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Bryan Magee

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Bryan Magee


Born
in Hoxton, London, England, The United Kingdom
April 12, 1930

Died
July 26, 2019

Genre

Influences


Bryan Edgar Magee was a noted British broadcasting personality, politician, poet, and author, best known as a popularizer of philosophy.

He attended Keble College, Oxford where he studied History as an undergraduate and then Philosophy, Politics and Economics in one year. He also spent a year studying philosophy at Yale University on a post-graduate fellowship.

Magee's most important influence on society remains his efforts to make philosophy accessible to the layman. Transcripts of his television series "Men of Ideas" are available in published form in the book Talking Philosophy. This book provides a readable and wide-ranging introduction to modern Anglo-American philosophy.
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The Philosophy of Schopenhauer

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Ultimate Questions

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مواجهه با مرگ

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3.88 avg rating — 388 ratings2 editions
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Karl Popper

4.30 avg rating — 304 ratings — published 1973 — 20 editions
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مردان اندیشه: پدیدآورندگان ...

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4.04 avg rating — 229 ratings — published 1978 — 21 editions
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Aspects of Wagner

4.05 avg rating — 170 ratings — published 1969 — 15 editions
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More books by Bryan Magee…
Quotes by Bryan Magee  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Ignorance is ignorance, not a licence to believe what we like.”
Bryan Magee, The Philosophy of Schopenhauer

“Like the character Moliere who discovered to his astonishment that he had been speaking prose all his life, I discovered to my astonishment that I had been immersed in philosophical problems all my life. And I had been drawn into the same problems as great philosophers by the same felt need to make sense of the world...The chief difference between me and them, of course, was that whereas they had something to offer by way of solutions to the problems, I had failed even to formulate very rich or sophistocated versions of the problems, let alone work my way through to defensible solutions for them. In consequence I fell on their work like a starving man on food, and it has done a geat deal to nourish and sustain me ever since.”
Bryan Magee, Confessions of a Philosopher: A Personal Journey Through Western Philosophy from Plato to Popper (Modern Library

“I had a pupil who turned in a couple of well-crafted essays on Descartes, subjecting "cogito ergo sum" to effective and damaging criticism...This was the sort of thing the best students did, and it was thought to be Oxford intellectual training at its most sophistocated. But I said to him, "If all the criticisms you've made of Descartes are valid-- and on the whole I think they are-- why are we spending our time here now discussing him? Why have you just devoted a fortnight of your life to reading his main works and writing two essays about them? ...More to the point: if all these things are wrong with his ideas--and I think they are-- why is his name known to every educated person in the Western world today, three and a half centuries after his death? ...[text].. The pupil saw my point straight away but was at a loss to answer...[text].. Along such lines as these I made it a conscious principle of my teaching, whatever the subject, to get the pupil first of all to do the necessary learning, and the detailed work of analysis and criticism, and then to raise "Yes, but what is the point of all this-- why are we doing it?" questions. And students almost invariably found that it was only when that stage was reached that the really exciting interest and importantance of what it was they were doing opened up before their eyes.”
Bryan Magee

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