A Cabinet of Philosophical Curiosities: A Collection of Puzzles, Oddities, Riddles, and Dilemmas

A Cabinet of Philosophical Curiosities: A Collection of Puzzles, Oddities, Riddles, and Dilemmas

by Roy Sorensen
A Cabinet of Philosophical Curiosities: A Collection of Puzzles, Oddities, Riddles, and Dilemmas

A Cabinet of Philosophical Curiosities: A Collection of Puzzles, Oddities, Riddles, and Dilemmas

by Roy Sorensen

Hardcover

$26.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Will you answer this question in the same way that you will answer my next question? Done? Good!

Will you buy this book?. Inside you will discover that your only truthful answer to this second question is affirmative.
Logic has made some men rich. Inside this book you will learn of John Eck (who debated Luther in 1519). He Will you answer this question in the same way that you will answer my next question? Done? Good! Will you buy this book? Inside you will discover that your only truthful answer to this second question is affirmative.

A Cabinet of Philosophical Curiosities is a colorful collection of puzzles and paradoxes, both historical and contemporary, by philosopher Roy Sorensen. Taking inspiration from Ian Stewart's Professor Stewart's Cabinet of Mathematical Curiosities, which assembled interesting "maths" from outside the classroom into a miscellany of marvels, these puzzles are ready to be enjoyed independently but gain mutual support when read in clusters. The volume ranges from simple examples to anomalous anomalies, considers data that seems to confirm a generalization while lowering its probability, and argues that we are doomed to believe infinitely many contradictions-and that the pain of contradictions can be profoundly stimulating.Inside this book you will learn of John Eck, who debated Luther in 1519. He devised a sequence of contracts that sidestepped usury laws, and German bankers made a fortune from this Triple Contract. Sorensen also recounts how Voltaire set himself up for life by exploiting a fallacy in the construction of a Parisian lottery. There is logic for altruists, too. You will discover how General Benjamin Butler used other-centric reasoning to protect runaway slaves. There are historical snapshots of logic in action, and the book contains tributes to Lewis Carroll, Arthur Prior, and Peter Geach. In addition to short essays, there are dialogues, cures and insults.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199829569
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 05/05/2016
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 5.70(w) x 8.40(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Roy Sorensen is a professor of philosophy at Washington University in St. Louis. He is the author of Seeing Dark Things, A Brief History of the Paradox, Vagueness and Contradiction, Pseudo-Problems, Thought Experiments and Blindspots.

Table of Contents

Absent Minded
Advice from Shih Teng
Airport Riddles
Against Trying your Best
Antinomy
Antisuperlative
Anything is possible?
Arbitrary Choice
Ballot Metaphysics
Being Alone
Bias against the Absent
Bible Codes
Book Review of A Million Random Digits
Brother in Law Resemblance
Can Jesus Argue Fallaciously?
Can you believe the impossible?
The Cheated God
Christmas364
Circumnavigator's Paradox
The Completeness Concern and Dirty Harry
Compulsive Counterexampling
Conformexamples
Consequentia mirabilis
Coping with Chaos
Counter-illusions
The Cow Pox Transport Problem
A Cure for Incontinence!
Do Butterflies Dream?
Dreams of the Logicians
Eternal Return
Evil Concepts
The Egg Came before the Chicken
Exploiting Isomorphism
Fairness Fallacies
Faking Munchausen's
Fallible or Anti-Infallible?
Fame as the Forgotten Philosopher
Fictional Theism
First Semantic Paradox
Fugu for Two
Gell-Mann's Slip of the Tongue
Handicaps on Deduction
Happy Death Day!
Happy Unbirthday!
How Smoking Saved Bertrand Russell's Life
I am an Inconsistent Machine
Idle Reasoning
I do not understand
Illogical Coin Collection
Inclusive Insight for Children
Inconsistent Vision
Infallible or Anti-Infallible?
It's a jumble out there!
Infinite Two Minute Debate
Kettle Logic
Liar's Loophole
Logically Equivalent - but Easier
Logical pens
Logical Theft
Losing by winning
Mayor of Casterbridge's Plan
Meta-agnostic
Meta-argument
Metaphysics of the Law of Averages
The Mexican Intuitionist
Modus Ponens or Modus Tollens?
Multiple Choice as a Sport
Nanofallacies
Necessary Waste
Nothing is written in stone
The Odd Universe of Nelson Goodman
Orwell Problems for Arguments
Other-centric Reasoning
Palindromic Arguments
Pebble from the Baths of Caraculla
Permission to Cheat
A Plenum of Palindromes
Portable Proofs
Premature Explanatory Satiation
Professor Ignorance
Quine's African Tour
Quine's Ground Out
Random Quiz
Rationally Believing Contradictions
Razed Hopes
Reasonable Doubt - Juror Point
Russell's Slip of the Pen
Séance with an Immortal
Self-Fulfilling Self-Defeating Prophecies
Smartfounding
Snappy Comebacks by Logicians
Statistics for Pessimists
Steve Martin's Contradictions
To Be and Not to Be
Tolstoy's Syllogism
Toward a Fairer Share of Dishwashing
Two Goldfish
The Unbearable Lightness of Logical Conclusions
Unbirthdays
We disagree
Winning by Drawing
Winning by Losing 542
Why do Ethicists Marry Logicians?
Why Fanatics are so Logical
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews