On the recommendation above I am reading Confessions of a Philosopher, am a third or so through, and am thoroughly enjoying it. It’s a great format, combining memoir with, in effect, primer, and I will be adding to my pile of TBR imminently.
Bryan Magee 12.04.1930-26.07.2019
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by muzzer View PostOn the recommendation above I am reading Confessions of a Philosopher, am a third or so through, and am thoroughly enjoying it. It’s a great format, combining memoir with, in effect, primer, and I will be adding to my pile of TBR imminently.
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostOn the recommendation above I am reading Confessions of a Philosopher, am a third or so through, and am thoroughly enjoying it. It’s a great format, combining memoir with, in effect, primer, and I will be adding to my pile of TBR imminently.
As a popular explainer of what philosophy is concerned with, Bryan Magee had few equals. Never, perhaps, has so much been owed by so many curious minds to a single intellect. But as his frank memoirs show, Magee was not just a man of intellect but one of will and, above all, appetite.
In glossy mode, another good primer is "The story of philosophy" (Dorling Kindersley Limited), which I found well worth borrowing from the library. Now I see he updated that in 2016!
Good to see he was so prolific near the end. Last interview here:
A great public intellectual passed away last month. Magee spent his life wonderstruck by the sheer fact of existence, for questions about the nature o...
Some of his final words:
“I wouldn’t rely on television for my introduction to anything... It seems to me a completely unimportant medium.”
"[politics] was a way of life that I didn’t really want for myself… I realised—and I think this was an aspect of maturing—that the pursuit of power was in some very deep way a mistake.”
"From the beginning, I was looking for ways of making money that didn’t involve my having a job… which is not very easy to find... That was my only interest in television: it would earn me some money while I started writing books.”
"There’s been an attempt to turn everything into light-entertainment, to turn even the news bulletins into entertainment, which has taken the guts out of television, ...”
“people say they went into politics because they wanted to make the world a better place, that’s very foreign to me… I wanted to go into politics because I thought I’d like being in politics.”
"I don’t think of myself as fundamentally an intellectual person.” (!)
"I was dealt a good hand—not a wonderful hand, not a marvellous hand—and I think I’ve lived in such a way as to make the most of the hand I’ve got. But, what I basically wish more than anything else is that I’d had better cards.”
One consolation: “Death will be upon us before we know where we are; and once we are dead it will be forever.”
P.S. Another last interview here :), and perhaps a better one, by Jason Cowley:
A broadcaster, politician, author and poet, Magee once occupied many prominent roles. Now, in old age, he lives in one room in a nursing hospital – yet his mind still roams restlessly free.
"“There aren’t explanations for everything; indeed, there are no explanations for anything, and we should be far more agnostic in our way of living.”Last edited by Mal; 12-08-19, 17:12.
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