I Think, Therefore I Laugh: The Flip Side of Philosophy

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Columbia University Press, 2000 - Humor - 178 pages

The preeminent explicator of mathematical logic to non-mathematicians, John Allen Paulos is familiar to general readers not only from his bestselling books but also from his media appearances, including The David Letterman Show and National Public Radio's "Talk of the Nation" and "Science Friday," as well as articles in Newsweek, Nature, Discover, Business Week, the New York Times Book Review, The Nation, New York Review of Books, and The London Review of Books.

Paulos originally wrote this charming little book on analytic logic, its mathematics, and its puzzles in 1985. And as in his later books, he uses jokes, stories, parables, and anecdotes to elucidate difficult concepts, in this case, some of the fundamental problems in modern philosophy.

 

Contents

Introduction
2
Wittgenstein and Carroll
4
Groucho Meets Russell
8
LOGIC
13
EitherOr
14
You Bet Your Life
20
Sillygisms
23
The Titl of This Section Contains Three Erors
30
Of Birds and Strange Colors
76
Truths HalfTruths and Statistics
83
Duhem Poincaré and the PoconosCatskill Diet
89
Reductionism Fallibilism and Opportunism
95
Randomness and the Berry Task
102
Determinism and Smart Computers
110
Bells Inequality and Weirdness
114
On Assumptions
124

Russells Dr Goldberg and Dr Rubin
35
Do You Get It?
40
Meaning Reference and Dora Blacks First Husband
48
Analytic vs Synthetic Boole vs Boyle and Mathematics vs Cookery
52
Miscellany
58
SCIENCE
63
Induction Causality and Humes Eggs
64
The Tortoise Came First?
71
PEOPLE
131
Context Complexity and Artificial Intelligence
132
Why Did He Just Now Touch His Head?
139
Arrow Prisoners and Compromise
150
AFTERWORD
161
BIBLIOGRAPHY
167
INDEX
173
Copyright

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About the author (2000)

John Allen Paulos -- best-selling author and mathematician -- is professor of mathematics at Temple University in Philadelphia. He has written numerous books, including Innumeracy: Mathematical Illiteracy and Its Consequences, A Mathematician Reads the Newspaper,and Once Upon a Number.

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