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Who is your favoutive Philosopher ? (Original Post) TristanIsolde Jun 2020 OP
Socrates & Locke onetexan Jun 2020 #1
I'll go with Didactylos. GoneOffShore Jun 2020 #2
Lao Tzu Archetypist Jun 2020 #3
+1 My choices also. c-rational Jun 2020 #19
Nice to hear! Archetypist Jun 2020 #20
Empedocles - 'Love & Strife' empedocles Jun 2020 #4
Lord Bishop George Barkley sab390 Jun 2020 #5
Schopenhauer BeyondGeography Jun 2020 #6
Sartre ret5hd Jun 2020 #7
Mine is Epictetus. Not sure of the spelling. CaliforniaPeggy Jun 2020 #8
Felix Adler no_hypocrisy Jun 2020 #9
Not in chronological order ... wendyb-NC Jun 2020 #10
Hegel gets a bad rap soothsayer Jun 2020 #11
Hegel is papa bear TristanIsolde Jun 2020 #12
Hegel has a neat footnote sab390 Jun 2020 #14
That's cool soothsayer Jun 2020 #16
Yogi Berra Walleye Jun 2020 #13
It is a tie for me between Chainfire Jun 2020 #15
Zippy the Pinhead quaint Jun 2020 #17
Parmenides - laid foundation for the Corpus Hermeticum Hestia Jun 2020 #18
I have 3. kairos12 Oct 2020 #21
Camus kairos12 Nov 2020 #22
Seneca Marie Marie Apr 2021 #23

Archetypist

(218 posts)
20. Nice to hear!
Fri Jun 12, 2020, 12:27 PM
Jun 2020

There are things I can't understand or even begin to understand, and that's OK. Then there are things I can't control, and that's OK too.

CaliforniaPeggy

(149,593 posts)
8. Mine is Epictetus. Not sure of the spelling.
Fri Jun 12, 2020, 07:03 AM
Jun 2020

He was a Stoic. Their basic message: There are things you have control over, and things you don't. Don't worry about the stuff you can't control.

I have tried to live my life this way; it saves a lot of grief.



no_hypocrisy

(46,083 posts)
9. Felix Adler
Fri Jun 12, 2020, 07:04 AM
Jun 2020
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felix_Adler_(professor)

While in Germany, he was strongly influenced by neo-Kantianism, especially the notions that one cannot prove or disprove the existence of a deity or immortality, and that morality can be established independently of theology.

-snip-

Adler introduced his concept of Judaism as a universal religion of morality for all of humankind. The sermon was his first and last at Temple Emanu-El.

-snip-

On May 15, 1876 he reiterated the need for a religion, without the trappings of ritual or creed, that united all of humankind in moral social action.[7] To do away with theology and to unite theists, atheists, agnostics and deists, all in the same religious cause, was a revolutionary idea at the time.

-snip-

Adler talked about "deed, not creed"; his belief was that good works were the basis of ethical culture.

wendyb-NC

(3,322 posts)
10. Not in chronological order ...
Fri Jun 12, 2020, 07:23 AM
Jun 2020

Socrates, Lao Tzu, Marx, Hegel, Spinoza, Locke, Paine, Simone De Beauvoir, Jean Paul Sartre, Gabriel Marcel, Albert Camus.

soothsayer

(38,601 posts)
11. Hegel gets a bad rap
Fri Jun 12, 2020, 07:41 AM
Jun 2020

But his dialectic is excellent, as is the idea that you can see man’s consciousness unfolding by looking at religion through the ages.

Also, Nicholas de Cusa for his concept that if you could learn the “real” name of one thing in creation, you could understand the mind of God.

sab390

(183 posts)
14. Hegel has a neat footnote
Fri Jun 12, 2020, 09:06 AM
Jun 2020

When he is talking about the superiority of the German system he has a footnote that says "I'm interested to see the outcome of the experiment in the colonies" meaning the US.

 

Hestia

(3,818 posts)
18. Parmenides - laid foundation for the Corpus Hermeticum
Fri Jun 12, 2020, 11:09 AM
Jun 2020

There is only one Being/Truth and we act upon what we perceive to be true independent of the actual Truth.

Advocated the concept of All is One.

https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/parmenides/#OveParPoe

Great book about Parmenides - In the Dark Places of Wisdom, which also discusses the Underground Healing Caves of Apollo

kairos12

(12,856 posts)
21. I have 3.
Sun Oct 18, 2020, 11:40 PM
Oct 2020

For daily living, Marcus Aurelius.

For daily meditation, Albert Camus.

For daily coping, Groucho Marx.

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