The Seasonal Reading Challenge discussion
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OLD TASK HELP THREADS
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15.10 ("Face the facts of being what you are, for that is what changes what you are.")

Oh my god! I am beside myself with glee right now!




I think there is a difference between a personal philosophy and a catchy saying, but it might often just be a question of rephrasing.

(er, and of course, this isn't my task, so hopefully Cynthia will agree that it works for you!)


You could also try works by:
John Locke
David Hume
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Friedrich Nietzsche
René Descartes
Immanuel Kant
Arthur Schopenhauer
Benedictus de Spinoza
Blaise Pascal
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel

What do you know, so do I! Except replace "checked out from the library" with "downloaded from Amazon for $1". ;) yay!

Would Everything Happens for a Reason: Finding the True Meaning of the Events in Our Lives work? One of my life philosophies is that things always have some kind of meaning even the crappy stuff.

I guess the thing you have to come up with first is you philosophy or principle of life is and then find a book that relates to that.
Nicole wrote: "Cynthia,
Would Everything Happens for a Reason: Finding the True Meaning of the Events in Our Lives work? One of my life philosophies is that things always have some kind of meaning ..."
Yes
Nicole wrote: "Would the idea that "everything happens for a reason" be considered a philosophy? "
I think so.
Nicole wrote: "I guess I already have a question. What qualifies someone as a philosopher? I ask because many self help books espouse philosophies, but obviously the authors are not philosophers in the sense that..."
If they relate to or match your philosophy of life that's fine - philosophy is a very broad thing so I'll be giving latitude on this one.


That reminds me of the movie A Walk to Remember. I'm not sure how similar the book is.


Could you recommend some of the books you've read recently about Buddhism that might work for this task?



I just finished The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac - it definitly is about Buddhism - and pretty much any Kerouac book will have a personal philosophy twist.



I don't see how the title relates to your philosophy but if you can explain the connection when you post - yes.



Your philosphy is suppose to be a part of the title, not necessarily the story line...



To me, that sounds right... but I am not Cynthia, and I could be totally wrong.

Yes
Valorie wrote: "I'm a big believer in Karma, would that count as a philosophy? Can I read a book with Karma in the title?"
Yes


I will see if I can get a copy of this from my local library x

"There is genuine dialogue - no matter whether spoken or silent - where each of the participants really has in mind the other or others in their present and particular being and turns to them with the intention of establishing a living mutual relation between himself and them. There is technical dialogue, which is prompted solely by the need of objective understanding. And there is monologue disguised as dialogue, in which two or more, meeting in space, speak each with himself in strangely tortuous and circuitous ways and yet imagine they have escaped the torment of being thrown back on their own resources."
I want to read Race-ing Justice, En-gendering Power: Essays on Anita Hill, Clarence Thomas and the Construction of Social Reality by Toni Morrison which discusses how bad things get when people treat each other as I-It rather than I-Thou.
Does this work?
If not, I'll be happy re-reading I and Thou.

"There is genuine dialogue - no matter whether spoken or silent - where each of the particip..."
PJ, I love I and Thou. It completely transformed the way I look at art and approach relationships. Great quote, too.


Sure
Tracey wrote: "would "you learn something new everyday" be a philosophy?"
Sure
pjreads wrote: "A lot of my philosophy is based on I and Thou by Martin Buber, who said:
"There is genuine dialogue - no matter whether spoken or silent - where each of the particip..."
If the book itself is not written by a philosopher you identify with then the title must relate to your philosophy - if you can explain it's relation then it counts.

If the book itself is not written by a philosopher you identify with then the title must relate to your philosophy - if you can explain it's relation then it counts."
OK. I didn't notice that it had to relate to the title, but I can explain the relation between Buber's philosophy and "the Construction of Social Reality."

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In Honor of Søren Kierkegaard (May 5, 1813 � November 11, 1855) a Danish Philosopher...Read a book whose title relates to your personal philosophy OR a book written by a philosopher whose ideas you identify with. When posting this task share your personal philosophy of life.
If you need suggestions OR have suggestions for books to read for this task post them here.