I began blogging
about history of philosophy because of very selfish reasons. I had
this foolishly ambitious notion of reading through majority of what
had passed as philosophy, starting from ancient
Greek and all the way to modern times. I thought that by writing down
in concise form the content of my readings, I could have some
concrete results from my effort and if I would load it to Internet,
I would have a convenient storage place for accessing my writings, if
I ever wanted to go back to them. With that end in mind, I began my
first blog, ”Philosophy for ignorants”, where the ignorant of the
title was supposed to be myself.
This blog is still
an ongoing concern, although I quickly noted that my reading rate –
few pages of a book in one day – was abysmally slow in comparison
with the texts themselves, which often discussed several books and
perhaps even several authors at a time.
As times went by, I
started to be a little annoyed that I might never get round to my
true field of expertise, that is, German idealism. The solution was
obvious: I began a new blog, ”The rise and fall of Germanidealism”. From the very beginning, the new blog was meant to be
much more scholarly. While the texts of my first blog were mostly
just summarized compilations out of the works of various philosophers
I had read, together with some notes as to some general remarks on
historical matters, the new blog was supposed to contain more
detailed analysis and exegesis of individual works, often in several
blog posts, and occasionally even some comparisons with themes in
modern philosophy.
The more scholarly
approach also required a more extensive choice of source material.
When compiling my original blog, I used to concentrate on the more
important philosophers and on the more important works of those
philosophers (well, I did read the whole Aristotelian corpus, just
for the fun of it), but in the German idealism blog I wanted to be
real thorough and check out all the minor philosophers and minor
works of the period I just could get my hands on easily. This
thoroughness meant also a change in languages I chose. My knowledge of
ancient Greek is rather poor, so in my first blog I eagerly used
translations. Because my capacity to read German was fair (and Latin,
well, I just might learn Latin by reading the texts), I chose to use
nothing but original materials, especially as most of what I was
going to read had never been translated to English.
After a couple of
years of writing two blogs, I again got a bit annoyed that I would
never reach current philosophy, which was a theme I saw I should know
more about. The natural answer was to start yet another blog,
dedicated this time to modern philosophy. And here it is then.
When it comes to the
level of scholarship, I wanted to avoid the intricate exegetics that
I would eventually engage with in my German idealism blog. Instead,
because many of the questions asked by the authors would still be
relevant, I wanted to share more of my personal opinions of the
matters discussed by them. Generally, the level of scholarliness
would be somewhere between my other two blogs. I would certainly try
to read all the works in the original language (we'll see if French
will prove to be an obstacle, since it's been a decade since I've
truly read anything in French). Furthermore, I did want to include
more obscure authors, but still only on a general level, taking only
a single outstanding work from the less known philosophers. I also
estimated that my rate of update would fall somewhere in the middle
of two blogs: more than just once a year, but not many times a month.
A difficult problem
was where to start and which philosophers I should read. With my
first blog the answer to the previous question was easy: I just could
start where philosophy was traditionally thought to begin. Similar
ease I showed when choosing what to read for the first blog: I just
took note of prominent authors of the era, chose some of them and
read a selection of their works. With the German idealism blog my
take was far more serious, but the answers were almost as easy. I
soon chose to begin with Christian Wolff as the founder of the first
famous German school of philosophy (although in hindsight I should
have begun with Thomasius). Furthermore, I could just easily take some
old history of philosophy books on German Enlightenment and German
idealism and write down every name I found.
Current philosophy
is of course a term always in flux, because what is current now, is
forgotten in a decade. Yet, what I mean by this epithet is the period
began by the works of two philosophers, Frege and Husserl. A natural
starting point would then be the works of these two philosophers. But
just like with my German idealism blog I didn't want to to begin
straight with Kant, before seeing his context, I wanted to also see
what philosophical culture Frege and Husserl were living in. Thus, I
began my study of current philosophy from quite far away, from 19th
century philosophy – minus German idealism, of course.
Which philosophers
then to read? For the beginning, I decided to use the help of
Coplestone's massive history of philosophy and especially its three
parts on the latest philosophy. I started to write down every name
mentioned in these three books (not including the German idealists)
and pick out one or two works by the authors thus chosen. The result
was that my reading schedule was to begin with few 18th century
philosophers. Particularly various American philosophers were
included, because Coplestone had not discussed American philosophy
before this point.
It is thus no wonder
that I shall begin with one of the founding fathers of the United
States. One may thus well note that many of the thinkers I will go
through shall not be of such an interest for modern philosophers –
I attempt to be as quick as I can with these cases. I think this is
enough for introductions – onward to Benjamin Franklin!
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