PDA

View Full Version : Who is the greatest living philosopher?


Inquisitor
Apr19-04, 12:47 AM
Who is the greatest living philosopher? Why?

olde drunk
Apr19-04, 07:58 AM
ME!

humbly,
olde drunk

jammieg
Apr19-04, 08:13 AM
Me too! In fact, I may be just smart enough to realize that I'm too ignorant to understand my own ignorance...maybe not...but I think it's unlikely to be whoever is selling the most books- knowledge is cheap understanding is priceless.

Stevo
Apr21-04, 05:54 AM
Probably Lewis, with the fairly recent passing of Davidson.

pace
Apr22-04, 05:48 PM
Our own norwegian Arne Nęss of course.. sheesh.

RageSk8
Apr22-04, 11:24 PM
Probably Putnam. He has been a leading figure in more than one philosophical movement. If Davidson didn't die last year he would have gotten my vote. The most famous living philosopher probably would be Rorty.

KingNothing
Apr25-04, 11:14 PM
I would say Jennifer Lopez, with her pioneering fashion philosophy.

anti-christ
May11-04, 12:39 PM
it is myself

Njorl
May11-04, 03:59 PM
What are you asking? Do you want to know, of the living philosophers, which is greates?

Or, do you want to know, of philosophers, which is the greatest at living?

That second one would be pretty hard to answer. I mean, you'd need to know their habits, hobbies lifestyles.


:wink:
Njorl

quddusaliquddus
May11-04, 04:34 PM
What are you asking? Do you want to know, of the living philosophers, which is greates?

Or, do you want to know, of philosophers, which is the greatest at living?

That second one would be pretty hard to answer. I mean, you'd need to know their habits, hobbies lifestyles.


:wink:
Njorl

Lol ... deserves to go into the 'Jokes' thread :wink:

quddusaliquddus
May12-04, 06:03 AM
If someone's going to mention snoop, I will Have to say 2pac ... no-one compares to him.

quddusaliquddus
May12-04, 06:05 AM
Shoot!! .... in my little world he's still alive ... lol .. I'd forgotten he's dead while I posted the above (listening to the 'Until the End of Time' remix of course :D)

anti-christ
May12-04, 08:21 AM
I am the greatest and that is why the admins here lock every thread I start

Dissident Dan
May14-04, 03:27 AM
ME!

humbly,
olde drunk

You lie! Do not try to usurp my position!

Anyway, that post has the highest irony density ever.

I can't say who the second best, but Tom Regan is pretty good.

salamander
May16-04, 07:44 AM
Well, fellows, here are a lot of interesting suggestions. Jennifer Lopez was a good one... liked that.

I have a candidate, but I assume this discussion might be over once I have revealed who it is. Shall I?

olde drunk
May16-04, 12:05 PM
published? i'd say lewis. otherwise, myself (i'm too stubborn to listen to anyone else).

salamander, go ahead. but, PLEASE, no reigious hero that may have been misrepresented, misquoted or misunderstood.

love and peace,
olde drunk

salamander
May17-04, 10:41 AM
Okay:

HOMER SIMPSON

would anyone agree?

jammieg
May17-04, 01:39 PM
Given Homer's broad exposure I agree he is among the greats but surely not the greatest.

salamander
May18-04, 04:07 AM
well we have to pick someone, why not homer?

jammieg
May23-04, 09:29 PM
On second thought I don't think it's me despite my aptitude for self inflicted confusion, although I'm not very familiar with all today's philosophers and so biased, the one that has the most positive influence on me is Marilyn Savant, reason being playing chess for a few months can boost a person's IQ by 5 points(if they enjoy it), but then if you take a lot of the fundamental aspects of intelligence and put them into a book of practical everyday methods one might get 15 points or more out of it in a few months or more importantly start a lifelong love of intellectual pursuits, and then if you combine that with inspiring people to get some mental exercise you might get 10k to 100k people to try it, so that's about 500k additional IQ points added to humanity, essentially what Einstein tried to do was inspire people but he didn't understand IQ very well but he did inspire although hardly with direction...Not that IQ alone is going to make the world a wonderful place, but if the world is a reflection of everyone's combined understandings and lack of then her affects are far more beneficially pervasive than General Relativity in the long run and the main factors to great works I suspect are pervasiveness and beneficiality to humanity... Socrates had similiar affects and was terribly mysterious, it's probably a lot more important to provoke or inspire people into thinking for themselves than hand them the great book of dry knowledge to memorize that seems to do more harm than good but it's a lot easier.

Nicomachus
Jun9-04, 09:54 PM
I would say Nozick or Churchland.
*Nico

force5
Jun13-04, 12:06 AM
Hey olde drunk,

I have to disagree with you.

I taught you everything I know and you still don't know nothing!

olde drunk
Jun14-04, 09:37 AM
Hey olde drunk,

I have to disagree with you.

I taught you everything I know and you still don't know nothing!
sadly, with tears falling, i must agree!!

what do we know? ---------- nuttin!

love&peace,
olde drunk

sciart
Jun22-04, 04:37 AM
Roger Penrose

because His Book << The Emporer's New Mind >>

jeff
Jun26-04, 03:02 PM
Roger Penrose

because His Book << The Emporer's New Mind >>

Penrose made a gigantic error in failing to realize the obvious possibility that individual human beings each have their own Godel sentences.

shonagon53
Jul2-04, 02:33 PM
Peter Sloterdijk, because he says so himself :-)

http://www.petersloterdijk.net/

shonagon53
Jul2-04, 02:34 PM
And Ronald Reagan of course, especially when he philosophizes at his best: "Facts are stupid things."