A Revised Poetry of Western Philosophy
Bertrand Russell finds himself in purgatory, tumbling through literal representations of the worlds of ideas he examined in his classic text, A History of Western Philosophy, gulping much-needed air, for example, from Empedocles' bucket. Mistaking his erection for a planted flag, he declares the place Platonopolis, attempts to calculate his Pythagorean number, kills God (though he later sees evidence of His resurrection), and, Rousseau-like, turns away from reason and civilization, favoring the noble savage, only to march back into the concrete jungle as one of Nietzsche's savage nobles. In the end, however, he is all jumbled up and clucking like Einstein's cuckoo clock, until he perceives philosophy as music, hears its arguments as a symphonic procession of the electrochemical pulses produced within three-pound lumps—lumps self-amalgamated from the vomitus of stars—and revises his History.
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A Revised Poetry of Western Philosophy
Bertrand Russell finds himself in purgatory, tumbling through literal representations of the worlds of ideas he examined in his classic text, A History of Western Philosophy, gulping much-needed air, for example, from Empedocles' bucket. Mistaking his erection for a planted flag, he declares the place Platonopolis, attempts to calculate his Pythagorean number, kills God (though he later sees evidence of His resurrection), and, Rousseau-like, turns away from reason and civilization, favoring the noble savage, only to march back into the concrete jungle as one of Nietzsche's savage nobles. In the end, however, he is all jumbled up and clucking like Einstein's cuckoo clock, until he perceives philosophy as music, hears its arguments as a symphonic procession of the electrochemical pulses produced within three-pound lumps—lumps self-amalgamated from the vomitus of stars—and revises his History.
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A Revised Poetry of Western Philosophy

A Revised Poetry of Western Philosophy

by Daniel Grandbois
A Revised Poetry of Western Philosophy

A Revised Poetry of Western Philosophy

by Daniel Grandbois

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Overview

Bertrand Russell finds himself in purgatory, tumbling through literal representations of the worlds of ideas he examined in his classic text, A History of Western Philosophy, gulping much-needed air, for example, from Empedocles' bucket. Mistaking his erection for a planted flag, he declares the place Platonopolis, attempts to calculate his Pythagorean number, kills God (though he later sees evidence of His resurrection), and, Rousseau-like, turns away from reason and civilization, favoring the noble savage, only to march back into the concrete jungle as one of Nietzsche's savage nobles. In the end, however, he is all jumbled up and clucking like Einstein's cuckoo clock, until he perceives philosophy as music, hears its arguments as a symphonic procession of the electrochemical pulses produced within three-pound lumps—lumps self-amalgamated from the vomitus of stars—and revises his History.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822982029
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Publication date: 11/18/2016
Series: Pitt Poetry Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 112
File size: 456 KB

About the Author

Daniel Grandbois is the author of the prose poetry/flash fiction collection Unlucky Lucky Days, the art novel The Hermaphrodite: An Hallucinated Memoir, and the prose poetry collection Unlucky Lucky Tales. His work has appeared in Fiction, Boulevard, the Mississippi Review, Conjunctions, and Electric Lit, among others, and often includes collaborations with visual artists across the Americas.

Table of Contents

Contents Introduction������������������� Book One: Ancient������������������������ Pythagoras����������������� Heraclitus����������������� Empedocles����������������� Anaxagoras����������������� Protagoras����������������� Socrates��������������� Plato������������ Aristotle���������������� Plotinus��������������� Book Two: Catholic������������������������� Augustine���������������� Benedict��������������� Gregory the Great������������������������ John the Scot�������������������� Aquinas�������������� Book Three: Modern������������������������� Machiavelli������������������ Erasmus�������������� More����������� Copernicus����������������� Kepler������������� Galileo�������������� Newton������������� Bacon������������ Hobbes������������� Descartes���������������� Spinoza�������������� Leibniz�������������� Locke������������ Berkeley��������������� Hume����������� Rousseau��������������� Kant����������� Darwin������������� Hegel������������ Byron������������ Schopenhauer������������������� Nietzsche���������������� Marx����������� Bergson�������������� Dewey������������ Einstein��������������� Materials Used��������������������� Acknowledgments����������������������
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