Author Topic: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)  (Read 106568 times)

Offline Red

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #575 on: July 05, 2012, 09:13:55 AM »
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I'm currently reading The First Mountain Man: Blood On the Divide.
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Offline Asahel24601

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #576 on: July 05, 2012, 11:38:05 AM »
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Psalms

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #577 on: July 05, 2012, 07:24:46 PM »
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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.

Offline The Warrior

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #578 on: July 07, 2012, 02:16:47 PM »
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A Book Called "The Enchantress", which is the last of an awesome series that is a giant myth/legend Conglomerate.
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Offline Nameless

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #579 on: July 07, 2012, 06:55:27 PM »
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The Fellowship of the Ring.

Offline Professoralstad

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #580 on: July 07, 2012, 09:20:55 PM »
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Great Expectations. Not my favorite Dickens novel, but ok.

I just finished The Count of Monte Cristo. It was way better than the movie.

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Offline Minion of Jesus

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #581 on: July 07, 2012, 09:36:52 PM »
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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.

+1

I just finished reading a part of a series of books called the Mysterious Benedict Society by Trenton Lee Stewart.
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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #582 on: July 07, 2012, 10:10:19 PM »
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Great Expectations. Not my favorite Dickens novel, but ok.
Why anybody would read that voluntarily is beyond me...
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Re: Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #583 on: July 07, 2012, 10:17:39 PM »
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Great Expectations. Not my favorite Dickens novel, but ok.
Why anybody would read that voluntarily is beyond me...

I've been downloading free books on my phone recently...I haven't been able to find too many other good ones that I haven't read yet.

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Offline TheKarazyvicePresidentRR

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #584 on: July 07, 2012, 11:24:15 PM »
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Holmes, all of the holmes books.
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Offline Minion of Jesus

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #585 on: July 08, 2012, 07:48:10 PM »
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Holmes, all of the holmes books.

Read most of those, except 1 or 2.
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Offline Nameless

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #586 on: July 09, 2012, 09:34:31 AM »
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The Two Towers by that one weird guy.

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #587 on: July 09, 2012, 11:16:17 AM »
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The 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.
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Warrior_Monk

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #588 on: July 10, 2012, 02:26:24 PM »
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The 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...

Offline DDiceRC

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #589 on: July 10, 2012, 03:29:46 PM »
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I am currently reading Fateful Lightning, a new Civil War history by Allen C. Guelzo of Gettysburg College (and a former seminary professor of mine). I will follow that up with While Mortals Sleep by Kurt Vonnegut, a posthumously-published set of early short stories. I am starting to really enjoy my Nook for reading (although it's not so great for study).
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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #590 on: July 12, 2012, 08:21:37 AM »
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The 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...

True... It's changing from inspiration to copying as time goes on... There are 21 books by this guy... That should see me through the summer... ::)
To the Pain!

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Rawrlolsauce!

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #591 on: November 08, 2012, 08:18:29 PM »
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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 8).
« Last Edit: November 08, 2012, 08:25:08 PM by Rawrlolsauce! »

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #592 on: November 08, 2012, 08:47:42 PM »
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I am currently reading Rising Again by Michelle Reichartz, book two of the Phoenix Rising series. The author is actually a friend of mine and writing is one of her passions. She's self-published 2 books now, with the third on its way.

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #593 on: November 08, 2012, 11:10:42 PM »
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Reading "Love Does" by Bob Goff. The stories he tells are absolutely crazy.

Offline lp670sv

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #594 on: November 08, 2012, 11:12:39 PM »
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Just started The Signal and the Noise by Nate Silver. Man is a genius

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #595 on: November 08, 2012, 11:42:37 PM »
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"Company Aytch" by Sam R. Watkins and "The Hobbit."
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Offline michaeljl

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #596 on: November 13, 2012, 01:25:23 AM »
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I'm reading Hannah Arendt, The Human Condition, and really enjoying it.

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 8).

Excellent book(s). I read them my junior year (in the best class I ever took in University), wrote a few papers on him senior year, and now my best friend is taking the same course so I'm experiencing the joy of revisiting Wittgenstein.

Did you have fun with the duck/rabbit?




Also, have you read Ray Monk's bio of Wittgenstein, The Duty of Genius? I highly recommend it to EVERYONE.
« Last Edit: November 13, 2012, 01:31:35 AM by michaeljl »

Rawrlolsauce!

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #597 on: November 13, 2012, 01:53:35 AM »
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His rabbit was in Philosophical Investigations, not the Tractatus. I really really prefer the Tractatus simply because Philosophical Investigations was too straight forward. I'm glad I read it, but I don't plan to ever read it again. The Tractatus is a book I could see myself reading many times over. In fact, I know I have to read it at least four times: once with the "Wittgenstein is a genius" mindset, once with the "Wittgenstein is an idiot" mindset, once with the "Wittgenstein is a therapist" mindset, and once with the "this is reductio ad absurdum" mindset. And the best example in Philosophical Investigations was clearly the beetle 8).

I like early Wittgenstein more than later Wittgenstein, by a pretty wide margin. I've noticed myself using the terms "nonsense" and "senseless" a lot more as a result. I guess I just have two major issues with it: I know the Tractatus is, ultimately, a book on ethics, but epistemology is my favorite subject in philosophy, and I don't understand where comment 2.225 came from (EDIT: and 2.223, and whatever other relevant ones there are). I know Hume believed in a posteriori knowledge exclusively also, but his philosophies seem to make sense to me more than Wittgenstein.

The difficult issue I'm having is related to Godel's Incompleteness Theorem. I know that's probably why he abandoned his Tractatus (assuming it wasn't written reductio ad absurdum like I mentioned earlier), but I've been reading a lot of other philosophers defending his position on Godel's Theorem. Anyway, why isn't Godel's Theorem avoidable? Doesn't redefining mathematics to have a finite amount of numbers fix that? Arbitrarily claim that Graham's Number is the largest number. Trying to add a number to that or going to more decimal places just can't be done - it's undefined. You'd be able to test any statement. You'd have to redefine irrational numbers as numbers that cannot exist, but can be closely approximated, but that's about the only issue I can think of.


I'm a Freshman engineering student, but considering I finished all my generals in highschool, I have tons of room in my schedule for whatever classes I want. I'm going to load up on philosophy - it'll be awesome. I almost took a graduate level course in symbolic logic this semester, but my counselor talked me out of it. I plan to take either that course or a 3xxx level course on metaphysics (hah.... taking metaphysics when Wittgenstein is my favorite philosopher... awesome....) next semester 8).
« Last Edit: November 13, 2012, 02:03:10 AM by Rawrlolsauce! »

Offline michaeljl

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #598 on: November 13, 2012, 02:07:21 AM »
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I don't know, man. I've spend days of my life out all night talking over the duck/rabbit with philosophy majors and barely remember the beetle.


Logical positivism was shut down by one sentence: "What verifies the principle of varifiability?"

I read for a continuity between so called "early" and "later."

Get a good foundation in the history of philosophy, alongside literature, science, general history, and art.

Wittgenstein makes sense because he never really read any philosophy besides bits of Schopenhauer when he wrote the Tractatus. He's not drawing off the tradition. He probably never read David Hume, at least not until later in his life.

I also think Hume's kind of silly and should have done a better job reading Aristotle. Wittgenstein has a good critique of skepticism in On Certainty, where he's dealing with Moore's "here's one hand, here's another" proof of the external world.


You thought the PI was "too straight-forward?" I think you might have read the wrong PI.
« Last Edit: November 13, 2012, 02:10:06 AM by michaeljl »

Rawrlolsauce!

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Re: What are you reading? (A quick poll.)
« Reply #599 on: November 13, 2012, 02:21:32 AM »
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There'd still be axioms, but wouldn't they be listable? Wasn't that the point of Hilbert's Program? The same thing would apply to philosophy. I suppose those axioms would need to be a priori, which is why I was wondering about where 2.223 came from.

Straight forward is wording it poorly, considering you can't get more straight forward than the Tractatus. I guess.... refreshing... is a better term. PI didn't really alter my mindset like the Tractatus has.
« Last Edit: November 13, 2012, 02:26:18 AM by Rawrlolsauce! »

 


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