ABSTRACT

In these lively and provocative essays, philosopher, polymath and all-round intellectual heavyweight, Raymond Tallis debunks commonplace truths, exposes woolly thinking and pulls the rug from beneath a wide range of commentator whether scientist, theologian, philosopher or pundit. Tallis takes to task much of contemporary science and philosophy, arguing that they are guilty of taking us down ever narrowing conduits of problem solving that only invite ever more complex responses and in doing so have lost sight of "wonder" - the metaphysical intoxication that first gave birth to philosophy 2,500 years ago. Tallis tackles some meaty topics - memory, time, language, truth, fiction, consciousness - but always with his characteristic verve, insight and wit. These essays showcase Tallis's skill for getting to the heart of the matter and challenging us to see, and wonder, in different ways. Wonder is the proper state of humankind, and as these essays show it has no more forceful a champion than Raymond Tallis.

chapter |22 pages

Overture

In Defence of Wonder

chapter 2|6 pages

Zhuangzi and that Bloody Butterfly

chapter 3|6 pages

Rescuing Truth

chapter 4|7 pages

Just a Little Tune I Found in My Mouth

chapter 6|6 pages

The Myth of Time Travel

chapter 8|6 pages

Seeing Time

chapter 9|6 pages

Call No Event Future Until it is Past

chapter 12|6 pages

Biological Reasons for Being Cheerful?

chapter 13|7 pages

The Soup and the Scaffolding

chapter 14|6 pages

Don't Tell Him, Pike!

chapter 15|6 pages

Okey Doke

chapter 16|6 pages

The Professor of Data-Lean Generalizations

chapter 18|7 pages

My Bald Head: The Ethics of Hair-Splitting

chapter 24|6 pages

Enhancing Humanity

chapter 26|6 pages

Making Use of Death

chapter 27|12 pages

Why I am an Atheist

chapter |14 pages

Coda

Parmenides: The Great Awakening