Anthony Gottlieb

The Dream of Reason

A History of Philosophy from the Greeks to the Renaissance

A stunning successor to Bertrand Russell's classic A History of Western Philosophy.

Philosophy is a subject with a long history and a short memory. In this landmark new study of Western thought, Anthony Gottlieb looks afresh at the writings of the great thinkers, questions many pieces of conventional wisdom, and explains his findings with unbridled brilliance and clarity. From the pre-Socratic philosophers such as Empedocles, whose account of the cosmos seems "a mixture of the physics of Stephen Hawking and the romantic novels of Barbara Cartland," through the celebrated days of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, up to Renaissance visionaries like Erasmus and Bacon, "philosophy" emerges here as a phenomenon unconfined by any one discipline. Indeed, as Gottlieb explains, its most revolutionary breakthroughs in the natural and social sciences have repeatedly been co-opted by other branches of knowledge, leading to the illusion that philosophers never make any progress.

From the physics of angels to Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose, Gottlieb builds through example and anecdote a vivid portrait of the human drive for understanding. After closing The Dream of Reason, readers will be graced with a fresh appreciation of the philosophical quest, its entertaining and bizarre byways, and its influence on every aspect of life.

Dream of Reason
Anthony Gottlieb is the executive editor of The Economist. He studied philosophy at Cambridge University and University College London, and has been a Visiting Fellow at Harvard University. He writes regularly on philosophy for the New York Times Book Review.
January 2001 / Cloth / ISBN 0-393-04951-5 / 352 pages / 6" x 9" / Philosophy
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