If you want an introduction to philosophical ideas, I suppose you could get Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction, which, though I’m sure it’s very good, wouldn’t quite have the same verve about it that this work has. The explanatory elements are always done in a tongue-in-cheek way, yet this isn’t done at the expense of their pedagogical element. We take in a broad scope of metaphysics, philosophy of religion, feminism and philosophy of language, amongst others. What we have then is a whistle-stop tour of the history of modern western philosophy. Many of the jokes are those you will have heard before and though this is not an analysis of humour, it does help understand the absurdities that create the humour – or rather, it helps to understand why the absurdities are absurdities. The general structure is that the authors give a short précis about a topic in philosophy before demonstrating it in use in a joke. From the start, I found it to be a delight. The subtitle of the book gives the concept: explaining philosophy through jokes. One day, I was exploring around the philosophy section of the Waterstones flagship store in Piccadilly I spotted it out of the corner of my eye. It’s a book that I had been after for some years, but could never find it for a reasonable price. This was my “coffee table” book that I dipped into every now and then, after finishing Professor Stewart’s Cabinet of Mathematical Curiosities.
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