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I'm reading The Silmarillion right now. I think I'll actually finish it this time, though I've renewed it from the Library twice already. Next on my list is Mortal by Ted Dekker.
Great Expectations. Not my favorite Dickens novel, but ok.
Quote from: Professoralstad on July 07, 2012, 09:20:55 PMGreat Expectations. Not my favorite Dickens novel, but ok.Why anybody would read that voluntarily is beyond me...
Holmes, all of the holmes books.
The Two Towers by that one weird guy.
Quote from: Nameless on July 09, 2012, 09:34:31 AMThe Two Towers by that one weird guy.What weird guy? I'm also reading some books by David Eddings. The guy who wrote the Eragon books got a LOT of his inspiration from this guy. I'm in a summer reading program, and the grand prize is a Kindle! I plan to win.
Quote from: Minion of Jesus on July 09, 2012, 11:16:17 AMQuote from: Nameless on July 09, 2012, 09:34:31 AMThe Two Towers by that one weird guy.What weird guy? I'm also reading some books by David Eddings. The guy who wrote the Eragon books got a LOT of his inspiration from this guy. I'm in a summer reading program, and the grand prize is a Kindle! I plan to win.I'm not sure I'd call anything Christopher Paolini wrote inspired...
A bit less than a year ago, with the help of my philosophy professor, I read Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.A few weeks ago I finished Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations.I'm rereading his Tractatus now. I'm actually really really really enjoying reading it from a therapeutic point of view. And one of the philosophy grad students I spoke to here seemed to hint that he thought it was written ad absurdum, which is something I never would've thought of by myself.If anyone wants to talk about it, feel free. Here's a link if anyone is interested. Although Wittgenstein was pretty critical of Russell's intro. My favorite propositions/comments/statements are 1.1, 2.225 (YAY EPISTEMOLOGY), 6.544, and 7 .