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The Great Ideas of Philosophy, 2nd Edition

By: Daniel N. Robinson, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Daniel N. Robinson
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Publisher's summary

Grasp the important ideas that have served as the backbone of philosophy across the ages with this extraordinary 60-lecture series. This is your opportunity to explore the enormous range of philosophical perspectives and ponder the most important and enduring of human questions - without spending your life poring over dense philosophical texts.

Professor Robinson guides you through more than 2,000 years of philosophical thinking and gives you a coherent, comprehensive, and beautifully articulated introduction to the great conversation of philosophy. Every lecture contains substance that can change your view of the world and its history.

You'll journey from the early philosophical ideas of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle; chart the origins of Christian philosophy and investigate the Islamic scholars who preserved and extended Greek thought during the Middle Ages; and venture through Enlightenment contributions to philosophy, from Francis Bacon to Locke, Hume, Kant, Mill, and Adam Smith.

Then shift your attention to the modern era, where you see groundbreaking ideas like psychoanalysis, pragmatism, and nihilism, as well as the collision between the inherently social understanding of meaning created by Wittgenstein, the vastly different estimation of human thought developed by the code-breaking genius Alan Turing, and the subtle response to him made by the American philosopher John Searle.

While the lectures cover an enormous range of key thinkers and ideas, they always focus on the most important ideas. The result is a course that gives you everything you need to finally grasp humanity's exciting philosophical history - without years of intense academic study and piles of dense reading.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.

©2004 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2004 The Great Courses

Featured Article: The Best Philosophy Audiobooks for Getting Lost in Thought


Philosophy asks and analyzes the questions that have pressed on humankind for centuries: What does it mean to be human? Why are we here? From ancient to contemporary times, these questions have been answered with varying, and sometimes contradictory, schools of thought. Our picks span centuries and subjects, and draw parallels across time to embolden listeners to dive deep into questions about the fundamental nature of our reality.

What listeners say about The Great Ideas of Philosophy, 2nd Edition

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  • Overall
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well done

speaker too biased. otherwise great. highly recommend for overview of Western philosophy. obviously hard to cover topics in depth

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

More than worth the listen

This series was not only NOT a waste of time it is a course I think everyone would benefit from.

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Brilliant

Professor Robinson has a vast and deep ocean of knowledge, expertly explained in easy to understand terms, logical but emotionally profound, especially the last lecture where he speaks on his own ideas and beliefs. I'm glad I listened, and can honestly say that it was a truly intellectually beneficial experience. I got a lot out of it.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

I am only partially finished with this course. It has been great.

This is a classic example of a mid level philosophy course emphasizing breadth of coverage and manages to cover just deep enough to give a good idea on and decent understanding of each of the topics broached upon.
The reader clearly understood his material. It was well read. It was well explained. I would recommend this to anyone who has taken an interest in western philosophy. I am only 50 lectures into the course. It has been one of the best all in one philosophy courses I have ever had.

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Guardedly Optimistic

I loved this!!! It was fantasticly refreshing to hear that someone was not only capable of logically and articulately building a chronological order of the evolving, devolving order of mankind's psyche over generations. He was also refreshingly unbiased, until the end but even that was tame.

He artfully conveyed the changing and evolving dogmas while referring back to previous lectures tying them together in a masterful tapestry.

I went in thinking it would be politically biased and absolute propaganda. Thankfully it was not. I can say with certainty that my life was enriched and not wasted on this Book.

thank you for being so eloquent and open minded!!

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A gift to us all

Cogent, erudite and eloquent yet approachable, grounded and even practical. Beautifully written lectures presented by an extraordinary orator. I’ve returned to this series 4 time over the past 15 years.

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A Rather "Spatial" Take on Philosophy

Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?

There is no doubt that Robinson is extremely learned. He's also a little self-impressed. His style can sometimes catapult you into the stars, or drive you nuts, depending on how well you're paying attention. Now, if your looking for a linear take on the history of philosophy, where the lecturer lays everything out according to a strict chronology and a "cause and effect" approach, you would probably do better with another overview. Yet if you're interested in being pulled through 2,500 years of thought according to an extremely erudite professor, who has, mind you, some eccentricity thrown in for good measure, than you will appreciate this approach. In other words, Robinson likes to go for the big ideas. And he likes to spend a lot of time building up to those big ideas. If you're patient and can follow his near-prose style of speaking, it does pay off. And, to his credit, he's working very hard to set things up so you can have your own epiphany with the ideas, which is what great philosophy professors should do. But then again, sometimes you just want the facts, and you want them laid out clearly and concisely. I sometimes found myself thinking "this is amazing," and other times, I found myself thinking, "ok, yeah, yeah, yeah, think I'll forward to the next lecture now." In all he gave me some great insight, some "great ideas," but I did feel it was a lot of work sometimes, and a lot of highs and lows.

What did you like best about this story?

Robinson is smart as hell and passionate, and this comes across in many of the lectures. He seems to do a little bit better with modern philosophy, starting with Bacon.

You're best off finishing a lecture if you happen to start it.

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104 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars

Mind blown. Again and again and again.

I'm new to philosophy so this course was quite an eye opening experience. Imagine having a, "Holy crap, this knowledge is not just valuable but IMPORTANT" moment every 60 seconds for 30 hours. That amount of cerebral combustion is exhausting and at times overwhelming but the journey was well worth it and I consider myself a more rounded and informed individual as a result. Every lecture, no matter how obscure or seemingly irrelevant to my life and personal experiences, had gems of valuable and eloquent wisdom. I took a lot of notes, and tried to view the information presented as a beginning- like an organizational map to guide me in a life long quest for knowledge. What a journey it's going to be reading through all of these ideas in more detail.

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2 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars

it is a long 30 hours

the first part all the Ancients are pretty much what you've ever read his presentation was great I love his lectures

The really good part comes from about chapter 50 on and it's worth just getting the book to listen to those 10 chapters or so anyways good luck with it if you decide to buy it it's worth it or maybe a credit for that anyways

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Conflicting headline requirements?

Very well done! Outstanding! Interesting, instructive, clearly and objectively explained.
Why must this review contain a minimum number of words? Also it says that a review heading is optional but at the end it is required.

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