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| View Larger Image | Aristotle and an Aardvark Go to Washington by Thomas Cathcart, Daniel Klein
| | List Price: | $18.95 | | Price: | $7.58 | | You Save: | $11.37 (60%) |  | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |  | |  | | Sales Rank: | 2685 | | Studio: | Abrams Image |  | | Binding: | Hardcover | | Number Of Pages: | 196 | | Publication Date: | January 01, 2008 | | Publisher: | Abrams Image |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description
Thomas Cathcart and Daniel Klein, authors of the national bestseller Plato and a Platypus Walk into a Bar, aren’t falling for any election year claptrap—and they don’t want their readers to either! In Aristotle and an Aardvark Go to Washington, our two favorite philosopher-comedians return just in time to save us from the double-speak, flim-flam, and alternate reality of politics in America.
Deploying jokes and cartoon as well as the occasional insight from Aristotle and his peers, Cathcart and Klein explain what politicos are up to when they state: “The absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence.” (Donald Rumsfeld), “It depends on what the meaning of the word ‘is’ is.” (Bill Clinton), or even, “We hold these truths to be self-evident…” (Thomas Jefferson, et al).
Drawing from the pronouncements of everyone from Caesar to Condoleeza Rice, Genghis Kahn to Hillary Clinton, and Adolf Hitler to Al Sharpton. Cathcart and Klein help us learn to identify tricks such as “The Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy” (non causa pro causa) and the “The Fallacy Fallacy” (argumentum and logicam). Aristotle and an Aardvark is for anyone who ever felt like the politicos and pundits were speaking Greek. At least Cathcart and Klein provide the Latin name for it (raudatio publica)! |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 3.5 based on 22 reviews)
| Picks low lying fruit  The problem with this book is that unlike Plato and a Platypus Walk into a Bar: Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes it picks the low lying fruit, skips a tight organization, and with some light sprinkles of other material, is basically a sustained rant on George W. Bush.
Not that GWB & crew don't make for great examples, but the other book was timeless, this book is locked into an era. Not only that, the lead line about Aristotle isn't a clear joke, just the title and forced into the book later.
This could have been much better with some work. July 31, 2008 | | Politics Trumps Logic  Good and entertaining, but if you learn anything from the book you'll be able to identify some of the authors' own fallacious arguments. Just goes to show that personal politics blinds even the experts. July 29, 2008 | | Funny Erudite and irreverent  Good read if you've been baffled by the slippery verbiage which has been flowing out of Washington recently. Fun stuff to explore and marvel at. July 20, 2008 | | light, quick tour through a host of logical fallacies with lots of funny quotes and funny jokes  I was convinced to read this book when I stumbled upon it at an airport bookstore and saw that it had (a) quotes from The Daily Show's Jon Stewart, and (b) funny story jokes. That was enough for me!
In this slim volume [just 3 CDs for the unabridged audiobook], the authors illustrate a broad array of logical fallacies (with fancy philosophical names like "denying the antecedent"*) using quotes from current politicians and lots of jokes (see Appendix A for an example). Members of the George W. Bush administration are the primary targets, although Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and others don't get left out.
The quotes are funny and the jokes are funny. The book is light, quick, and enjoyable.
The philosophy provides a structural framework: the authors go through various fallacies one-by-one, giving a short description and then examples and jokes. One could probably learn something about philosophy from this, but I admit that a few days after having finished the book, most of what has stayed with me are the quotes and the jokes.
I listened to the unabridged audioboook narrated by Johnny Heller [just 3 CDs]. He does a good job except when he is imitating Dick Cheney or George W. Bush: Then, not so much.
* That may not be the actual name. I'm recalling here.
Appendix A: A joke from the book, retold by me
A man approaches another man on the street and says, "Jones, you've completely changed! You used to be fat and now you've lost all the weight and are thin as a rail. You used to wear nice suits and now you're wearing these rags. You even used to be short and now you're tall." The other man responds, "My name isn't Jones," to which the first replies, "So you've even changed your name!" June 30, 2008 | | loved it  I got this book for my husband for Father's Day and he loved it. In fact, he's enjoyed telling so many of the jokes. He just sits there and snickers or howls, and then we get to hear all about it. He loved it! June 30, 2008 | |
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