For all of us tryhards here who enjoy the challenge of reading:
What is a book(s) that you attempted to read, but couldn't finish? Was it out of boredom, difficulty of prose or something else that got in the way?
For me, I read sections of Saint Augustine's The City of God. It was one of the densest things I read in high school for my homeschooled curriculum. I don't think it was ever intended for casual reading, and thankfully I didn't have to read all of it. It's a book of Christian philosophy written by Augustine of Hippo, a bishop in Northern Africa. He's more well known in literature circles for Confessions, which is a more enjoyable read.
I like Kant's overall ideas, I've been thinking about them a lot recently. Not a fan of Hegel, but most of my exposure to him is from The World as Will and Representation,and Schopenhauer doesn't exactly jump for joy whenever Hegel is brought up. Marcus Aurielias is reasonably good, he at least makes his thoughts understandable and accessable, unlike Hegel who delibrately makes his work obscure to annoy people and show how clever he was (even though Schopenhauer literally showed him up when Hegeel was a professor and he just a student). I think Descartes was right about a lot but his stuff on animals is just atrocious, really just the worst imagiable. Kant wasn't great, but at least he had some idea about morality being applied to animals. Haycartes>Descartes.
Nothing beats mythology and religion though. The more you understand them, the more you realise that 99%-100% of what these philosophers are saying are just simplifications/complications of what's already written down in these stories. Carl Jung at least seems to have understood this. Give me the Bible or the Poetic Edda over these endless treatises and essays any day. Though I'd be wary of the Ancient Greek stuff (Pre-Plato, anyway), lest you start becoming a babbling lunatic like that Nietzsche fellow, who seems to have achieved a level of stupidity only reachable by the incredibly gifted.
Kant is pretty much just an updated explanation of Christianity. Schopenhauer is just gnosticism for atheist nerds, like he comes up with this whole philosophical framework which has already been thought up hundreds of years before him. Neiszche just becomes an outright satanist by the end. Both of their ideas of the "Will to Life/Will to Power" are fundamentally wrong, but at least Schopenhauer had the good sense to say "This will is probably a bad thing and ought to be rejected." Whereas Neiszche basically just stole Schopenhauer's ideas but said "this will is a good thing and everyone should follow it to get power." It's like, I really disagree with what both of these people have to say and I think it would have been better if both of them had kept their mouths shut, yet that doesn't mean that I don't find their ideas impressive.
Honestly, I think a huge part of why religion and mythology work is just that they're inherently so much more epic. Fenris the devourer of worlds fighting epic duel against Odin at Ragnarok while Heimdall and Loki fight is far more worth reading than "ethical duties and moral laws as representations of the world and will". And I get the impression it can say a lot more with a lot less than any philosopher can. It's why I have such great respect for Tolkien, who manages to take all these religious ideas and do something cool with all of them rather than just write essays and lectures all day.
As for Spinoza, I originally was a huge fan of him over other philosophers and I really like what he has to say, but Kant seems to have eclipsed him recently for me.
Schopenhauer essentially says "Everything you do causes more bad than it does good, so try not to do anything", yet Nietzsche’s ideas are "Everything you do causes more bad than good, but who cares, do it anyway." This is why they diverge so strongly on aestheticism. Fundamentally, they seem to me to be arguing over the same view of the world, but each one has a different viewpoint. I think the view of the world itself is actually entirely wrong and this is where the problem arises, but I think Schopenhauer's view is the less harmful because he at least doesn't see pity as contemptible or as "preserving those things that ought to be dead" or whatever it was Nietzsche said.
I certainly wouldn't dismiss Nieszche or Freud,I would never do that. In fact Nieszche made a great deal of points that have actually been incredibly important for my own thoughts and philosophies and Freud has had a tremendous effect on the modern world. And Nieszche's ravings inspire Jung who I think is one of the greatest philosophers of all time.
But I do think that, when you get right down to what their conclusions are about how the world and humanity work, and how people ought to behave, they've been disastrously wrong and had extremely negative conseqeunces. Frankly I rather like Tolstoy's takes on Nieszche, he sums him up better than I can anyway: https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/10350187-there-would-seem-to-be-only-one-question-for-philosophy
Kant is a meaty read. I've noticed a trend of philosophy books mentioned here.
I actually have both Spinoza and Descartes in my library. I definitely agree that Descartes is easier.
I liked his style with Confessions. It was just the overwhelmingly large volume of points and subpoints that really irked me with City of God haha (some sections were good though)
When I was a junior in college, I was assigned Milton, by William Blake. I hated it so much that I hurled it across the room, 3/4th unread. I stand by my decision.
The less read of William Blake, the better. The "philosophies" of him and Nietzsche can be summed up by the line "and now for the author's poorly concealed fetish." As soon as someone starts to obsess over sex to the extent that both of them do, I no longer have much interest in what they have to say. And that goes especially true for Freud, too. The whole topic is a psychological tumor.
The Poetic Edda is a GREAT choice, I absolutely love it. It's concise , epic, easy to understand but with incredibly interesting themes and ideas that I think are still incredibly useful in the modern world. Things like fate, writing, words, the meaning of life, technology, all of these things are all insightful. And even without all the philosophical stuff, there's all the creatures and characters like Odin and Fafnir. All around, great fun.
https://archive.sacred-texts.com/neu/poe/index.htm
If you're still taking suggestions for religious texts, if you want some more Christian philosophy, the works of C.S. Lewis (not referring to the Chronicles of Narnia) are numerous and accessible while still being pretty thorough. I'd recommend Mere Christianity as one example.
For mythology, I'd recommend, if you haven't read it already, the Saga of the Volsungs. It's a great read, especially if you're unfamiliar with original Norse mythology.
That I disagree with, actually. I think a lot of Blake's lyric poetry is wonderful. I often teach his "London" and his "Sick Rose" and lots of other Songs of Innocence and Experience, and I like the Marriage of Heaven and Hell. But his mystical works I find very hard to read.
I read "London" and I remember liking it, then I looked into his other stuff and just couldn't stand any of it.
A diss towards the author of The Tyger? Tsk tsk.
I haven't read that much from him, so I can't actually judge.
I've not had the pleasure/displeasure of reading it. Why the hatred?
Do you generally have impatience with like, mysticism as a concept? I feel like a lot of people just think it's generally kind of stupid (it's not stupid and mysticism is real and god is real)
I always feel, with Blake's mysticism, that I'm coming into Act IV of a play with no program, and also it's part two of a three part play. Or like I'm starting a fantasy novel and the author has an elaborate history all worked out complete with his own language, and he wants to throw it all at me on page one to world build. But as a general concept, I don't object to mysticism, even though I am very ignorant of it. I have a lot to learn on the subject. Maybe I'll return to Milton at some point.
Finnegans Wake
Ezra 4:8-onwards. I took a semester of Aramaic, not realizing it was one of those glasses mostly for grad students that they will occasionally have a little one sit in on. Threw us into the text at a level of speed I was unaccustomed to, because everyone around me had a ton of Semitic language experience and I didn't. When I hear about fucking Rehum and Shimshai, to this day I get a bad feeling
I also want to plug my beloved House of Leaves, which to me is essentially a text about how meaning collapses when you attempt to project it onto a frustrating and confusing world. The book itself is essentially a labyrinth of layered footnotes with their own separate stories, attached as commentary to a piece of (amateur) academic film criticism. I love that book so much.
I liked it. I thought the first half of it held together better than the second half. Maybe that's the point (I don't think so). But it was a cool read nevertheless. As a footnotey genius-mess, I thought Infinite Jest was more fun to read, but obviously there's less metatextual shenanigans.
I think the first half is more cohesive (insofar as a book like this can be), but I really really like Navidson's final expedition. Him losing his eye in order to gain knowledge of self, which no other character in the book really has, kind of completes the Odin and Yggdrasil paralellism in a way I really like.
Ugh religious philosophy. I've always struggled with philosophy. I can't say I've ever heard of The City of God but you reminded me of a time I tried to learn a bit of religious philosophy. I'm not naturally gifted in that way nor am I willing to put in the work to learn so I guess I'm sol. My Torah study group once decided to read the Nineteen Letters. I slogged through a translation of the first three but was so confused as to what I'd just read that I had to read them again. Unfortunately that didn't make it any easier. Gave up right then and there.
In your defence, that whole strain of Jewish philosophy is kind of incoherent
For some reason I never thought of the communist Manifesto, but that's an example of something I tried reading as well but found it way too boring.
A lot of modern day communists also seem more like a disorganised cult as opposed to a political leaning as well, which is off putting.
How hard the bible was mostly just depended on the version I tried reading it in. The ones in old English are especially hard (for obvious reasons) but some itterations I found to be very readable.
Then the word of the LORD came to Jeremiah in Tahpanhes: 9 "Take in your hands large stones and hide them in the mortar in the pavement that is at the entrance to Pharaoh's palace in Tahpanhes, in the sight of the men of Judah, 10 and say to them, 'Thus says the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel: Behold, I will send and take Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon, my servant, and I will set his throne above these stones that I have hidden, and he will spread his royal canopy over them. 11 He shall come and strike the land of Egypt, giving over to the pestilence those who are doomed to the pestilence, to captivity those who are doomed to captivity, and to the sword those who are doomed to the sword. 12 I shall kindle a fire in the temples of the gods of Egypt, and he shall burn them and carry them away captive. And he shall clean the land of Egypt as a shepherd cleans his cloak of vermin, and he shall go away from there in peace.
I do remember quite liking the ESV version a lot too. Although more than anything I loved just switching between lots of different versions to read the same passages, because I'd be shocked by how subtly but substantially different some passages could be, and Once you read through those same passages in different versions you could kind of synthesize them to get a more full picture of what is actually being said. But typically the differences are usually quite trivial.
https://youtu.be/FFCXHr8aKDk?si=x_81qq7qSBb62vVr
This is easily one of the most memorable scenes in cinema for me. I really loved this when I watched it.
I haven't yet finished the Canterbury Tales because for some autistic reason I keep wanting to read the version that came before we all agreed on how we were going to spell things from now on. I don't really regret my decision, it's really more fun that way, I'm just bad at making progress because I have to go back and re-read the parts I've already parsed to get back into the rhythm and bizarre pronunciations
Read it out loud. It helps so much.
I've been studying a few excerpts of one of the books mentioned in this thread and the foreshadowing is amazing. There are so many references to past chapters, even those that are seemingly unrelated, and this book practically creates its own symbolism. It's possibly the only book I've read which utilizes the deus ex machina plotline well. The only thing is that there are so many characters it's hard to keep track of them all, though the main ones are always well-characterized. This book is the Bible, btw.
Love this comment haha
Not only is the deus ex machina plot device used well, it’s used often. Jews need to escape Egypt and lose their pursuers? Boom: Moses parts the sea and so they can cross then drowns the army behind them.
The authors didn’t feel like killing off the beloved character of Elijah? Boom: he’s whisked off in a fiery chariot. Some even claim that to this day he stops in on Passover just to drink wine and hangout.
Jacob needs a new name? Boom: he fistfights God by a river.
In fact, the use of deus ex machina is brought to a new height when the Divine Figure becomes a man. He literally comes to save humanity wholesale from a threat of doom they have no power to overcome by themselves.