They don't need to be identified as such; Jesus, Muhammad, Dawkins, etc. Whose philosophies have influenced you the most?
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Well if I can choose Jesus then I will.They don't need to be identified as such; Jesus, Muhammad, Dawkins, etc. Whose philosophies have influenced you the most?
Those with PhDs in philosophy (which means. oddly, that they have doctorates of philosophy in philosophy) have about the hardest time of any with PhDs to obtain a professorship, so most are prostitutes. They're very good. They won't stop philosophizing until you pay them treble or use Hemlock (that's how they got the famous Greek prostitute Socrates).I've never paid for a philosopher, so they're all free to me.
I paid you to say me! I'm having that check canceled.I have no favorites.
Fair enough. I don't create that many threads (at least relative to the number of posts I have; 61 vs. 7,000+) and one was on Nolan's batman trilogy and philosophy.I just see concepts here & there which I like.
It was his matrices that attracted you from the start, am I right? I'm right. More seriously, what did you find inspiring? I ask first because I have found that, in general, the scientists who tend to be the most acquainted with philosophy and its importance tend to be physics whose work relates to quantum theory or cosmology, but this is fairly new. Not physicists being philosophically learned, but that all academics were polymaths, but this slowly changed up to the 20th century and then began to change very quickly. Pauli is of the generation of physicists (and scientists) who were better scientists, more specialized, and less familiar with other fields. Einstein, for example, was well-known for his deep concern for the philosophy of science, physics, and theory as well as metaphysics and after he wrote his famous EPR paper (or rather, developed the idea and then saw it ruined, in his mind, by his co-authors), Pauli wrote to (I think) Heisenberg lamenting this latest "garbage" from that antique, obsolete physicists Einstein. Unlike with Einstein, Bohr, Dirac, Bohm, Schrödinger, Heisenberg, etc., (the first and second generation of physicists after the advent of quantum physics) I haven't read anything by Pauli. I don't even know the names of any titles (which is embarrassing). So I would be interested to know what I've missed so that I can obtain it and pretend this conversation never took place and that I'd read Pauli years ago.I've found inspiration from Wolfgan Pauli
Surely you must be joking Mr.Richard Feynman
I was reviewing a calculus self-help/self-study book someone on this discussion board recommended and delighted to find that the author had set up one of the problems such that the answer was 42, and in the margins the author referenced Douglas and stated that the reader now knew that the question to which 42 was the answer was (something I can't recall- the derivative of something or the integral or whatever).Douglas Adams
Janet or Friedrich von Schlieffen-Heiffen Gesuntenheiden?invisible gorillas.
Isn't "42" always the answer to everything, Majikfondel?Those with PhDs in philosophy (which means. oddly, that they have doctorates of philosophy in philosophy) have about the hardest time of any with PhDs to obtain a professorship, so most are prostitutes. They're very good. They won't stop philosophizing until you pay them treble or use Hemlock (that's how they got the famous Greek prostitute Socrates).
I paid you to say me! I'm having that check canceled.
Fair enough. I don't create that many threads (at least relative to the number of posts I have; 61 vs. 7,000+) and one was on Nolan's batman trilogy and philosophy.
It was his matrices that attracted you from the start, am I right? I'm right. More seriously, what did you find inspiring? I ask first because I have found that, in general, the scientists who tend to be the most acquainted with philosophy and its importance tend to be physics whose work relates to quantum theory or cosmology, but this is fairly new. Not physicists being philosophically learned, but that all academics were polymaths, but this slowly changed up to the 20th century and then began to change very quickly. Pauli is of the generation of physicists (and scientists) who were better scientists, more specialized, and less familiar with other fields. Einstein, for example, was well-known for his deep concern for the philosophy of science, physics, and theory as well as metaphysics and after he wrote his famous EPR paper (or rather, developed the idea and then saw it ruined, in his mind, by his co-authors), Pauli wrote to (I think) Heisenberg lamenting this latest "garbage" from that antique, obsolete physicists Einstein. Unlike with Einstein, Bohr, Dirac, Bohm, Schrödinger, Heisenberg, etc., (the first and second generation of physicists after the advent of quantum physics) I haven't read anything by Pauli. I don't even know the names of any titles (which is embarrassing). So I would be interested to know what I've missed so that I can obtain it and pretend this conversation never took place and that I'd read Pauli years ago.
Surely you must be joking Mr.
I was reviewing a calculus self-help/self-study book someone on this discussion board recommended and delighted to find that the author had set up one of the problems such that the answer was 42, and in the margins the author referenced Douglas and stated that the reader now knew that the question to which 42 was the answer was (something I can't recall- the derivative of something or the integral or whatever).
Janet or Friedrich von Schlieffen-Heiffen Gesuntenheiden?
Oh and C.S. Lewis for sure.Jiva Goswami, Madhvacharya, Srila Prabhupada, CS Lewis...