Philosophy Final
Soccio's Archetypes of Wisdom gives a relatively thorough survey of philosophy from ancient "wise men" like Socrates down to present-day university professors like Martha Nussbaum. It gives a sense of philosophy as not only applicable to serious questions in our daily life, but also. I think the three biggest areas in which I learned from Soccio's survey of philosophy relate to religion, utilitarianism, and something I would like to term "intellectual modesty." This necessarily represents a personal response to Soccio's presentation of the great philosophers, but I have never taken a philosophy course before this. To some extent, I am most fascinated by the applicability Soccio emphasizes, especially with intellectual questions which can be more broadly applied within anyone's life (including my own).
The chief personal feeling that I got from Soccio's survey of philosophy is an increased intellectual respect for religion. This is purely a personal reaction, based on those philosophers in Soccio's survey who deal with religious issues: Aquinas, Kierkegaard, and William James were all new to me. It is worth noting, though, that American religion does not do much to dispel the impression that it is intellectually and philosophically jejune, and so much of it seems an expression of ressentiment combined with an apparatus of pseudo-scholarship. For example, the hostility to science evidenced by so much contemporary American religion could not be farther from Aquinas'"efforts...
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