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Great Ideas of Philosophy, 2nd Edition

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Daniel N. Robinson

30:15:24

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  • 01 From the Upanishads to Homer.mp4
    31:23
  • 02 Philosophy-Did the Greeks Invent It.mp4
    30:42
  • 03 Pythagoras and the Divinity of Number.mp4
    29:48
  • 04 What Is There.mp4
    30:46
  • 05 The Greek Tragedians on Mans Fate.mp4
    29:00
  • 06 Herodotus and the Lamp of History.mp4
    29:52
  • 07 Socrates on the Examined Life.mp4
    31:14
  • 08 Platos Search For Truth.mp4
    31:08
  • 09 Can Virtue Be Taught.mp4
    31:18
  • 10 Platos Republic-Man Writ Large.mp4
    30:46
  • 11 Hippocrates and the Science of Life.mp4
    29:21
  • 12 Aristotle on the Knowable.mp4
    31:07
  • 13 Aristotle on Friendship.mp4
    30:26
  • 14 Aristotle on the Perfect Life.mp4
    30:37
  • 15 Rome, the Stoics, and the Rule of Law.mp4
    30:43
  • 16 The Stoic Bridge to Christianity.mp4
    29:00
  • 17 Roman Law-Making a City of the Once-Wide World.mp4
    29:26
  • 18 The Light Within-Augustine on Human Nature.mp4
    30:22
  • 19 Islam.mp4
    30:37
  • 20 Secular Knowledge-The Idea of University.mp4
    31:04
  • 21 The Reappearance of Experimental Science.mp4
    29:39
  • 22 Scholasticism and the Theory of Natural Law.mp4
    29:46
  • 23 The Renaissance-Was There One.mp4
    30:24
  • 24 Let Us Burn the Witches to Save Them.mp4
    31:02
  • 25 Francis Bacon and the Authority of Experience.mp4
    30:06
  • 26 Descartes and the Authority of Reason.mp4
    29:34
  • 27 Newton-The Saint of Science.mp4
    29:46
  • 28 Hobbes and the Social Machine.mp4
    30:18
  • 29 Lockes Newtonian Science of the Mind.mp4
    30:26
  • 30 No matter The Challenge of Materialism.mp4
    29:47
  • 31 Hume and the Pursuit of Happiness.mp4
    30:30
  • 32 Thomas Reid and the Scottish School.mp4
    30:19
  • 33 France and the Philosophes.mp4
    30:35
  • 34 The Federalist Papers and the Great Experiment.mp4
    29:56
  • 35 What Is Enlightenment Kant on Freedom.mp4
    30:19
  • 36 Moral Science and the Natural World.mp4
    30:25
  • 37 Phrenology-A Science of the Mind.mp4
    30:31
  • 38 The Idea of Freedom.mp4
    31:05
  • 39 The Hegelians and History.mp4
    30:49
  • 40 The Aesthetic Movement-Genius.mp4
    30:01
  • 41 Nietzsche at the Twilight.mp4
    29:01
  • 42 The Liberal Tradition-J. S. Mill.mp4
    30:21
  • 43 Darwin and Natures Purposes.mp4
    30:27
  • 44 Marxism-Dead But Not Forgotten.mp4
    30:56
  • 45 The Freudian World.mp4
    30:38
  • 46 The Radical William James.mp4
    29:57
  • 47 William Jamess Pragmatism.mp4
    30:16
  • 48 Wittgenstein and the Discursive Turn.mp4
    29:02
  • 49 Alan Turing in the Forest of Wisdom.mp4
    31:07
  • 50 Four Theories of the Good Life.mp4
    32:07
  • 51 Ontology-What There Really Is.mp4
    27:47
  • 52 Philosophy of Science-The Last Word.mp4
    30:22
  • 53 Philosophy of Psychology and Related Confusions.mp4
    30:51
  • 54 Philosophy of Mind, If There Is One.mp4
    28:50
  • 55 What makes a Problem Moral.mp4
    29:27
  • 56 Medicine and the Value of Life.mp4
    29:37
  • 57 On the Nature of Law.mp4
    30:09
  • 58 Justice and Just Wars.mp4
    29:31
  • 59 Aesthetics-Beauty Without Observers.mp4
    30:02
  • 60 God-Really.mp4
    29:35
  • NA NA.mp4
    01:23
  • Description


    Humanity left childhood and entered the troubled but productive world when it started to criticize its own certainties and weigh the worthiness of its most secure beliefs. Thus began that "Long Debate" on the nature of truth, the scale of real values, the life one should aspire to live, the character of justice, the sources of law, the terms of civic and political life—the good, the better, the best.

    The debate continues, and one remains aloof to it at a very heavy price, for "the unexamined life is not worth living."

    This course of 60 lectures gives the student a sure guide and interpreter as the major themes within the Long Debate are presented and considered. The persistent themes are understood as problems:

    • The problem of knowledge, arising from concerns as to how or whether we come to know anything, and are justified in our belief that this knowledge is valid and sound
    • The problem of conduct, arising from the recognition that our actions, too, require some sort of justification in light of our moral and ethical sensibilities—or lack of them
    • The problem of governance, which includes an understanding of sources of law and its binding nature.

    The great speculators of history have exhausted themselves on these problems and have bequeathed to us a storehouse of insights, some so utterly persuasive as to have shaped thought itself. In these coherent and beautifully articulated lectures you will hear Plato and Aristotle, the Stoics and Epicureans, the Scholastic philosophers and the leaders of Renaissance thought.

    In addition, you will learn about the architects of the Age of Newton and the Enlightenment that followed in its wake—all this, as well as Romanticism and Continental thought, Nietzsche and Darwin, Freud and William James. This course is a veritable banquet of enriching reflection on mental life and the acts of humanity that proceed from it: the plans and purposes, the values and beliefs, the possibilities and vulnerabilities.

    Some of What You Will Learn

    In these lectures you will:

    • Explore three basic philosophical questions: What can I know? How should I behave? Is this tribe or polis able to preserve our knowledge, protect our interests, lead us to a more meaningful life?
    • Understand why we should aspire to moral excellence through habitual striving and a devotion to self-perfection, and how we might attain a flourishing form of life.
    • Explore the four assessments of what constitutes the good life. These have come and gone over the course of time in many forms.

    The titles of the lectures in this course reveal its scope. In every lecture, there is substance that can change your view of the world and its history.

    You will see the creation of rational thought. Dr. Daniel N. Robinson addresses in one lecture why such a rich tapestry of thought would begin in ancient Greece and why, weaved together during the lives of three specific men, it would never be equaled.

    Most famous was Socrates, the pagan philosopher whom St. Augustine would revere because he was willing to die for truth. Socrates's student, Plato, wrote so powerfully on almost every issue in philosophy that Alfred North Whitehead later commented that all of Western philosophy was a footnote to Plato. (But British philosopher and mathematician Bertrand Russell described Plato as a "garden-variety" Fascist.)

    How We Live Determines Character

    Aristotle, Plato's student, had possibly the most fruitful mind in human history. He laid the foundations for virtually every science, and his treatises on friendship and the good life have never been surpassed. As Dr. Robinson concludes: "Aristotle makes quite clear that our character is shaped by our works. That is, we make ourselves into the sorts of beings we are in virtue of the manner in which we conduct our lives."

    After Greece, the lectures explore the beginnings of Christian philosophy in the work of the Roman Stoics, the exceptional debt of civilization to Roman law and to Islamic scholars who preserved and extended Greek thought while Europe became a backwater in the Dark Ages.

    Early in the 17th century, Francis Bacon defends the scientific mode of knowledge. Experience and not speculation is the central source of learning. He observed that "words are but the pictures of matter," and that to fall in love with words was as mistaken as to "fall in love with a picture."

    Bacon's program to rely on experience was not embraced by the genius René Descartes, inventor of analytic geometry, whose division of the mind and the body has been a rupture in Western philosophy ever since. Professor Robinson describes one reply to Descartes' proof of his own existence:

    "The Scottish 'commonsense' philosopher Thomas Reid is kidding around a bit when he gets to Descartes' famous 'Cogito, ergo sum.' Descartes would not accept his own existence until he could come up with a very good rational argument that culminates in a conclusion that he exists. Reid says a man who disbelieves his own existence is no more fit to be reasoned with than one who thinks he's made of glass."

    Ideas Engender Democracy

    The course carefully examines the ideas of Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, and Reid, and the impact of those ideas on governments—particularly on the new democracy in America.

    The Enlightenment program of scientific knowledge undermined the possibility of human freedom because a world completely determined by material causes made freedom an illusion. The course examines the ongoing debate, exemplified by the conflict between Hume and Kant, over whether there can be any truly moral acts taken in a causally determined world.

    And the course shows how this debate is amplified in the German Romantic thought of Goethe and Schiller, in which freedom becomes the defining feature of human being. In Nietzsche, the lectures show how the argument for freedom takes on a full, dark, and possibly more honest aspect.

    The course also examines the collision between the inherently social understanding of meaning created by Wittgenstein and the vastly different estimation of human thought created by the code-breaking genius Alan Turing—and the subtle reply to him from American philosopher John Searle.

    Further lectures, unique to the second edition of this course, examine the concept of reality itself:

    • Do ideas of natural law and moral reality exist in the larger universe, independent of us or our sentiments?
    • How should moral problems affect medical and ethical decisions?
    • Is war ever justified?

    You will see how natural law theory has evolved through the Enlightenment and the writings of Jeremy Bentham and John Austin, among others. Theories of a "just" war, beginning with St. Augustine and including St. Thomas Aquinas and Francisco Suarez, set forth the principles by which engaging in and conducting war are justified.

    Finally, after exploring the concepts of aesthetics and beauty, we take a concluding look at history's greatest theological debates about the existence of God.

    A Great Teacher

    This course is the integration of a lifelong student of these issues who has thought and published in every area covered by these lectures. Professor Robinson is one of those rare teachers whose tremendous respect for his audience, vast expertise, relish for language, and engaging rhetorical flair create an exceptionally enjoyable learning environment.

    Dr. Robinson's lectures make the ideas of philosophy thrilling, passionate, human, and divine. Customers agree: "Professor Robinson explains multiple disciplines like no one since Aristotle. His scope is awesome. A professor's professor." Another writes: "Enjoying these tapes is one of the most rewarding experiences of my life at this time."

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    Daniel N. Robinson
    Daniel N. Robinson
    Instructor's Courses

    Dr. Daniel N. Robinson is a member of the philosophy faculty at Oxford University, where he has lectured annually since 1991. He is also Distinguished Professor, Emeritus, at Georgetown University, on whose faculty he served for 30 years. He was formerly Adjunct Professor of Psychology at Columbia University, and he also held positions at Amherst College and at Princeton University.

    Professor Robinson earned his Ph.D. in Neuropsychology from City University of New York.

    He is past president of two divisions of the American Psychological Association: the Division of History of Psychology, from which he received the Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Division of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology, from which he received the Distinguished Contribution Award.

    Professor Robinson is author or editor of more than 40 books, including Wild Beasts & Idle Humours: The Insanity Defense from Antiquity to the Present, An Intellectual History of Psychology, The Mind: An Oxford Reader, and Aristotle’s Psychology. He is former editor of the Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology. Dr. Robinson has also published widely on the constitutional history of the U.S. and its philosophical foundations, with original research appearing in the International Journal of Constitutional Law and The American Journal of Jurisprudence. He is coeditor of The American Founding: Its Intellectual and Moral Framework (London: Continuum, 2012).

    The Teaching Company, doing business as Wondrium, is a media production company that produces educational, video and audio content in the form of courses, documentaries, series under two content brands - Wondrium and The Great Courses
    • language english
    • Training sessions 61
    • duration 30:15:24
    • English subtitles has
    • Release Date 2023/08/19

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