An Introduction to Philosophy: Perennial Principles of the Classical Realist Tradition

by Daniel J. Sullivan

Paperback, 2009

Barcode

6816

Call number

100 SUL

Status

Available

Call number

100 SUL

Pages

303

Description

AN INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY by Daniel J. Sullivan is intended for the general reader as well as for the student. Its primary purpose is to present the elements of philosophy with simplicity and clarity in order to arouse that sense of wonder which Aristotle says is the beginning of the love of wisdom. This well-structured overview begins with an historical study of philosophy, tracing the evolution of philosophical problems from their simplest origins, and continues with an analysis of the more concrete problems about man himself. The more abstract problems of man and his relation to the world around him make up the final study of this book. Sullivan works in the great classical, realist tradition of Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Aquinas, and their modern-day inheritors, exposing the perennially valid and vital principles of philosophy and emphasizing the profound moral and social implications of these principles. He respects the distinction between natural and revealed wisdom, but does not hesitate to point out how the conclusions of philosophy are complemented by the truths of revelation. AN INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY clearly demonstrates that philosophy is a good deal more than a classroom exercise.… (more)

Publication

TAN Books (2009), 303 pages

ISBN

0895554690 / 9780895554697

Collection

Rating

½ (2 ratings; 3.5)

User reviews

LibraryThing member drbrendan
This is the fundamental, first year, philosophy text that I used for the first year university classes. It served me well because it was written simply and focused on the ideas rather than on the history. I sued this text for university first-year level philosophy teaching.
LibraryThing member mykl-s
Sullivan explains the Thomist tradition, which is the philosophy of Roman Catholicism as far as I know it.
Thomism holds to basic, essential, perennial 'truths,' which may seem obvious, but many of which must be based on faith.
From these basics, originated by St. Thomas Aquinas, its reasoning is
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quite logical and comprehensive.
It is worth knowing about, and Sullivan was a good guide for me.
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