Now I will wrestle with the other three
great philosophical questions that have been plaguing mankind for centuries.
«either way, such demythologizing claims * everything * is a myth» -------------- We are no closer to answering
the great philosophical questions of existence (like «why are we here?»)
No, not when he claimed he'd solved
all great philosophical questions at just 29 years old...
Not exact matches
Many, many
great scientists are writing books on their activities, but books which are in fact
philosophical works... Science produces metaphysical
questions and, in fact,
great scientists tend to solve these problems... The problem is to believe that these solutions belong to science, or to believe that a
philosophical solution is given immediately by science.
While the
great majority of Protestant theologians turned to Barth and other Neoorthodox thinkers, a few of us felt the need to deal directly with the
question of God's reality, in a way that could not avoid
philosophical issues.
There is a
great gap between the immediate, concrete experiences in which
questions about death arise and the abstract,
philosophical reflection in which relational theology is couched.
Those who have read the book know that Tickle goes into much
greater detail about the
questions and challenges raised by cognitive science, literary deconstruction, higher criticism, Freud, Jung, Campbell, Einstein, Heisenbuerg, and many other
philosophical / scientific / cultural movements.
This book will make you think and it's hard to give a
greater compliment than that... a deeply personal and sensitively constructed exposition of some of the most enduring
philosophical questions... particularly fascinating... endearingly autobiographical style... Shaha has constructed a charmingly readable journey through some of the most enduring
philosophical territory, weaving memories and thoughtful anecdotes into a powerful story of hope and truth.
Pi in the Sky (
great title) is an attempt to introduce a lay readership to the
philosophical questions that underlie mathematics and particularly the
question of why does maths manage to describe the Universe we appear to have.
The story leans heavily on
philosophical and metaphysical
questions... just like every
great sci - fi film.
Written by Kojima Productions, the storyline carries the signature depth and
philosophical questions that only Hideo and his team can come up with, and it's pretty
great.
But what are the implications of a curatorial venture, like The
Great Debate, scaling the mountaintop of a big
philosophical question with only fog at its peak?