that "devalued democratic values" given his entire concept of a new society was sort of about ultra democracy and "devaluation of legal institutions" is funny because yes he "devalued" bourgeois legal institutions and thought we should build something new but also it implies that somehow "legal institutions" don't do bad things, as if the USSR didn't have laws and a sophisticated policing and justice system. It's absurd. And of course it's interesting to contrast with Nietzsche - his devaluing of democratic values ie insisting democracy is evil and bad doesn't get a mention at all.
The second part is funny because that's not really what praxis means but also because in a book about philosophy "falsifability" rarely comes into things. It'd be hard to falsify Plato's philosophy of forms, for example, and he'd never even think to say it. It's just interesting to me the way Marxism is talked about in ways that don't aid understanding at all. show less
He remarks of Nietzsche "It was as if Nietzsche anticipated Nazism (and he was of course falsely linked to the Nazi message, as if Goebbels and Goering and the like could possibly be mistaken for Nietzsche's classically inspired idea of the superior human being)" ! Apparently the Nazis were bad because they were not superhuman *enough*. The message of Aryan racial superiority would have been ok if it was true. This is some sick shit. He talks about Nietzsche's idea of "slave morality" but doesn't criticise it and doesn't mention his idea that it's all traceable to Jewish influence. Hmm.
The short Marx section is a pretty decent short summary. And then he mentions Lenin, and we get this:
"It is this system [Marxism-Leninism] which in 1989 largely collapsed amid disillusionment. One main reason for this is that Marx's own devaluation of legal institutions and democratic values paved the way for a ruthless State machinery and command economy which created a vast amount of human suffering...
One of the themes, specially of Lenin, was the importance of praxis for understanding. The way to the truth lay through Marxism. This doctrine made Marxism virtually unfalsifiable."
My problem isn't with the line about "ruthless State machinery" but the justification given for it is so weak. It's very hard to say that "devalued democratic values" given his entire concept of a new society was sort of about ultra democracy and "devaluation of legal institutions" is funny because yes he "devalued" bourgeois legal institutions and thought we should build something new but also it implies that somehow "legal institutions" don't do bad things, as if the USSR didn't have laws and a sophisticated policing and justice system. It's absurd. And of course it's interesting to contrast with Nietzsche - his devaluing of democratic values ie insisting democracy is evil and bad doesn't get a mention at all.
The second part is funny because that's not really what praxis means but also because in a book about philosophy "falsifability" rarely comes into things. It'd be hard to falsify Plato's philosophy of forms, for example, and he'd never even think to say it. It's just interesting to me the way Marxism is talked about in ways that don't aid understanding at all.
Ninian Smart was a founding figure in British secular religious studies. This review of 'world philosophy' came at the very end of his life as perhaps a summation of at least one part of his life's work - a particular approach to religion as containing within it varieties of philosophy.
The reader should be warned, therefore, that this is a book largely of the many different potentialities of philosophy as justifications for belief and culture rather than any set of positions about philosophy show more as a professional investigation of the truth or challenge in the cause of truth.
Smart is instinctively non-judgmental and tolerant, the epitome of the kindly Scottish relativist who refuses to get off the fence even when it is a matter of saying whether God exists or not. The question is irrelevant to him - the issue is whether those he studies believe what they believe.
Once this position is established, then the book can abandon the study of religion qua religion and look at the many varieties of judgement and criticism that we call philosophy and that make up the human religious condition along equally non-judgemental globalist lines.
From this perspective, the book is useful as a reference work but Smart has taken on too big a task, especially as he insists on giving broadly equal value to all parts of the world and all traditions. The result is (as with so many general companions to philosophy) short-handing and so obscurities.
Still, as sets of summary of the many components of human belief and the 'thinking' that goes into sustaining them, the book is better in the library than out of it. The extensive bibliography alone provides a baseline, at the end of the last century, for further study. show less
The reader should be warned, therefore, that this is a book largely of the many different potentialities of philosophy as justifications for belief and culture rather than any set of positions about philosophy show more as a professional investigation of the truth or challenge in the cause of truth.
Smart is instinctively non-judgmental and tolerant, the epitome of the kindly Scottish relativist who refuses to get off the fence even when it is a matter of saying whether God exists or not. The question is irrelevant to him - the issue is whether those he studies believe what they believe.
Once this position is established, then the book can abandon the study of religion qua religion and look at the many varieties of judgement and criticism that we call philosophy and that make up the human religious condition along equally non-judgemental globalist lines.
From this perspective, the book is useful as a reference work but Smart has taken on too big a task, especially as he insists on giving broadly equal value to all parts of the world and all traditions. The result is (as with so many general companions to philosophy) short-handing and so obscurities.
Still, as sets of summary of the many components of human belief and the 'thinking' that goes into sustaining them, the book is better in the library than out of it. The extensive bibliography alone provides a baseline, at the end of the last century, for further study. show less
Death and Loss: Compassionate Approaches in the Classroom (Cassell Studies in Pastoral Care and Personal and Social Education) by Oliver Leaman
This book is a guide for all teachers concerned with the pastoral care of their pupils.
Review in Choice: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, March, 2014
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