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Plato and a Platypus Walk into a Bar . . .: Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes

Plato and a Platypus Walk into a Bar . . .: Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes
Authors: Thomas Cathcart, Daniel Klein
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)

List Price: $12.00
Buy New: $6.08
You Save: $5.92 (49%)



New (52) Used (16) from $5.86

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 125 reviews
Sales Rank: 1361

Media: Paperback
Edition: Reprint
Pages: 224
Number Of Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7 x 4.8 x 0.7

ISBN: 0143113879
Dewey Decimal Number: 102.07
EAN: 9780143113874
ASIN: 0143113879

Publication Date: June 24, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: 100% Brand New! - Ships Today! Identical to Amazon's book in every way. Flawless! Not a cheap Remainder or Book Club Copy! *We recommend Expedited Shipping option for much faster mail delivery

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This New York Times bestseller is the hilarious philosophy course everyone wishes they d had in school

Outrageously funny, Plato and a Platypus Walk into a Bar . . . has been a breakout bestseller ever since authors and born vaudevillians Thomas Cathcart and Daniel Klein did their schtick on NPR s Weekend Edition. Lively, original, and powerfully informative, Plato and a Platypus Walk Into a Bar . . . is a not-so-reverent crash course through the great philosophical thinkers and traditions, from Existentialism (What do Hegel and Bette Midler have in common?) to Logic (Sherlock Holmes never deduced anything). Philosophy 101 for those who like to take the heavy stuff lightly, this is a joy to read and finally, it all makes sense!



Customer Reviews:   Read 120 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A Book to Treasure   May 3, 2007
Margherita S. Smith (Ft. Belvoir, VA USA)
177 out of 192 found this review helpful

This is such a profound and hilarious treasure of a little book that I have ordered several as gifts for family and friends.

Because I am long removed from the formal study of philosophy in college, I am grateful to be so smoothly and delightfully reintroduced to philosophical concepts. I intended to read only a brief section (one concept) at a time--each takes no mote than fifteen minutes-- but couldn't keep away for long, and finished the book in a day. Now I've lent my copy to a friend, but I can hardly wait to get it back and read it again.

In an early 20h century Webster's, philosophy is defined as "Literally, the love of, inducing the search after, wisdom; in actual usage, the knowledge of phenomena as explained by, and resolved into, causes and reasons, powers and laws."

Plato and the Platypus describes the findings of the great philosophers throughout history who have conducted the search after wisdom and taught their explanations of phenomena. And then it illustrates the causes and reasons, the powers and laws, with jokes--good jokes, relevant jokes, jokes that made me laugh aloud even as they stimulated my own search.

I don't think I have ever before had such a joyful read.

Peggy Smith
author, Mark My Words: Instruction and Practice in Proofreading



4 out of 5 stars Loving wisdom through laughter   May 14, 2007
John Zxerce (Colorado ^^^)
153 out of 169 found this review helpful

The Roman satirist Juvenal famously quipped "Difficile est saturam non scibere" -- it's difficult not to write satire. It was difficult nearly two millennia ago, and Thomas Cathcart and Daniel Klein prove it still is today.

Satire provides a profound examination of an idea. Aristotle wrote "Humor is the only test of gravity, for a subject which will not bear raillery is suspicious, and a jest which will not bear serious examination is false wit."

It's been said he identified a very compelling reason for using humor: it's a test of ideas. Humor is a challenge to the very core of an idea -- its gravity, its seriousness. If an idea can't withstand humor it will crumble under intellectual scrutiny.

In a section on Aristotle contrasting between "essential" and "accidental" properties, Cathcar and Klein offer this illustrative joke:

<As he lay dying, he cried out, "God, how could you do this to me?"

And a voice from the heavens responded: "To tell you the truth, Thompson, I didn't recognize you." >>

We laugh - why? The answer to the question 'why' gives us understanding about philosophy, ourselves, and the world around us.



5 out of 5 stars MOVE OVER, WOODY ALLEN, HERE'S BOFFOLOSOPHY!   May 18, 2007
Shashank Tripathi (Gadabout)
115 out of 123 found this review helpful

Ok, I admit it, I was one of those flyballs with disheveled hair in college who spewed paragraphs from Sophie's World and felt warm and fuzzy about it. Over the years, sanity would prevail and I'd adjust my diet to include relatively more benign doses of, say, Woody Allen's satire (e.g., Without Feathers, which has among the best essays I have ever read on philosophy, with tongue firmly in cheek). But it is difficult to find a book with which I could perpetuate that passion and inflict it on my Regular Bloke buddies and be assured that it'd actually be read.

Well, this peppy little compilation of jokes might just be that perfect gift item. It takes philosophy to task with such flair and gusto that I nearly read it from cover to cover, not like one is supposed to savor a joke book--in sporadic doses, flicking random pages. The jokes are absolutely spot-on, definitely beyond your average "my karma ran over your dogma" variety, and often give a whole new meaning to the term "wisecrack". For instance, a Buddhist walks up to a hot-dog stand and says, "Make me one with everything". He then pays the vendor and asks for change. The vendor says, "change comes from within". This is not the funniest one, mind you, just one of the brief ones that a lazy codger such as myself will take the time to reproduce.

But the romp is not merely for laughs. These cracks are organized into streams/schools of philosophies as it were, which means the book also serves as a pretty good primer in philosophy over the years. I'm one of the curious types who will read up everything possible about authors of a book that I like; knowing them adds new dimensions to what I'm reading. Turns out Tom and Daniel do understand a thing or two about philosophy, having majored in philosophy at Harvard and worked in psychedelic careers ever since, including some gigs with Chicago's mafia! Their superlative command of the field shows clearly in the way this book has been arranged. Best of both worlds: content and context.

So, is it worth buying? To borrow an aphorism from the book itself, "Depends on what your definition of is is". [Translation: stop reading and get it already! You'll be reading it more than once, perhaps even passing it along.]



5 out of 5 stars delightful, accessible, educational romp   May 14, 2007
Winslow Corbett (New York)
29 out of 37 found this review helpful

A perfect match! I'm finding it such a joy to see the depth behind jokes and the levity in philosophy. I wish that "Plato and a Platypus Walk Into a Bar" had been required reading when I was in school.


1 out of 5 stars Fun Premise, but ...   June 29, 2007
C. J. Singh (Berkeley, California, USA)
28 out of 36 found this review helpful

Granted some -- roughly one in ten -- of the jokes in this book are fun to read, but most have only a tenuous connection with the philosophical concept they are supposed to exemplify. So my answer to whether the book achieves the objective announced in its subtitle, "Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes," has to be no.

Instead, I recommend: "LOOKING AT PHILOSOPHY: THE UNBEARABLE HEAVINESS OF PHILOSOPHY MADE LIGHTER" by Donald Palmer. And for an excellent anthology of humorous writing that, moreoever, does not purport to teach systematic philosophical concepts as its subtext, I recommend: "FIERCE PAJAMAS: AN ANTHOLOGY OF HUMOR WRITING FROM THE NEW YORKER," edited by David Remnick and Henry Finder.

Also, the authors of this book expose their double standard when they lament their lapse in putative "political correctness." Very circumspect and apologetic for including a joke that ridicules Jews and another that targets Poles, they show no such compunction for including a joke that ridicules Sardars (of India).

Fun premise, but the book fails to deliver.

-- C J Singh





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