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Shining Peak Links | |
The
Shining Peak website of introductory philosophy
The
Shining Peak is my website of assorted
notes for the philosophy lessons I teach at the College in my area. I
hope it is a good resource for the students, and for anyone else that
stumbles onto it. Some of the main fields of philosophy are covered by
the links to the left. They are brief summaries of some of the
questions, and they emphasize a classical, Platonic, Aristotelian and
Scholastic
view. The philosophy of Plato and Aristotle, and that of the middle
ages, often called
scholastic (meaning of the schools), is the foundation of thought.
Especially the scholastic era is widely overlooked and under
appreciated,
yet rich and intriguing era of philosophy, far more interesting usually
than the modern cold scientific outlook that finds nothing special in
the fact that the universe exists, that humans exist and are really a
microcosm of all reality, and can know about reality.
Philosophy should be a love of wisdom, a joy at seeing and studying how things are then reflecting on what that means for me, where is the truth in it, what is the meaning for me. Not a dry system trying to deny there is any wisdom to behold, or trying to prove there is nothing special about anything. Philosophy should behold the universe around us and wonder at the meaning of it, seeking to understand it, not cynically claiming there is no sense to it and dismissing any effort to explain it that might hint at some immaterial or metaphysical causes. It should seek to understand the world around us, not float off into possible worlds that will never be. It should not let itself be replaced with, or reduced to mere scientific knowledge. So why is it called the Shining Peak? Mountain peaks are symbolic of the heights that human thought aspires to. But that is not why it's called that. Actually Shining Peak is just the translation of my name into English from its Luxumbergish/Germanic roots. There is not some other mystical meaning to it, at least not that I intended. To the left there are links to the sections of philosophy that correspond to the classes I teach. Below those at the left are links to other sites that have philosophical writings or explanations that I think would be helpful, including sites where you can read original writings of various philosophers. Just because I link to a site does not mean I endorse what is said there. At the top and bottom are links to Contact Me. |
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| Introduction Logic Cosmology Metaphysics Natural Theology Human Nature Knowledge Ethics Politics Links to other sites Classical authors Episteme Links Summa Theologica Scholastic Page The Five Ways Works of Aristotle Works of Aquinas Many Authors works Plato's Dialogues John Locke |
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