Books : The Great Ideas: A Lexicon of Western Thought

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Author name: Mortimer J. Adler

 : The Great Ideas: A Lexicon of Western Thought
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Used Price: $82.66






Type of bind: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 081
EAN num: 9780684859217
ISBN number: 0684859211
Label: Scribner
Manufacturer: Scribner
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 1008
Printing Date: February 01, 1999
Publishing house: Scribner
Sale Popularity Level: 1195156
Studio: Scribner




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Editor's Notes and Comments:

Brief Book Summary:


Forty-five years ago, Mortimer Adler sat down at a manual typewriter with a list of authors and a pyramid of books. Beginning with 'Angel' and ending with 'World,' he set out to write 102 essays featuring the ideas that have collectively defined Western thought for more than twenty-five hundred years. The essays, originally published in the Syntopicon, were, and remain, the centerpiece of Encyclolpaedia Britannica's Great Books of the Western World. These essays, never before available except as part of the Great Books, are, according to Clifton Fadiman, Adler's finest work.

This comprehensive volume includes pieces on topics such as 'War and Peace,' 'Love,' 'God,' and 'Truth' that amply quote the historical sources of these ideas -- from the works of Homer to Freud, from Marcus Aurelius to Virginia Woolf. These essays evoke the sense of a lively debate among the great writers and thinkers of Western civilization. It is almost as if these authors were sitting around a large table face-to-face, differing in their opinions and arguing about issues that are acutely relevant to the present day. Now available in a handsome Scribner Classics edition, The Great Ideas also contains Adler's own essay explaining why the twentieth century, though witness to dramatic discoveries and technological advances, cannot understand these achievements without seeing them in the larger context of the past twenty-five centuries.

Adler's purely descriptive synthesis presents the key points of view on almost three thousand questions without endorsing or favoring any one of them. More than a thousand pages, containing more than half a million words on more than two millennia of Western thought, The Great Ideas is an essential work that draws the reader into our civilization's great conversation of great ideas.



Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Follow the Evolution of the Great Ideas - CLASSIC
The 102 Great Ideas are definite intellectual qualities that led to our current Western civilization's cultural mindset. From the many dozens of books that have been labeled 'the classics' have been culled 102 Great Ideas. Each idea is followed from the earliest of writers to modern times. Very fascinating book. A definite shoe-in for nomination for an only book to have on a desert island.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - A succinct and intriguing roadmap for the timeless questions of life
Mortimer Adler guides a discusion across the ages, addressing profound questions ranging from the foundation of our universe to the composition of our selves. He paints the landscape of philosophy and science from thinkers as disparate as Plato, Nietzsche, Faraday, and Mill.

The Great Ideas can help readers who seek answers to matters such as whether moral absolutes or practical utility should guide one's decisions, when a de jure authority merits obedience, and what duties a person owes to his society. An educator may benefit from Adler's exposition on whether morality can be taught and his summary of views on the responsibility of teachers to socialize or liberate youth. An economist may enjoy Alder's discusion of the value of labor, which touches upon the theories of Veblen, Marx, Weber, Keynes and other influential thinkers. Physicists may gain insights into the progression of the experimental method and the role of aesthetics in the formulation of scientific theory.

Adler does not answer the timeless questions, but he brings to light their complexity. His book is ideal for readers who want to grasp the range of ideas. Readers must then draw their own conclusions about each Great Idea. Or, like Adler, they may leave each question of philosophy open for debate. The human race forever seeks answers, and sometimes the best questions simply require a few centuries of pondering.




Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Tour de Force of Intellectual Brilliance
Of all Mortimer Adler's various works, this one must rank at the top. It is a dynamic but reverent exploration of the 102 most important ideas of the Western World. These works eventually ended up in the Encyclopaedia Britannica's GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD. They have now been published separately, a fact that all who are interested in advancement and civilization must applaud.

The ideas are explored in a variety of ways - from what ancient, medieval and modern philosophers thought to a discusion of the history of the idea to its influence in the modern world. These are the building blocks of the foundations of Western civilization. Until recently, people who did not practice or recognize these ideas were considered "primitive". Only recently has there been a celebration from certain quarters of the uncivilized, uneducated and uncouth.

Adler makes several presumptions, the foremost among them being that humans are rational creatures and that philosophical ideas are what really drives the world, with language being an adjunct of ourselves. Many of these ideas concern how we consider ourselves and not only the world around us. Throughout, Adler adopts a neutral stance toward support of a particular opinion but this does not mean he is morally or ethically neutral.

This is a good reference book and an interest coffee table addition - sure to enlighten and enhance any conversation.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - One of the Greatest Books
I have more than 2,000 books in my library, and I cherish none more than this great compendium of Western intellectual thought.

The book has 102 chapters, covering every imaginable topic under the sun: such as Justice, War, Peace, Liberty, Freedom, Sin, the World, Intellect, Knowledge, and dozens more. Each chapter is about five pages, two columns each, of dense thought expressed throughout the ages -- from Plato through James, from Homer through Tolstoy, from Copernicus through Einstein -- highlighting the best that ever has been imagined or thought.

The author synthesizes the great and important ideas arising over the eras, taking no sides, but expositing the different and divergent ideas these great thinkers committed to writing for posterity's benefit. It's like reading the whole library of the Great Books of Western Civilization in a thematic, rather than, serialized, manner.

I've grown accustomed to reading a chapter a day, and then rereading these chapters as ideas pop up in other contexts. In these chapters I find such disparate sages as Jane Austin, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Aquinas, Descartes, Aristotle, Darwin, and everyone else who has something to contribute. This tome is truly encyclopeadic and catholic in scope and reference.

If I had the time and the means, I would read these original sources for myself and develop a card catalogue of the massive resources for the mere pleasure of knowledge for its own sake. But as time doesn't permit such a rigorous endeavor, I find Adler's synthesis to be the subsequent best thing.

This book will be a great resource for the whole family, especially adults and adolescents just beginning their studies. It will be of great value to those of college-level, where many students are bereft of these great ideas, cast aside for more "politically correct" authors and ideas. This book is a suitable bromide against the myopia of modernity and its tendencies toward nihilism. Above all, it is the best that has ever been thought or said.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Seminal Thought
Rare is the author who can synthesize 2,500+ years of Western thought so ably and intelligently as Adler does in this wonderful collection of essays on almost every conceivable topic under the sun. This, to my way of thinking, is genuine philosophy, the study of wisdom and the importance it makes. This is not Anglo-American analytic philosophy, although Mr. Adler is very competent within its stringent criteria, nor is this Continental European ideology, although Mr. Adler is quite familiar with its panoply. This is, instead, a collection of essays on the most important issues that have confronted human beings since the beginning of time. They are crisply and perspicaciously written, drawing on the philosophy and thought of the major thinkers over the horizon of history. It is more encyclopeadic than spontaneous, and provides a great place for every student, regardless of age, to begin his/her inquiry into a vast array of subject matters. It's also a treasury chest to return to time and again.



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