An illustrated tour through the history of Western philosophy by renowned authority Anthony Kenny, newly revised and expanded in a special 20th anniversary edition
Newly revised and expanded for a special 20th anniversary publication, the latest edition of An Illustrated Brief History of Western Philosophy contains all of Anthony Kenny's original writings on the history of Western philosophy from ancient to modern, along with new writings on the philosophy of the mid-20th century, covering important contributions from continental philosophers and philosophers of the post-Wittgenstein anglophone tradition, including the work of many women whose works have too often been neglected by the historical record.
The only book of its kind, offering complete, concise coverage of the full Western philosophical tradition over 2,500 years of history A valuable resource for the general philosophy reader and the beginning philosophy student Filled with photos, illustrations, paintings, and maps to provide further dimensions to this comprehensive history Authored by one of the most respected and learned philosophers of the modern era Widely translated and a consistent best-seller in philosophy resources for the general reader
Sir Anthony Kenny is an English philosopher whose interests lie in the philosophy of mind, ancient and scholastic philosophy, the philosophy of Wittgenstein, and the philosophy of religion.
A romp through the ideas and thinking of a vast array of Philosophers. I would say, overall, it presents their work fairly - outlining their key works and how they were received. There seemed to be a more personal approach to the summary of Rorty at the end of the book but it hasn't put me off exploring Rorty's work myself. The book also sparked an interest in Marcuse and Habermas whose works I hope to explore.
While I enjoyed this book from a historical perspective, its explanations of various philosophers' thinking often left me wondering what in the world I'd just read. I was surprised, in particular, to find that so much of philosophy seems to be concerned with questions about such minutea as the predicates and subjects of seemingly simple sentences.
Whether my frustrations with this book were due to authorial incompetence is something I can only determine by reading other authors in this field. While I'm still hopeful that there's value to be gained from reading philosophy, this book unfortunately dampened my optimism.
Kenny does well at distilling the key ideas of philosophers from the pre-socratic era to the twentieth century. As someone only moderately familiar with philosophy, I found everything (except the chapter on Kant) very easy to understand. I found it very helpful, and will probably revisit it in the future.
I have to admit I skimmed through this in order to see how accessible and suitable it would be as a course book for my philosophy students. It does present a reasonably clear background to the main philosophers as a good general background to philosophy. It is divided into manageable sections but still requires alot of concentration to understand the concepts.