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Plato and a Platypus Walk into a Bar: Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes


by Thomas Cathcart, Daniel Klein

List Price: $18.95
Price: $12.89
You Save: $6.06 (32%)
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 8039
Studio: Abrams Image
Binding: Hardcover
Number Of Pages: 208
Publication Date: May 01, 2007
Publisher: Abrams Image


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description
Here’s a lively, hilarious, not-so-reverent crash course through the great philosophical traditions, schools, concepts, and thinkers. It’s Philosophy 101 for everyone who knows not to take all this heavy stuff too seriously. Some of the Big Ideas are Existentialism (what do Hegel and Bette Midler have in common?), Philosophy of Language (how to express what it’s like being stranded on a desert island with Halle Berry), Feminist Philosophy (why, in the end, a man is always a man), and much more. Finally—it all makes sense!

“I laughed, I learned, I loved it!” Roy Blount Jr.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.0 based on 110 reviews)

My kind of text!  
Finally, I've come across my kind of text: PLATO AND PLATYPUS
WALK INTO A BAR: UNDERTANDING PHILOSOPHY THROUGH
JOKES by Thomas Cathcart and Daniel Klein . . . I only regret
that this engaging--and informative!--book wasn't available when
I took the course as an undergraduate.

Imagine having humor brought into the teaching of such topics as
Metaphysics, Logic, Epistemology, and even Existentialism . . . you'd
certainly want to study more and/or perhaps switch majors . . . either
that or you'd want a similar book for such courses as Economics
and Physics.

The authors not only share jokes, but they also present a
philosophical background for telling them:

* One type of applied ethics that burgeoned in the twentieth century
was professional ethics, the codes regulating the relationships
of professionals to clients and patients.

After attending a conference on professional ethics, four psychiatrists
walked out together. One said, "You know, people are always coming
to us with their guilt and fears, but we have no one to go to with our
problems. So why don't we take some time right now to hear each other
out?" The other three agreed.

The first psychiatrist confessed, "I have an almost uncontrollable
desire to kill my patients."

The second psychiatrist said, "I find ways to cheat my patients out
of their money whenever I can."

The third followed with, "I'm involved in selling drugs and often
get my patients to sell them for me."

The fourth psychiatrist then confessed, "You know, no matter how
hard I try, I can't seem to keep a secret."

They also take some old classics that you may have not heard
for quite some time, then introduce them with a twist that
will leave you laughing:

* . . . take away Socrates's rationality and he's no longer Socrates,
but give him plastic surgery, and he's Socrates with a nose
job. Which reminds us of a joke.

When Thompson hit seventy, he decided to change his lifestyle completely
so that he could live longer. He went on a strict diet, he jogged, he swam,
and he took sunbaths. In just three months' time, Thompson lost thirty pounds,
reduced his waist by six inches, and expanded his chest by five inches. Svelte
and tan, he decided to top it all off with a sporty new haircut. Afterward, while
stepping out of the barbershop, he was hit by a bus.

As he lay dying, he cried out, "God, how could you do this to me?"

And a voice from the heavens responded, "To tell you the truth, Thompson,
I didn't recognize you."

There are only 188 pages in PLATO AND A PLATYPUS . . . it left
me wanting more . . . and when's the last time you hear anybody
ever say that about anything remotely related to philosophy?


July 03, 2008

we loved it; almost a family read  
Even though this book was a gift for my spouse, when he's giggling, we make him read it to us....which is often! Has brought up many great conversations and lots of laughs with our teens! Plus, we have already thought of so many other people that this book would be great as a gift! yea!
June 30, 2008

Good for what it is  
This book attempts to explain philsophy through jokes. On many levels it succeeded. The jokes gave insight into the philisphic concept being discussed far better than a bland analysis could have. The book covers, for all I can tell, all of philophy from the Greeks to the modern day. It is an overview, and thus shallow, but it serves as an introduction to the subject.

The jokes in this book were often old, but still funny.
June 14, 2008

good effort  
i heard these guys on NPR last year and found them highly informative and entertaining. the book losses some of the immediacy of their patter but still one of the more palatable explications of some very difficult [for me] philosophological concepts, if i could only remember an;y of them. definitely worth the time and money.
May 31, 2008

Cogent philosophy punctuated with jokes  
A fun way to review/learn a little Philosophy. Briefly analyze your chuckles then move on to the next joke. Some of the explanations were better than the jokes and vice versa
May 20, 2008


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