Enlightenment from the South Park gang faster than you can say, "Screw you guys, I'm going home"! The Ultimate South Park and Respect My Philosophah! presents a compilation of serious philosophical reflections on the twisted insights voiced by characters in TV’s most irreverent animated series.
Robert Arp, Ph.D. (Saint Louis University, 2005), has taught Philosophy at Southwest Minnesota State University, Florida State University, and many schools in Missouri, before doing postdoctoral research in ontology through the National Center for Biomedical Ontology with Mark Musen and Barry Smith at the University at Buffalo.
Imagination is an essential feature of human life, but how much should Pascal wager for some City Wok? Living in a, "world risk" society can totally suck balls.
Anyone who has completed an Introduction to Logic course (the Crème Fraîche of philosophy) would respect the authoritah to always define basic concepts under discussion, m'kay?
Beck's "enlightenment function" is not a collection of underpants dating back to 1998.
"But what Libertarians seem to ignore is that there is a 'feedback loop' between individualism and socialization in human development." (185/258)
If a, "miracle" is a violation of laws of nature, is our current salvation Pam Bondi's nose rectoplasm?
Nice to see a Peter Singer name drop.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Some of the essays are fun and informative, some of them are not as engaging, and at least one of them is not consistent in the argumentation used (even if they ended up in favor of the side I root for). They touch a great range of topics including vulgarity in the media, gay marriage, economics, individual freedom and politics, animal rights, and music. Obviously the examples taken from the series are great to make some of the philosophical themes and/or ideas easier to understand for the layman, but don't expect something too deep.