Immagine dell'autore.

Martin Cohen

Autore di 101 Philosophy Problems

39+ opere 864 membri 13 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Martin Cohen is an author, editor, and philosopher who has written many popular books in philosophy and social science including 101 Philosophy Problems, 101 Ethical Dilemmas, Mind Games. Philosophical Tales, and Wittgenstein's Beetle. He has also written key reference works in the For Dummies mostra altro series on critical thinking skills and philosophy. mostra meno

Comprende i nomi: Martin Koen, Martin Cohen

Fonte dell'immagine: via Alchetron

Opere di Martin Cohen

101 Philosophy Problems (1999) 296 copie
101 Ethical Dilemmas (2003) 149 copie
Philosophy For Dummies (2010) 33 copie
Cracking Philosophy (2016) 16 copie
In Quest of Telescopes (1980) 10 copie
101 Ahlak Ikilemi (2016) 3 copie
The Competitive Edge (1982) 2 copie
MARTYR 2 copie
Akil Oyunlari (2014) 1 copia
Rethinking Thinking (2022) 1 copia

Opere correlate

The Universe (1987) — Collaboratore — 114 copie
25 Short Short Stories — Collaboratore — 1 copia

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1964
Sesso
male
Attività lavorative
philosopher

Utenti

Recensioni

Less philosophical puzzles than examples of paradoxes and biases.
 
Segnalato
kaikai1 | 5 altre recensioni | May 22, 2020 |
With a title like this one, you know exactly what you are getting into. This book is vehemently anti-nuclear. The authors debunk established "facts" about nuclear power in each chapter; like the idea that it is a green energy, or low cost. Even though the book isn't long, parts of it were very dense, especially while discussing the true cost of nuclear in terms of kilowatt hours. It covers the major nuclear accidents, and takes the stance that the true cost in terms of cancers and deaths is being covered up my multiple agencies for the sake of the industry. What surprised me most, was how much the author disparaged other green energy ideas like wind and solar. By the end, the book has concluded that pretty much all of the green energy alternatives are pointless, but provides no ideas to help solve the energy problem. While the book is full of good information on the true costs of nuclear in various terms, I was slightly frustrated that all other alternatives were criticized with no suggestions for any kind of solution.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
LISandKL | Dec 26, 2014 |
Good introduction to ethics
 
Segnalato
georgeslacombe | Feb 24, 2014 |
One of the classic items in the philosopher’s toolbox is the thought experiment. The person conceives of a scenario or a universe, proposes a problem, and engages another person with its implications or meaning. While they may seem simple, thought experiments have rules (or at least guidelines). They should be simple, internally consistent, complete, and conceivable. Martin Cohen, in Wittgenstein’s Beetle, takes the reader through 26 such experiments to help us get a handle on the nature of the universe, the laws of physics, and even the meaning of language.

The book’s 26 experiments are a fun alphabetic tour of philosophy and science—A for Alice’s Acceleration, B for Bernard’s Body-Exchange, and so on. This has the simple effect of keeping our attention on each experiment and not letting them blend together into a hazy mess. He lays out the experiment as originally thought out and invites the reader to a supplementary discussion of each one. Each experiment’s logical implications and revelations are at least mildly interesting. My favorite was at J (for Jules Henri Poincare’s look into alternate geometries):

“Imagine a gaseous world made up of gaseous beings. They exist near the center of the world and as such, expand to occupy a decent amount of space. Surrounding the world is a vacuum whose temperature measures absolute zero but they don’t know it (this is important). One day, they decide to get a fix on exactly how large their planet is, and so begin slowly measuring the distance to the outer edge with a gaseous measuring device (also important). As they slowly make their way to the edge, they get colder and colder, steadily approaching absolute zero, and thereby shrinking along the way (as gases tend to do). Upon getting infinitesimally closer to the edge, they get infinitely small and therefore never reach it. So they give up and go back towards the center (and re-expand to their original size). They relay to the rest of the planet that their world is infinitely large because they never reached the edge.” The implication here is that measurement is relative and based on perception.

While the scenario is wildly fantastic, it still helps inform our understanding of the universe. The other experiments in this book are just as informative. Cohen’s collection is designed to give you nuggets of thought to chew on for a while, then pass along to another one. He incorporates a lot of the original source material (or at least a good translation), but keeps the writing crisp and slightly witty. For those wishing to dip a toe into philosophy, this would as good a place as any to start. A quick and informative book.
… (altro)
2 vota
Segnalato
NielsenGW | Jun 12, 2013 |

Premi e riconoscimenti

Potrebbero anche piacerti

Autori correlati

Statistiche

Opere
39
Opere correlate
3
Utenti
864
Popolarità
#29,637
Voto
½ 3.4
Recensioni
13
ISBN
138
Lingue
11

Grafici & Tabelle