I: Introduction
II: Mind
III: Mind and Body
IV: The Objective Self
V: Knowledge
VI: Thought and Reality
VII: Freedom
VIII: Value
IX: Ethics
X: Living Right and Living Well
XI: Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life
Thomas Nagel is University Professor in the Department of
Philosophy and the School of Law at New York University. His books
include The Possibility of Altruism, The View from Nowhere, and
What Does It All Mean?: A Very Short Introduction to Philosophy. He
is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a
Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy. In 2008, he was
awarded the Rolf Schock Prize in Logic and
Philosophy and the Balzan Prize in Moral Philosophy.
"In writing this remarkable book, Thomas Nagel has succeeded in
combining qualities that are rarely found together. Its aims are
intellectually ambitious, and their achievement involves the
unqualified repudiation of cherished views held by many of Nagel's
more or less eminent contemporaries....He engages with precisely
those philosophical doubts and anxieties that the reflective
nonprofessional may be supposed to feel, and that are often
inadequately dealt
with by those whose professional business is philosophy."--P. F.
Strawson, The New Republic
"Remarkable....All of his discussions are clear and insightful, but
some reach a level of originality and illumination that opens
genuinely new avenues of philosophical thought....A rare
combination of profundity and clarity, along with simplicity of
expression. It should be recommended to all those who are bored
with or despair about philosophy."--Charles Taylor, Times Literary
Supplement
"At a time when so much philosophy is devoted to technical
discussion of esoteric questions, Nagel has written an original
book, accessible to any educated reader, on some of the largest
questions about our knowledge of the world and our place in
it....Those who read it will be made to question many of their
deepest beliefs, to consider new possibilities, and as a result to
become more intellectually awake."--Jonathan Glover, The New York
Review of
Books
"An illuminating book by one of the most provocative philosophers
writing today."--Religious Studies Review
"The clarity of [Nagel's] argument and the courage of his
convictions are admirable. Highly recommended."--Key Reporter
"In writing this remarkable book, Thomas Nagel has succeeded in
combining qualities that are rarely found together. Its aims are
intellectually ambitious, and their achievement involves the
unqualified repudiation of cherished views held by many of Nagel's
more or less eminent contemporaries....He engages with precisely
those philosophical doubts and anxieties that the reflective
nonprofessional may be supposed to feel, and that are often
inadequately dealt
with by those whose professional business is philosophy."--P. F.
Strawson, The New Republic
"Remarkable....All of his discussions are clear and insightful, but
some reach a level of originality and illumination that opens
genuinely new avenues of philosophical thought....A rare
combination of profundity and clarity, along with simplicity of
expression. It should be recommended to all those who are bored
with or despair about philosophy."--Charles Taylor, Times Literary
Supplement
"At a time when so much philosophy is devoted to technical
discussion of esoteric questions, Nagel has written an original
book, accessible to any educated reader, on some of the largest
questions about our knowledge of the world and our place in
it....Those who read it will be made to question many of their
deepest beliefs, to consider new possibilities, and as a result to
become more intellectually awake."--Jonathan Glover, The New York
Review of
Books
"An illuminating book by one of the most provocative philosophers
writing today."--Religious Studies Review
"The clarity of [Nagel's] argument and the courage of his
convictions are admirable. Highly recommended."--Key Reporter
"[Nagel's] clear writing style like his reasoning suggests an
at-homeness with difficult philosophical ideas and an eagerness to
reflect on them and communicate them to others."--The Thomist
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