I spotted some errors late in the editing process that I wanted to clear up here. First, Copleston’s volumes are still printed by Continuum. However, I can’t find the books available for purchase anywhere except directly from the publisher, which is odd. I don’t know the exact status of the series at Continuum, but my advice still stands: you can find used copies of Copleston and save some money. Second, I grouped Boethius into Roman philosophy. This isn’t wrong per se, but then I started Medieval Philosophy with St Augustine. Augustine is older than Boethius by nearly a century. So my groupings here were a tad inconsistent. The lines between Roman philosophy and Medieval philosophy are blurry. Both philosophers were influenced by Neo-Platonism, and I wanted to include a representative Neo-Platonist text in the Roman section. Unfortunately, a beginner-friendly Neo-Platonist text is hard to find, especially non-Christian Neo-Platonism. (Though Boethius is a Christian Neo-Platonist, the text doesn’t feel as religious as Augustine’s writings. Make of that what you will.) If I see other errors, or others point them out to me, I’ll update this comment.
Do you think a beginner can get into Schopenhauer? I found him shockingly readable, harder than the Stoics who are very clear but worlds easier than the poetic Nietzsche. I think because he extensively quotes past philosophers and relates his arguments to theirs, he would give somebody a good blueprint for how to study other philosophy. I actually ordered the complete works of Plato, who I had dismissed foolishly, before hearing his comments.
@@nickdualUseless and obsolete are both vague and relative notions. Even if a philosopher’s views are wrong (also vague), one can get ideas from their ideas and apply them to contemporary debates and issues. For instance, it’s no secret that much of formal logic and semantics was refined by studying the systems proffered by 14th century philosophers & theologians. I couldn’t care less how wrong, say, Descartes is about mind/body, his theory of distinctions, which he elaborated on from Suarez, does wonders for sharpening one’s own mind, let alone aiding in understanding early modern concepts more generally. Davidson’s ontology and his theory of events was influenced by a number of “useless”, “obsolete” and “wrong” thinkers.
Having spent almost 5 years studying Eastern philosophy both inside and outside of school, I think your recommendations are pretty good. I'll just add that Eastern philosophy is very vast, and is often overlooked because it tends to have a religious flavor to it. Chinese philosophy alone has many branches, but the most popular are Confucianism and Taoism. For Confucianism I would recommend the books: An Introduction to Classical Chinese Philosophy and The Essential Mengzi by author Bryan W. Van Norden. For Taoism I would recommend the Tao Te Ching by Red Pine and Zhuangzi: The Essential Writings by Brook Ziporyn. Buddhism is extremely diverse, but for Eastern Buddhism (Chinese and Japanese) I would start by reading Emptiness and Omnipresence by Brook Ziporyn and The Way of Zen by Alan Watts. Zen is often seen as Japanese and while Japan popularized Zen it was brought over from China where it is called Chan. I know Buddhism and Taoism are often seen as religions, but they are very philosophical and the word "religion" has a different meaning in Asia. Hope this helps a little!
I second this! Buddhism is often seen as pure spirituality, but what many don’t realize is that Buddhist philosophy is more of an analytical response to the prevalent Hindu theology of its emergent era. Buddhism has since developed into a religion, but at its core, it is as philosophically rich as any Western system. I’ve become particularly fond of the non-dual explorations which developed later in Tibet. “Progressive Stages of Meditation on Emptiness” is my current read, and it’s blowing my mind. Clear, concise, and luminous.
@@this_alec Great point! Non-duality has always been a part of Buddhism even in its early years. Mahayana Buddhism expanded on non-duality, interdependence, and emptiness (meaning everything is empty of inherent existence, because everything that exists depends on the existence of something else). All branches of Buddhism are fascinating, but I have found Tibetan Buddhism and Tiantai Buddhism (a Chinese sect) to be the deepest and most interesting for my taste.
I think Ziporyn's book on Tiantai is a little dense for first-timers. Honestly, I think by far the best introduction to Chan (aka Zen) Buddhism is by Peter Hershock (just called "Chan Buddhism"). Mark Siderits has two books on "Buddhism as Philosophy" and "The Buddha's Teachings As Philosophy" that are well reviewed. I like Red Pine's translation, but I would also recommend Hans-Georg Moeller's "Daodejing" and especially his book "Daoism Explained".
Namaste Jared, for Indian philosophy I suggest 1. Introduction to Indian philosophy by Satishchandra Chetterjee and Dhirendranath Datta 2. A critical survey of Indian philosophy by Chandradhar Sharma 3. The Bhagavad Gita 4. The principal Upanishads by S Radhakrishan 5. The Yoga series by Swami Vivekananda 6. The works of Adi Sankaracharya, including Tattvabodha and his commentaries on the Gita, Bramha Sutra and Upanishads. 7. The Dhammapada 8. Dohas of Kabir 9. The idealist way of life/The Hindu view of life by S Radhakrishan 10. Indian philosophy both volumes, S Radhakrishnan 11. Sarva Darsana Sangraha by Madhavacharya I have specifically chosen books that English readers will find very easy to read, enjoy
one more point don't buy bhagvad gita by isckon its just shit, titled as 'Bhagvad Gita As It Is' (the irony lol 🤣) buy bhagvad gita from gita press preferably without commentary
A good abridgement of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics is called “How to Flourish,” which condenses its main arguments down in a way that’s more accessible for beginners. In fact, its translator presents the same excerpts in her own Ancient Philosophy courses.
Islamic Philosophy is incredibly fascinating! I would recommend having a strong understanding of Platonic/Neo-Platonic Metaphysics, and Aristotelian Logic. As well as the Quran and Hadith Literature. The four philosophers that I would recommend jumping into are Ibn Arabi, Ibn Cina (Avicenna), Suhrawardi, and Mulla Sudra. It is mental gymnastics, to say the least, to wrap your head around illuminationism and the arguments on contingency/necessity.
"The Book of the City of Ladies" by Christine de Pizan. The students in my introductory Political Philosophy course are assigned this text when they are learning about Medieval thought.
For Chinese Philosophy Collinson, Plant, Wilkinson, Fifty Eastern Thinkers (2000) Koller, Asian Philosophies Graham, Disputers of the Tao (1989) Ivenhoe, The Daodejing of Laozi (Hackett Classics) (2003) Ivenhoe & Van Norden, Readings in Classical Chinese Philosophy (Second Ed, 2005) Van Norden, Mengzi Watson, Xunzi: Basic Writings Ziporyn, Zhuangzi For virtue theory, read Mengzi since provides the foundation of virtue theory based on Ruism Note: read multiple translations of the Daodejing
I found Anthony Kenny's a New History of Western Philosophy to be a worthy substitute for Bertrand Russell's book. Read both but where Russel misunderstood or left out (I'm looking at you Kierkegaard) certain philosophers, Kenny is much much less biased. Every section goes over the great thinkers and their ideas, but then includes a breakdown in developments in certain fields like Metaphysics, Logic, or Ethics, and others. Its a bit hard to explain but if you can find a table of contents for it, you'll see what I mean. I believe its a collection of 4 separate initial works. It's also a hefty tome of over 1000 pages in full that, at least in paper back, cost me around 50 euros.
Brilliant. As an old man, I wish this list would have been available fifty years ago. Thank you. I subscribe to your Substack and pray you will unpack some of your presentation in the future, especially the influence of philosophy on early Christianity.
Listening you talking about Marx, I think there's one more very important philosopher from the 1700s-1800s - Adam Smith. He's the father of the study of economics (and who, like Marx after him, uses the Labour Theory of Value) and the concept of the Invisible Hand of the Market. "Adam Smith By Jesse Norman" is a good intro, I heard. To learn about why the Labour Theory of Value is wrong, I would look into the Marginalist Revolution (Jevons, Menger and Walras). And other later critiques of Marx(ism), such as "Socialism" by Ludwig von Mises (or his "Liberalism", or "Road to Serfdom" by F.A. Hayek.
Keep up the great work Jared. You're a hero! You've got lots of supporters here who look like they might want a lot more of the mentorship and thought leadership you're putting out into the world.
Hello Mr. Jared, I hope this comment finds you well. When I found myself gravitating towards philosophy, you were someone who I found to be empathetic and genuine in your discourse. I will never be able to read all that you'll suggest, but whenever I read something eye opening, I am impelled to render thanks two-fold, to the writer and the suggester. And they've all been some of the very best, regardless of genre. I hope you can pull through in these uncertain times for yourself and your family, and that you'll continue to be true and produce the quality that makes me and your other well-wishers, coming back for more.
My recommendation to get into russian philosophy: A history of Russian philosophy by V.V. Zenkovsky, History of Russian Philosophy by Nikolay Onufriyevich Lossky, The Meaning of Love by Vladimir Solovyov, War, Progress, and the End of History: Three Conversations, Including a Short Tale of the Antichrist by Solovyov Vladimir, The Fourth Political Theory by Aleksandr Dugin, Noomahia by Aleksandr Dugin
I would also like to recommend Julián Marías' History of Philosophy. Comprehensive while succinct, it is a fantastic, accessible introduction to philosophy. Plus, the man was a genius!
This is a fantastic topic. Great idea! It makes me want more: where to begin (or re-begin) reading Fiction, History, or Science Fiction for those of us who have been out of serious reading for a while since college… and need to start wading in the shallow end of the pool before making my way back into progressively more difficult works. Kudos.
Nice! Love the long form video! Would love to see a video at some point just briefly explaining the main points of different schools of thought. Also, further down the line, I’d love to see you collab with Useful Charts and make a philosophy chart from beginning to end. That would be a fun series to watch!
You do such an incredible work!! Thanks you for sharing. Also thank you to all people sharing more lists in the comments, I may not live long enough to read everything but sure I will try.
Really appreciate the time and care put into this video - my experience with philosophy is lacking in breadth. I do have one suggestion though. In respect to this being a recommendation list for beginners, I personally think Nietzsche’s Genealogy of Morals is a better recommendation for beginners than Beyond Good and Evil. BGE is actually my favorite work of Nietzsche’s, but I believe GOM to be a better introduction to his thought because of it being limited in scope with the topics the book covers. With BGE, you have a critique of dogmatic perspective in philosophy and the faith it’s predicated on, a chapter on how to become the perspectival philosopher Nietzsche has in mind for the philosophers of the future, a diagnosis of the religious neurosis and related modes of perspective, a chapter of miscellaneous aphorisms, the historical development of morality, the commonly accepted prejudices in academia, the blind morality in modernity’s “higher man”, and Nietzsche’s opinion on what actually constitutes virtuous morality. As someone who has tried to get friends in Nietzsche, I’ve noticed in large they really struggle with BGE. But with GOM covering Nietzsche’s theory on the two morality valuation systems and their development throughout history, a discussion on the historical development of bad conscience and the tools of the psyche which are used in relation to the phenomena of bad conscience, and a deep dive into what constitutes the meaning of ascetic ideals and how that meaning is contingent on the individual’s value system, I find that beginners have a much easier time chewing on this book. And, in regards to illustrating how Christianity and the religious essence of platonism has heavily influenced modern morality, I think this book fits the bill much better given its limited scope. Again, just wanted to say I really enjoyed the video. Just wanted to share my experience with trying to get people into Nietzsche, as I think his writings are very valuable
I find Kojeve's Introduction to the Reading of Hegel from 1947 to be a great survey of Hegel's thought. it acclimates you to the immensity of Hegel's Phenomenology in a way that will make you feel like a genius, and incorporates ideas from Marx and existentialism as well
Great video! So helpful to have a compact list like this, also checking out the comments is very helpful to find more specific recommendations. Thank you, Jared!
I have a recommendation of my own: Amartya Sen's The Idea of Justice. Sen is a philosophically oriented economist who includes classical Indian philosophy along with Western philosophy in his writings on justice and whether or not various concepts of it are attainable or not. Publisher is Harvard Belknap.
Plato is the man. I'm always surprised when he doesn't top the list in philosophy for beginners. I really like Epictitus as well. He is Lazer focused on what is important, which is one's integrity. We waste too much of our lives trying to impress people.
the first two texts on philosophy I read was "Social contract" by Rousseau and "The First Philosophers" by waterfield which you recommended in another video and for me I guess they really worked because ive been interested in philosophy ever since.
Barnes & Noble currently still has on its shelf copies of various Copleston volumes. They published by Image Books, Doubleday. As mentioned, there are numerous various printings available in used bookstores for fairly cheap, especially if you get the out of print mass market versions that were published by Image in 1963. Imo, Copleston’s History of Philosophy is the best chronological overview ever published-it is both fairly rigorous and still accessible enough for determined undergrads. Anthony Kenny’s multi volumes of History of Philosophy are also good, as is the Adam’s volumes. But another good, and a bit more accessible than Copleston, series- out of print-is A History of Western Philosophy by W.T. Jones. Again, use libraries or get them used. It’s 4 volumes, I think: The Classical Mind, The Medieval Mind, Hobbes To Hume, and then it’s either one or two volumes on Kant thru Sartre.
I want to start reading about philosophy and I had just watched your older video about philosophy book recommendations and this is perfect thank you very much
I didn't even realize Peter Adamson did books along with the podcast. I'm only missing 2 of the old Copleston books when they were mass market paperbacks from Doubleday Image. Will be looking into that Epictetus volume you showed. Great vid!
Amazing video. I would say in late modern philosophy Schopenhauer is a great read to show how philosophy can be taken. Specifically, I would recommend Parerga and Paralipomena.
Great video! I was in a philosophy major. But, my teachers taught mostly about the overview from each era. So, we didn’t have so much chance to get into the text deeply. There’s a lot more to explore in details! Thanks!! 🙏🙏
A fantastic intro to ancient Chinese philosophy is “Philosophers of the Warring States” edited by Hagen and Coutinho, tons of commentary and is organized very very nicely.
I have to recommend Thomas Paine. He might not be the most innovative philosopher, but I think he’s one of the most important for modern democracy. His writing influenced Thomas Jefferson who wrote arguably one of the most important documents in the US and western world. A lot of the language in the Declaration is incredibly similar to Thomas Paine’s writings. Another thought, it’d be interesting to see you compile a list of 21st century philosophers. I haven’t read much recent philosophy but based on interviews, I think Robert Sapolsky will be one of the major ones. Yes, he’s a neuroscientist, but his conclusions have a profound direct impact on philosophy, especially regarding free will and determinism.
Very interesting! Picked up an Adamson and the Hackett Hellenistic Philosophy. Went to get some more and was told my Amazon that I already owned them; your influence I assume.
For those interested in medieval philosophy I would highly recommend Etienne Gilson's The Spirit of Medieval Philosophy, also anything by Gilson is in my opinion worth a read.
My biggest problem with Copleston is the frequent absence of glosses for words and phrases from the source texts in their original languages. I bought the full set when I was in college taking Latin and German before I’d started Greek and had a rather slow time working through volume one. E.g., he introduces Aristotle’s ontological categories by the Greek terms Aristotle used for them without English glosses for the Greek words and then on the next page starts referring to them with corresponding English terms. If you read Greek, it’s richly rewarding (both for the content and for the ego), but remembering my earliest encounter with it, it could be quite frustrating. Even now, I have pretty good Greek and passable Latin and German reading knowledge, but Copleston leaves me at a loss with the French of volume four and later entries in the series. Nonetheless, Copleston is thorough and engaging enough that he almost motivates me to learn French.
Thank you for making this video as not all of us have academic degree in philosophy or job related to it, but still are interested in all these and I anyway always like your videos. so this list will help a lot on where to start and so on.. Regarding Indian philosophy recommendation you were right that a reader is better to grasp fully first an overall view of many things before going deep. The "sarma" one you mentioned,I checked it's index, it's a good book but I noticed that it doesn't have non mainstream schools like tantra etc in it. ( Also though I appreciate lots of suggestions in comments there's one thing that I wanna mention like people are recommending books like Bhagavad Geeta which is great but in my opinion it's still a synthesis of philosophies of that time and doens't explain what you might be looking for. (Atleast personally in my opinion). So because you yourself have a masters degree I think you might benefit from academic works of experts putting the book in its context and commentary and so on. Because I couldn't form the list I thought that I can share my syllabus from my university when I did graduation in philosophy. It's a public link and though the pdf is about syllabus in the end section of semester-y information and paper pattern there is the list of prescribed and suggested reading. I think it will be best for what u are looking for. In graduation basically we were taught more of a comprehensive view of the subject so the books are all encompassing beginners type and still informative.. 👇👇 uniraj.ac.in/student/syl_N/uploads/Philosophy-I&II%20sem_06.10.2023.pdf And I never did masters but if you want suggestions regarding deep information and want to read further I would suggest these links which are again syllabus ( including the suggested reading) that' prescribed for a student doing masters in philosophy in my university. The syllabus is a little different for two types: Annually studying 👇 www.uniraj.ac.in/student/syllabi/Syllabus-2024/M.A.%20Philosophy%20(Annual)2023-24.pdf Semester wise studying students 👇 www.uniraj.ac.in/student/syllabi/Syllabus-2024/M.A.%20Philosophy(Semester%20Sch2023-24.pdf Ps: sorry you might have to search a little in these papers 😅 but the lists were too big to just write all the names . I hope I was helpful and I really think these are great lists so Thank you And have a happy reading!!
I have recently started reading Mortimer J. Adler's "Ten Philosophical Mistakes" and I sincerely recommend it. His main argument is (and this argument goes back to Thomas Aquinas, and even before to Aristotle) that small error(s) at the beginning of a reasoning lead to much bigger and complex problems and false conclusions. I can't recommend the book enough!
Bryan Van Norden is a wonderful source for ancient Chinese philosophy! He even has a 30 or so lecture series on TH-cam overlaying the historical development of Confucianism, Taoism, and Chan Buddhism that I would highly recommend.
You mentioned Ficthe in a category of more difficult to read late modern idealists, and I truly think his Vocation of Man is not only digestible, but impactful and enjoyable.
Thanks for the list Jared. I'm following one of your earlier lists, but this gives me more direction and context overall. Though I've not directly followed philosophy it's amazing how many names you mentioned were known to me. As much a part of our culture as Star Wars 🤣
Highly reccomend the Hackett Publishing Modern Philosophy: An Anthology of Primary Sources. Gives you access to a lot of primary texts from the rationalists and empiricists as well as covering women such as emilie du chatelet and Margaret Cavendish.
Not sure if anyone in the comments has suggested this title yet, but a while ago I came across a book called History of Philosophy by Julián Marías. I believe it was written in 1967 though, so not the newest thing available. That said, the table of contents is more or less like Bertrand Russell's book, but also with some additional figures as well, including some from Spain since that is where Marías was from. I'm currently going through Peter Adamson's History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps series, so perhaps I will try to get to Marías' book afterwards.
If I could offer 1 additional suggesting from contemporary philosophy that I think people would find very helpful in understanding these other books is "little manual for Knowing" When getting my philosophy degree, little manual was indispensable in terms of assessing + understanding the impact of the implicit epistemology I had acquired from growing up in the modern West.
Thank you for this video! Especially for the recommendations of Peter Adamson and Copleston (I've already read Russell few years ago), because I feel on the safe ground with the primary sources, but am a bit sceptical with general overviews. I have to admit, I'm a bit confused that there was no mention of Schopenhauer. Unlike Hegel, he is quite readable and understandable on beginner level. At least Aphorisms on the Wisdom of Life deserve to be mentioned in my humble opinion :)
I wonder if you could do a small Into to Philosophy series on TH-cam, I know I would watch it. Videos, not super long, going over a text and its main points and clearing up specific arguments which can be confusing
Philosophies of India, Heinrich Zimmer. Great overview of the major Indian philosophies. Unfortunately he died before finishing the book and the end is an edit of his annotations by Joseph Campbell. But it's a great introduction on Indian philosophy.
I would add Justice as Fairness - A restatement by John Rawls. Much more accessible than his Theory of Justice. I would also add The Social Contract by Rousseau. I think those two are great bookends to social contract theory
Like your Channel: No fuzz, straight to the point. Thanks for that. supporting this. A PS: you should do readings, i'd buy it without a thought... just sayin' ... and PPS: Aurelius.. my way to go anywhere... thx
Awesome video , as always 5 stars. Thankyou Jared , very much for all the philosophical insights and practical nuggets of wisdom in understanding the intricacies of philosophy. I am also interested in the Philosophy of Science. And have read a few books on this topic. Popper, Kuhn and recently Kitcher and Baxter. I think there are other people like me who are also interested in this branch of philosophy. So please help us with a video on this topic .
The analects of Confucius is good for beginners, So is the Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu, and The Art Of War by Sun Tzu. I find if you want to get into Chinese Philosophy these are a good start.
thank you for another fantastic videos. You comment on our current focus on textual analysis caught my attention. As a Visual Artist, my interest is in the "wordless". I would appreciate it greatly if you could spare a few pointers on where I could learn more.
Excellent video. Thank you greatly. This video is a resource I've hoped to find as I begin my self-study of philosophy. I am curious what you think of Will Durant's THE STORY OF PHILOSOPHY as a single-volume overview. It has loads of gaps, but it's quite accessible and offers the novice reader a great introductory list of voices and titles. Just curious what you (or any of your viewers) think about Durant's text. Thanks again for the work you're creating. It's greatly appreciated.
For Indian Philosophy - An Introduction to Indian Philosophy by Satishchandra Chatterjee and Dhirendramohan Dutta. This is a good solid book to start with Indian Philosophy.
Did you not recommend "The story of philosophy" by Will Durant for any particular reason? Just curious what you think of that specific philosophy overview book.
Just finished Plato's dialogues, the Republic, and working my way through Nicomachean Ethics. Wondering how approachable/worthwhile Aristotle's Metaphysics would be for a relative beginner.
Thanks for the helpful vid. I’m teaching my first undergrad philosophy course this Fall and I’ve been thumbing through Anthony Kenny’s history of philosophy, put out by Oxford. I’m curious if you have looked at it, and if so, how it stacks up against the other histories you recommended.
Hey Jared I was really curious about your opinion on Vonnegut? As a writer and his opinions on society. Play devils advocate a little bit too if you have criticisms. He’s my favorite author and I would love your take.
As you discussed here for Stoicism I have Discourses Fragments Handbook by Epictetus along with The Enchiridion and of course Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. Apologies if I missed it but Is it true that Seneca has 12 essays altogether? If so I currently have a collection of 10 so far. I'm also hoping to add Letters in the future. You never seem to see my comments but I appreciate the videos.
For Chinese philosophy maybe I'd suggest Karyn Lai (I think she's working with Adamson on the Chinese Philosophy part of the podcast). There's a very good book that has a kind of overview of Chinese and Indian philosophies that's called World Philosophy by David E. Cooper (I think he's the Philosophy of Gardens guy), which is what I've used for my classes whenever I cover those Eastern traditions. I know of other resources, but they're in Spanish :/ As for Buddhism, I can suggest Jay Garfield and Walpola Rahula. Also, Ben Ani Scharfstein has a history of philosophy from the Upanishads to Kant, which is divided by subject and compares different philosophers both East and West for that subject (like, Uddalaka from the Upanishads and Parmenides on ultimate being).
While I certainly think people should read what they find most interests them, it will create some problems for the reader if they skip significant periods of philosophy. For instance, on the issues of substance, if one begins with the early moderns, some debates will remain opaque as the entire discussion of forms and their conceptual evolution from Plato to Descartes has been neglected. Without familiarity of this development, the question of whether, say, Descartes is the starting a new modern scientific project or the last of the medieval scholasticism projects hinges on the issues surrounding forms, hylomorphism, and identity-key concepts related to views on substance up to the period in question. The view one holds here colors one’s entire view for later period topics. In short, it’s just best, imo, not to skip thru the history of philosophy as if it were a salad bar buffet.
For me Philosophy starts with Hammurabi's Code. Or maybe even earlier with the Book of Job, which comes from the Neolithic era. So do some Grimm's Fairytales. I find it fascinating how God gave Mankind Law, and you start seeing it first appear in the first civilizations. And also stories in Genesis, which come from earlier source materials which probably actually did originate with the Hebrews. Though Job and some Grimm's Fairy Tales are perhaps the earliest literature in the world. And the first few chapters of Genesis.
Jared, I would love it if you would do more deep dives on single books by authors like Ursula K Le Guin or Margaret Atwood. I found your author overviews fascinating but I think going more granular would support your new content schedule while keeping it more literary and less "TH-cam-y"
These are really great! Thank you so much!!! Video suggestion for you if you need more ideas. You had a really hot take on your top ten fantasy books video that you think Sanderson doesn’t depict mental health issues very well. I’d like to know what fiction books you have read that do a good job depicting mental health?
For African philosophy, Peter Adamson's done an entire side-podcast for A History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps that's focused on African philosophy, he's got resources and further reading on his website, and one day the podcast episodes will inevitably be made into another book in the series :)
I am not so much reading the republic as analyzing it in depth and trying to have a deep understanding of the OG Socrates. Then the plan is to read Aristotle, more plato, then perhaps Descartes, and Hume. Then, German idealism.
I've been creating a guide to study philosophy that seem interesting to my future students. the three main matters are 1. science, philosophy and society; this include the three main branches of philosophy a) ethics b) epistemology c) metaphysics. 2. philosophical currents; for example, idealism 3. pedagogy; this include learning teories and some didactics research. What do you think?
I spotted some errors late in the editing process that I wanted to clear up here.
First, Copleston’s volumes are still printed by Continuum. However, I can’t find the books available for purchase anywhere except directly from the publisher, which is odd. I don’t know the exact status of the series at Continuum, but my advice still stands: you can find used copies of Copleston and save some money.
Second, I grouped Boethius into Roman philosophy. This isn’t wrong per se, but then I started Medieval Philosophy with St Augustine. Augustine is older than Boethius by nearly a century. So my groupings here were a tad inconsistent. The lines between Roman philosophy and Medieval philosophy are blurry. Both philosophers were influenced by Neo-Platonism, and I wanted to include a representative Neo-Platonist text in the Roman section. Unfortunately, a beginner-friendly Neo-Platonist text is hard to find, especially non-Christian Neo-Platonism. (Though Boethius is a Christian Neo-Platonist, the text doesn’t feel as religious as Augustine’s writings. Make of that what you will.)
If I see other errors, or others point them out to me, I’ll update this comment.
Many philosophies are useless and obsolete, even wrong. You should define something new.
I redefined a new Dualism philosophy.
Blackwell's in the UK has them and shipping to the US is free!
Do you think a beginner can get into Schopenhauer? I found him shockingly readable, harder than the Stoics who are very clear but worlds easier than the poetic Nietzsche.
I think because he extensively quotes past philosophers and relates his arguments to theirs, he would give somebody a good blueprint for how to study other philosophy. I actually ordered the complete works of Plato, who I had dismissed foolishly, before hearing his comments.
@@nickdualUseless and obsolete are both vague and relative notions. Even if a philosopher’s views are wrong (also vague), one can get ideas from their ideas and apply them to contemporary debates and issues.
For instance, it’s no secret that much of formal logic and semantics was refined by studying the systems proffered by 14th century philosophers & theologians.
I couldn’t care less how wrong, say, Descartes is about mind/body, his theory of distinctions, which he elaborated on from Suarez, does wonders for sharpening one’s own mind, let alone aiding in understanding early modern concepts more generally.
Davidson’s ontology and his theory of events was influenced by a number of “useless”, “obsolete” and “wrong” thinkers.
@@Summalogicae That means we have "wide space" to research new things.
Having spent almost 5 years studying Eastern philosophy both inside and outside of school, I think your recommendations are pretty good. I'll just add that Eastern philosophy is very vast, and is often overlooked because it tends to have a religious flavor to it. Chinese philosophy alone has many branches, but the most popular are Confucianism and Taoism. For Confucianism I would recommend the books: An Introduction to Classical Chinese Philosophy and The Essential Mengzi by author Bryan W. Van Norden. For Taoism I would recommend the Tao Te Ching by Red Pine and Zhuangzi: The Essential Writings by Brook Ziporyn. Buddhism is extremely diverse, but for Eastern Buddhism (Chinese and Japanese) I would start by reading Emptiness and Omnipresence by Brook Ziporyn and The Way of Zen by Alan Watts. Zen is often seen as Japanese and while Japan popularized Zen it was brought over from China where it is called Chan. I know Buddhism and Taoism are often seen as religions, but they are very philosophical and the word "religion" has a different meaning in Asia. Hope this helps a little!
I second this! Buddhism is often seen as pure spirituality, but what many don’t realize is that Buddhist philosophy is more of an analytical response to the prevalent Hindu theology of its emergent era. Buddhism has since developed into a religion, but at its core, it is as philosophically rich as any Western system.
I’ve become particularly fond of the non-dual explorations which developed later in Tibet. “Progressive Stages of Meditation on Emptiness” is my current read, and it’s blowing my mind. Clear, concise, and luminous.
@@this_alec Great point! Non-duality has always been a part of Buddhism even in its early years. Mahayana Buddhism expanded on non-duality, interdependence, and emptiness (meaning everything is empty of inherent existence, because everything that exists depends on the existence of something else). All branches of Buddhism are fascinating, but I have found Tibetan Buddhism and Tiantai Buddhism (a Chinese sect) to be the deepest and most interesting for my taste.
Xunzi better to start with than Mengzi.
Watts was a charlatan
I think Ziporyn's book on Tiantai is a little dense for first-timers. Honestly, I think by far the best introduction to Chan (aka Zen) Buddhism is by Peter Hershock (just called "Chan Buddhism"). Mark Siderits has two books on "Buddhism as Philosophy" and "The Buddha's Teachings As Philosophy" that are well reviewed. I like Red Pine's translation, but I would also recommend Hans-Georg Moeller's "Daodejing" and especially his book "Daoism Explained".
Jiddu Krishnamurti is too often overlooked
I like how you get right to the point with your recommendations.
Namaste Jared, for Indian philosophy I suggest
1. Introduction to Indian philosophy by Satishchandra Chetterjee and Dhirendranath Datta
2. A critical survey of Indian philosophy by Chandradhar Sharma
3. The Bhagavad Gita
4. The principal Upanishads by S Radhakrishan
5. The Yoga series by Swami Vivekananda
6. The works of Adi Sankaracharya, including Tattvabodha and his commentaries on the Gita, Bramha Sutra and Upanishads.
7. The Dhammapada
8. Dohas of Kabir
9. The idealist way of life/The Hindu view of life by S Radhakrishan
10. Indian philosophy both volumes, S Radhakrishnan
11. Sarva Darsana Sangraha by Madhavacharya
I have specifically chosen books that English readers will find very easy to read, enjoy
- ashtvakra gita
- tao te ching by lao tzu
- ashtvakra gita
- guru granth sahib
one more point don't buy bhagvad gita by isckon its just shit, titled as 'Bhagvad Gita As It Is' (the irony lol 🤣)
buy bhagvad gita from gita press preferably without commentary
@@kaustubhkadam1083truer words were never spoken. I agree.
It's not "shit" but i agree iskcon one is manipulated with an agenda @@kaustubhkadam1083
@@kaustubhkadam1083 Swami Gambhirananda translation is also good
A good abridgement of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics is called “How to Flourish,” which condenses its main arguments down in a way that’s more accessible for beginners. In fact, its translator presents the same excerpts in her own Ancient Philosophy courses.
Finally. This video is exactly the reason why I started following your channel.
Your approach to philosophy is approachable. Thank you for your work!
Islamic Philosophy is incredibly fascinating! I would recommend having a strong understanding of Platonic/Neo-Platonic Metaphysics, and Aristotelian Logic. As well as the Quran and Hadith Literature. The four philosophers that I would recommend jumping into are Ibn Arabi, Ibn Cina (Avicenna), Suhrawardi, and Mulla Sudra.
It is mental gymnastics, to say the least, to wrap your head around illuminationism and the arguments on contingency/necessity.
no, just read plotinus and aristotel..., Ibn Cina is the only one worth looking at....
"The Book of the City of Ladies" by Christine de Pizan. The students in my introductory Political Philosophy course are assigned this text when they are learning about Medieval thought.
For Chinese Philosophy
Collinson, Plant, Wilkinson, Fifty Eastern Thinkers (2000)
Koller, Asian Philosophies
Graham, Disputers of the Tao (1989)
Ivenhoe, The Daodejing of Laozi (Hackett Classics) (2003)
Ivenhoe & Van Norden, Readings in Classical Chinese Philosophy (Second Ed, 2005)
Van Norden, Mengzi
Watson, Xunzi: Basic Writings
Ziporyn, Zhuangzi
For virtue theory, read Mengzi since provides the foundation of virtue theory based on Ruism
Note: read multiple translations of the Daodejing
I found Anthony Kenny's a New History of Western Philosophy to be a worthy substitute for Bertrand Russell's book. Read both but where Russel misunderstood or left out (I'm looking at you Kierkegaard) certain philosophers, Kenny is much much less biased. Every section goes over the great thinkers and their ideas, but then includes a breakdown in developments in certain fields like Metaphysics, Logic, or Ethics, and others. Its a bit hard to explain but if you can find a table of contents for it, you'll see what I mean. I believe its a collection of 4 separate initial works. It's also a hefty tome of over 1000 pages in full that, at least in paper back, cost me around 50 euros.
Thanks!
Brilliant. As an old man, I wish this list would have been available fifty years ago. Thank you. I subscribe to your Substack and pray you will unpack some of your presentation in the future, especially the influence of philosophy on early Christianity.
Listening you talking about Marx, I think there's one more very important philosopher from the 1700s-1800s - Adam Smith. He's the father of the study of economics (and who, like Marx after him, uses the Labour Theory of Value) and the concept of the Invisible Hand of the Market. "Adam Smith By Jesse Norman" is a good intro, I heard. To learn about why the Labour Theory of Value is wrong, I would look into the Marginalist Revolution (Jevons, Menger and Walras). And other later critiques of Marx(ism), such as "Socialism" by Ludwig von Mises (or his "Liberalism", or "Road to Serfdom" by F.A. Hayek.
Fantastic video. This is the best philosophy book rundown I have seen...thanks for doing it!
Love these. Would recommend reading more Eastern philosophy books to everyone due to its vastness and peacefulness
Keep up the great work Jared. You're a hero! You've got lots of supporters here who look like they might want a lot more of the mentorship and thought leadership you're putting out into the world.
Hello Mr. Jared, I hope this comment finds you well.
When I found myself gravitating towards philosophy, you were someone who I found to be empathetic and genuine in your discourse.
I will never be able to read all that you'll suggest, but whenever I read something eye opening, I am impelled to render thanks two-fold, to the writer and the suggester. And they've all been some of the very best, regardless of genre. I hope you can pull through in these uncertain times for yourself and your family, and that you'll continue to be true and produce the quality that makes me and your other well-wishers, coming back for more.
My recommendation to get into russian philosophy: A history of Russian philosophy by V.V. Zenkovsky, History of Russian Philosophy by Nikolay Onufriyevich Lossky, The Meaning of Love by Vladimir Solovyov,
War, Progress, and the End of History: Three Conversations, Including a Short Tale of the Antichrist by Solovyov Vladimir, The Fourth Political Theory by Aleksandr Dugin, Noomahia by Aleksandr Dugin
Love the channel, hope I can muster the energy to read a few of these books:)
I would also like to recommend Julián Marías' History of Philosophy. Comprehensive while succinct, it is a fantastic, accessible introduction to philosophy. Plus, the man was a genius!
Thank you for another great video. And your substack is worth every penny and more.
This is a fantastic topic. Great idea! It makes me want more: where to begin (or re-begin) reading Fiction, History, or Science Fiction for those of us who have been out of serious reading for a while since college… and need to start wading in the shallow end of the pool before making my way back into progressively more difficult works. Kudos.
Nice! Love the long form video! Would love to see a video at some point just briefly explaining the main points of different schools of thought. Also, further down the line, I’d love to see you collab with Useful Charts and make a philosophy chart from beginning to end. That would be a fun series to watch!
Hi Jared, just a quick word of thanks to you. Recently discovered your channel and I'm watching all of your videos. 😊
Thank you so much, Jared. This is just what I have been looking for!
You do such an incredible work!! Thanks you for sharing. Also thank you to all people sharing more lists in the comments, I may not live long enough to read everything but sure I will try.
It would be so dope if you did an audio podcast that reviews philosophy books and other philosophical concepts.
Really appreciate the time and care put into this video - my experience with philosophy is lacking in breadth. I do have one suggestion though. In respect to this being a recommendation list for beginners, I personally think Nietzsche’s Genealogy of Morals is a better recommendation for beginners than Beyond Good and Evil. BGE is actually my favorite work of Nietzsche’s, but I believe GOM to be a better introduction to his thought because of it being limited in scope with the topics the book covers. With BGE, you have a critique of dogmatic perspective in philosophy and the faith it’s predicated on, a chapter on how to become the perspectival philosopher Nietzsche has in mind for the philosophers of the future, a diagnosis of the religious neurosis and related modes of perspective, a chapter of miscellaneous aphorisms, the historical development of morality, the commonly accepted prejudices in academia, the blind morality in modernity’s “higher man”, and Nietzsche’s opinion on what actually constitutes virtuous morality.
As someone who has tried to get friends in Nietzsche, I’ve noticed in large they really struggle with BGE. But with GOM covering Nietzsche’s theory on the two morality valuation systems and their development throughout history, a discussion on the historical development of bad conscience and the tools of the psyche which are used in relation to the phenomena of bad conscience, and a deep dive into what constitutes the meaning of ascetic ideals and how that meaning is contingent on the individual’s value system, I find that beginners have a much easier time chewing on this book. And, in regards to illustrating how Christianity and the religious essence of platonism has heavily influenced modern morality, I think this book fits the bill much better given its limited scope.
Again, just wanted to say I really enjoyed the video. Just wanted to share my experience with trying to get people into Nietzsche, as I think his writings are very valuable
this is very good, it thrills my heart and aches my wallet! so many good editions!!!!!
I find Kojeve's Introduction to the Reading of Hegel from 1947 to be a great survey of Hegel's thought. it acclimates you to the immensity of Hegel's Phenomenology in a way that will make you feel like a genius, and incorporates ideas from Marx and existentialism as well
This channel is such a treasure. Thank you so much!
Great video! So helpful to have a compact list like this, also checking out the comments is very helpful to find more specific recommendations. Thank you, Jared!
I have a recommendation of my own: Amartya Sen's The Idea of Justice. Sen is a philosophically oriented economist who includes classical Indian philosophy along with Western philosophy in his writings on justice and whether or not various concepts of it are attainable or not. Publisher is Harvard Belknap.
Plato is the man. I'm always surprised when he doesn't top the list in philosophy for beginners. I really like Epictitus as well. He is Lazer focused on what is important, which is one's integrity. We waste too much of our lives trying to impress people.
Excellent panorama!!!
Thank you, Jared.
the first two texts on philosophy I read was "Social contract" by Rousseau and "The First Philosophers" by waterfield which you recommended in another video and for me I guess they really worked because ive been interested in philosophy ever since.
Barnes & Noble currently still has on its shelf copies of various Copleston volumes. They published by Image Books, Doubleday.
As mentioned, there are numerous various printings available in used bookstores for fairly cheap, especially if you get the out of print mass market versions that were published by Image in 1963.
Imo, Copleston’s History of Philosophy is the best chronological overview ever published-it is both fairly rigorous and still accessible enough for determined undergrads. Anthony Kenny’s multi volumes of History of Philosophy are also good, as is the Adam’s volumes.
But another good, and a bit more accessible than Copleston, series- out of print-is A History of Western Philosophy by W.T. Jones. Again, use libraries or get them used. It’s 4 volumes, I think: The Classical Mind, The Medieval Mind, Hobbes To Hume, and then it’s either one or two volumes on Kant thru Sartre.
Just a quick thank you for all the time and effort you put into this video.
Aristotle's Nicomachian Ethics is next on my list, followed by his Politics. Thanks for your channel and I shall join substack to support it.
You stayed away from the post-structuralists and postmodernists (Derrida, Foucault etc). Probably a wise move too!
I want to start reading about philosophy and I had just watched your older video about philosophy book recommendations and this is perfect thank you very much
Would love to see an entire video of early modern philosophy! Like breaking down each sub-section and providing reccs, not necessarily for beginners.
I didn't even realize Peter Adamson did books along with the podcast. I'm only missing 2 of the old Copleston books when they were mass market paperbacks from Doubleday Image. Will be looking into that Epictetus volume you showed. Great vid!
Amazing video. I would say in late modern philosophy Schopenhauer is a great read to show how philosophy can be taken. Specifically, I would recommend Parerga and Paralipomena.
Great video! I was in a philosophy major. But, my teachers taught mostly about the overview from each era. So, we didn’t have so much chance to get into the text deeply. There’s a lot more to explore in details! Thanks!! 🙏🙏
A fantastic intro to ancient Chinese philosophy is “Philosophers of the Warring States” edited by Hagen and Coutinho, tons of commentary and is organized very very nicely.
I have to recommend Thomas Paine. He might not be the most innovative philosopher, but I think he’s one of the most important for modern democracy. His writing influenced Thomas Jefferson who wrote arguably one of the most important documents in the US and western world. A lot of the language in the Declaration is incredibly similar to Thomas Paine’s writings.
Another thought, it’d be interesting to see you compile a list of 21st century philosophers. I haven’t read much recent philosophy but based on interviews, I think Robert Sapolsky will be one of the major ones. Yes, he’s a neuroscientist, but his conclusions have a profound direct impact on philosophy, especially regarding free will and determinism.
My favorite bona fide philosopher has got to be good old Bertrand Russell. He was a gem.
Very interesting! Picked up an Adamson and the Hackett Hellenistic Philosophy. Went to get some more and was told my Amazon that I already owned them; your influence I assume.
Brilliant video. So glad I came across your channel! Please keep making this superb content. Really helping people.
AC Graylings History of Philo book was a great start for me!
For those interested in medieval philosophy I would highly recommend Etienne Gilson's The Spirit of Medieval Philosophy, also anything by Gilson is in my opinion worth a read.
My biggest problem with Copleston is the frequent absence of glosses for words and phrases from the source texts in their original languages. I bought the full set when I was in college taking Latin and German before I’d started Greek and had a rather slow time working through volume one. E.g., he introduces Aristotle’s ontological categories by the Greek terms Aristotle used for them without English glosses for the Greek words and then on the next page starts referring to them with corresponding English terms. If you read Greek, it’s richly rewarding (both for the content and for the ego), but remembering my earliest encounter with it, it could be quite frustrating.
Even now, I have pretty good Greek and passable Latin and German reading knowledge, but Copleston leaves me at a loss with the French of volume four and later entries in the series. Nonetheless, Copleston is thorough and engaging enough that he almost motivates me to learn French.
Thank you for making this video as not all of us have academic degree in philosophy or job related to it, but still are interested in all these and I anyway always like your videos. so this list will help a lot on where to start and so on..
Regarding Indian philosophy recommendation you were right that a reader is better to grasp fully first an overall view of many things before going deep. The "sarma" one you mentioned,I checked it's index, it's a good book but I noticed that it doesn't have non mainstream schools like tantra etc in it. ( Also though I appreciate lots of suggestions in comments there's one thing that I wanna mention like people are recommending books like Bhagavad Geeta which is great but in my opinion it's still a synthesis of philosophies of that time and doens't explain what you might be looking for. (Atleast personally in my opinion).
So because you yourself have a masters degree I think you might benefit from academic works of experts putting the book in its context and commentary and so on.
Because I couldn't form the list I thought that I can share my syllabus from my university when I did graduation in philosophy. It's a public link and though the pdf is about syllabus in the end section of semester-y information and paper pattern there is the list of prescribed and suggested reading. I think it will be best for what u are looking for. In graduation basically we were taught more of a comprehensive view of the subject so the books are all encompassing beginners type and still informative.. 👇👇
uniraj.ac.in/student/syl_N/uploads/Philosophy-I&II%20sem_06.10.2023.pdf
And I never did masters but if you want suggestions regarding deep information and want to read further I would suggest these links which are again syllabus ( including the suggested reading) that' prescribed for a student doing masters in philosophy in my university.
The syllabus is a little different for two types:
Annually studying 👇
www.uniraj.ac.in/student/syllabi/Syllabus-2024/M.A.%20Philosophy%20(Annual)2023-24.pdf
Semester wise studying students 👇
www.uniraj.ac.in/student/syllabi/Syllabus-2024/M.A.%20Philosophy(Semester%20Sch2023-24.pdf
Ps: sorry you might have to search a little in these papers 😅 but the lists were too big to just write all the names . I hope I was helpful and I really think these are great lists so Thank you
And have a happy reading!!
I have recently started reading Mortimer J. Adler's "Ten Philosophical Mistakes" and I sincerely recommend it. His main argument is (and this argument goes back to Thomas Aquinas, and even before to Aristotle) that small error(s) at the beginning of a reasoning lead to much bigger and complex problems and false conclusions. I can't recommend the book enough!
Bryan Van Norden is a wonderful source for ancient Chinese philosophy! He even has a 30 or so lecture series on TH-cam overlaying the historical development of Confucianism, Taoism, and Chan Buddhism that I would highly recommend.
You mentioned Ficthe in a category of more difficult to read late modern idealists, and I truly think his Vocation of Man is not only digestible, but impactful and enjoyable.
Thanks for the list Jared. I'm following one of your earlier lists, but this gives me more direction and context overall. Though I've not directly followed philosophy it's amazing how many names you mentioned were known to me. As much a part of our culture as Star Wars 🤣
Highly reccomend the Hackett Publishing Modern Philosophy: An Anthology of Primary Sources. Gives you access to a lot of primary texts from the rationalists and empiricists as well as covering women such as emilie du chatelet and Margaret Cavendish.
Not sure if anyone in the comments has suggested this title yet, but a while ago I came across a book called History of Philosophy by Julián Marías. I believe it was written in 1967 though, so not the newest thing available. That said, the table of contents is more or less like Bertrand Russell's book, but also with some additional figures as well, including some from Spain since that is where Marías was from. I'm currently going through Peter Adamson's History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps series, so perhaps I will try to get to Marías' book afterwards.
Great set. Thanks for making it! Maybe one day i'll get some or all done & come back here to review & comment
Thank you, Jared. This was informative and interesting.
If I could offer 1 additional suggesting from contemporary philosophy that I think people would find very helpful in understanding these other books is "little manual for Knowing"
When getting my philosophy degree, little manual was indispensable in terms of assessing + understanding the impact of the implicit epistemology I had acquired from growing up in the modern West.
Thank you for this video! Especially for the recommendations of Peter Adamson and Copleston (I've already read Russell few years ago), because I feel on the safe ground with the primary sources, but am a bit sceptical with general overviews.
I have to admit, I'm a bit confused that there was no mention of Schopenhauer. Unlike Hegel, he is quite readable and understandable on beginner level. At least Aphorisms on the Wisdom of Life deserve to be mentioned in my humble opinion :)
I wonder if you could do a small Into to Philosophy series on TH-cam, I know I would watch it. Videos, not super long, going over a text and its main points and clearing up specific arguments which can be confusing
Amazing list, I can not wait to dive in!
Philosophies of India, Heinrich Zimmer. Great overview of the major Indian philosophies. Unfortunately he died before finishing the book and the end is an edit of his annotations by Joseph Campbell. But it's a great introduction on Indian philosophy.
I would add Justice as Fairness - A restatement by John Rawls. Much more accessible than his Theory of Justice. I would also add The Social Contract by Rousseau. I think those two are great bookends to social contract theory
Like your Channel: No fuzz, straight to the point. Thanks for that. supporting this. A PS: you should do readings, i'd buy it without a thought... just sayin' ... and PPS: Aurelius.. my way to go anywhere... thx
thank you very much, just at the right time when i got curious about getting into philosophy
Awesome video , as always 5 stars.
Thankyou Jared , very much for all the philosophical insights and practical nuggets of wisdom in understanding the intricacies of philosophy.
I am also interested in the Philosophy of Science. And have read a few books on this topic. Popper, Kuhn and recently Kitcher and Baxter.
I think there are other people like me who are also interested in this branch of philosophy.
So please help us with a video on this topic .
The analects of Confucius is good for beginners, So is the Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu, and The Art Of War by Sun Tzu. I find if you want to get into Chinese Philosophy these are a good start.
thank you for another fantastic videos. You comment on our current focus on textual analysis caught my attention. As a Visual Artist, my interest is in the "wordless". I would appreciate it greatly if you could spare a few pointers on where I could learn more.
Excellent video. Thank you greatly. This video is a resource I've hoped to find as I begin my self-study of philosophy.
I am curious what you think of Will Durant's THE STORY OF PHILOSOPHY as a single-volume overview.
It has loads of gaps, but it's quite accessible and offers the novice reader a great introductory list of voices and titles.
Just curious what you (or any of your viewers) think about Durant's text.
Thanks again for the work you're creating. It's greatly appreciated.
Great Video. Thanks for the valuable information.
For Indian Philosophy - An Introduction to Indian Philosophy by Satishchandra Chatterjee and Dhirendramohan Dutta. This is a good solid book to start with Indian Philosophy.
Did you not recommend "The story of philosophy" by Will Durant for any particular reason? Just curious what you think of that specific philosophy overview book.
Great work!! Thanks for the recommendations 🎉🎉🎉
newer book on humanities: Are We Human? by Beatriz Colomina & Mark Wigley
The most complete collection of Eastern Philosophy is out of print, but free online, called- The Sacred Books Of The East.
Just finished Plato's dialogues, the Republic, and working my way through Nicomachean Ethics. Wondering how approachable/worthwhile Aristotle's Metaphysics would be for a relative beginner.
Thanks for the helpful vid. I’m teaching my first undergrad philosophy course this Fall and I’ve been thumbing through Anthony Kenny’s history of philosophy, put out by Oxford. I’m curious if you have looked at it, and if so, how it stacks up against the other histories you recommended.
Hey Jared I was really curious about your opinion on Vonnegut? As a writer and his opinions on society. Play devils advocate a little bit too if you have criticisms. He’s my favorite author and I would love your take.
As you discussed here for Stoicism I have Discourses Fragments Handbook by Epictetus along with The Enchiridion and of course Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. Apologies if I missed it but Is it true that Seneca has 12 essays altogether? If so I currently have a collection of 10 so far. I'm also hoping to add Letters in the future. You never seem to see my comments but I appreciate the videos.
For Chinese philosophy maybe I'd suggest Karyn Lai (I think she's working with Adamson on the Chinese Philosophy part of the podcast). There's a very good book that has a kind of overview of Chinese and Indian philosophies that's called World Philosophy by David E. Cooper (I think he's the Philosophy of Gardens guy), which is what I've used for my classes whenever I cover those Eastern traditions. I know of other resources, but they're in Spanish :/ As for Buddhism, I can suggest Jay Garfield and Walpola Rahula.
Also, Ben Ani Scharfstein has a history of philosophy from the Upanishads to Kant, which is divided by subject and compares different philosophers both East and West for that subject (like, Uddalaka from the Upanishads and Parmenides on ultimate being).
Rather than just like listicals why don't you just do lectures for content?
Good question
great video, thank you very much!
While I certainly think people should read what they find most interests them, it will create some problems for the reader if they skip significant periods of philosophy. For instance, on the issues of substance, if one begins with the early moderns, some debates will remain opaque as the entire discussion of forms and their conceptual evolution from Plato to Descartes has been neglected. Without familiarity of this development, the question of whether, say, Descartes is the starting a new modern scientific project or the last of the medieval scholasticism projects hinges on the issues surrounding forms, hylomorphism, and identity-key concepts related to views on substance up to the period in question. The view one holds here colors one’s entire view for later period topics.
In short, it’s just best, imo, not to skip thru the history of philosophy as if it were a salad bar buffet.
For me Philosophy starts with Hammurabi's Code. Or maybe even earlier with the Book of Job, which comes from the Neolithic era. So do some Grimm's Fairytales. I find it fascinating how God gave Mankind Law, and you start seeing it first appear in the first civilizations. And also stories in Genesis, which come from earlier source materials which probably actually did originate with the Hebrews. Though Job and some Grimm's Fairy Tales are perhaps the earliest literature in the world. And the first few chapters of Genesis.
Jared, I would love it if you would do more deep dives on single books by authors like Ursula K Le Guin or Margaret Atwood. I found your author overviews fascinating but I think going more granular would support your new content schedule while keeping it more literary and less "TH-cam-y"
These are really great! Thank you so much!!! Video suggestion for you if you need more ideas. You had a really hot take on your top ten fantasy books video that you think Sanderson doesn’t depict mental health issues very well. I’d like to know what fiction books you have read that do a good job depicting mental health?
I'll try to get all done and come back!
For African philosophy, Peter Adamson's done an entire side-podcast for A History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps that's focused on African philosophy, he's got resources and further reading on his website, and one day the podcast episodes will inevitably be made into another book in the series :)
Thank you, Jared!!
Great approach. 👍
if its not any trouble i would like it if you do a video about Greek mythology and a breakdown of homer's work for beginner's please
I am not so much reading the republic as analyzing it in depth and trying to have a deep understanding of the OG Socrates.
Then the plan is to read Aristotle, more plato, then perhaps Descartes, and Hume.
Then, German idealism.
On jurisprudence and political philosophy what would you recommend? The only person i heard of was HLA Hart theory of law.
I've been creating a guide to study philosophy that seem interesting to my future students. the three main matters are 1. science, philosophy and society; this include the three main branches of philosophy a) ethics b) epistemology c) metaphysics. 2. philosophical currents; for example, idealism 3. pedagogy; this include learning teories and some didactics research.
What do you think?