Now reading - Page 37 - Politics Forum.org | PoFo

Wandering the information superhighway, he came upon the last refuge of civilization, PoFo, the only forum on the internet ...

Discuss literary and artistic creations, or post your own poetry, essays etc.
Forum rules: No one line posts please.
By independent_turkiye
#1431466
bakhtin karnavelesk a russian writer interesting one his wprks arent total cus he smoked some of them when he didnt have cigarette paper :))
User avatar
By Red Star
#1436491
Bloody Foreigners by Robert Winder


Excellent book. I love it.

Wolfgang Koeppen - Death In Rome
William Taubman - Khruschev: The Man And His Era
User avatar
By peter_co
#1436596
Quantum Mechanics by Landau and Lifshitz
The Canterbury Tales (in middle english)
User avatar
By Abood
#1436609
Doom wrote:What will you guys read after that? Aristotle? Aquinas? Machiavelli?
Aristotle's 'Nicomachean Ethics', followed by Aristotle's 'Politics'.
User avatar
By Rancid
#1436624
A beginner's guide to short-term trading by toni turner

Pretty good book.. i'm trying to venture out of the world of mutual funds. I'm going to try a little swing and position trading when i save up some cash to play with...

sorry if it pisses the anti-capitalist off
By kamikaze718
#1436635
1984- Orwell
Rule of Terror: Russia under Lenin and Stalin- Hellmut Andics
Double Cross- James Patterson
Alphabet of Manliness- Maddox
User avatar
By Red Star
#1436760
Aristotle's 'Politics'


God, that book got on my nerves.
User avatar
By Abood
#1438256
I think Plato's Republic is getting on my nerves. Shall I start worrying?

That book is way overrated. People talk about it like it's a holy book, but it's way too flawed. For one, every single person Socrates talks with seems to agree with him on everything. Since when does a philosophy conversation work like that?
User avatar
By Nets
#1438258
Excursions in Number Theory
John Anderson and C. Stanley Olgivy
User avatar
By galactus
#1439566
I am currently reading, among other things:

Martin Heidegger - Sein und Zeit

!

I think Plato's Republic is getting on my nerves. Shall I start worrying?

That book is way overrated. People talk about it like it's a holy book, but it's way too flawed. For one, every single person Socrates talks with seems to agree with him on everything. Since when does a philosophy conversation work like that?


One of the difficulties in reading antique philosophers is that you have to refrain from criticising them with modern tools.

I didn't like it either, by the way. I generally do not enjoy reading the greeks in their original form.
Last edited by galactus on 31 Jan 2008 17:19, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
By Quercus Robur
#1439572
:)

Female Eunuch - Greer
The Fallout - Andrew Anthony
Milestones - Sayyid Qutb
User avatar
By Modificador
#1440170
I am currently reading "Thus Spoke Zarathustra" by Friedrich Nietzsche, which I am actually enjoying, and I have just finished "Hyperion" by Dan Simmons, a science fiction novel that I really liked.

Truth-a-naut wrote:Beevor's "The Spanish Civil War".

I used to think the war was just some sort of footnote in that turbulent era, I didn't know it was so intense and bloody.


If you like to read some novels about the Spanish Civil War I would recommend you "For Whom the Bell Tolls" by Ernest Hemingway and "Homage to Catalonia" by George Orwell. Just in case you haven't read them, although they are quite famous.
User avatar
By Doomhammer
#1440278
I am reading "We Europeans" by Richard Hill. It's quite funny.
User avatar
By Ombrageux
#1444680
I've just read:
Mighty and the Meek by US diplomat Vernon Walters. It's not bad, it's a book of his meetings with all the famous people he met, which seems to include every important leader who speaks a Western European language from WW2 to the end of the Cold War (he was an interpreter as he spoke English, French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish AND German..).

Ludwig Wittgenstein: the Duty of Genius by Ray Monk. A mammoth biography, I can't say the most important philosopher of the 20th century emerges in good shape from this book. He comes across as perpetual angsty teenager and a bit of a crank. (and his personal ethics are just weird)

The Prince by Machiavelli. What a tiny little book! And not nearly as devilishly cynical as you might expect. He condemns being generous for its own sake, yes, it is better to be feared than loved, but he also argues for arming the people, for being on the side of the people (not the nobles), for encouraging the arts and sciences and generally being a virtuous leader, which is different from being a clean one. The book didn't blow me away though, I can't really see why its become a classic of Western political philosophy.
User avatar
By ingliz
#1445533
Water of the Hills{Jean de Florrette and Manon of the Springs} by Marcel Pagnol
The Heart of a Dog by Mikhail Bulgakov
User avatar
By Red_Army
#1448228
A Portrait of the Artist As A Young Man by: James Joyce, I'm almost done and I enjoyed it a lot. Its very dense though.
User avatar
By Le Rouge
#1448400
Metapolitics by Alain Badiou.

Fascinating, though I'm not sure I agree.
  • 1
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • 191

No one would be arrested if protesters did not dis[…]

Nope! Yep! Who claimed they were? What predat[…]

Russia-Ukraine War 2022

It seems a critical moment in the conflict just ha[…]

The Crimean Tatar people's steadfast struggle agai[…]