Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Plato and a Platypus Walk Into a Bar

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Cover artist
  
Paul Buckley

Pages
  
208

OCLC
  
71312724

Originally published
  
1 May 2007

Genre
  
Comedy

Country
  
United States of America

Publication date
  
May 1, 2007

ISBN
  
978-0-8109-1493-3

Dewey Decimal
  
102/.07 22

Author
  
Daniel B. Klein

Page count
  
208

Plato and a Platypus Walk Into a Bar imagesgrassetscombooks1222897338l180995jpg

Publishers
  
Abrams Books (hardcover), Penguin Books (paperback)

Similar
  
Daniel B Klein books, Other books

Plato and a platypus walk into a bar by thomas cathcart daniel klein


Plato and a Platypus Walk Into a Bar – Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes is a book that explains basic philosophical concepts through classic jokes. Thomas Wilson Cathcart and Daniel Martin Klein, graduates of Harvard in philosophy, collaborated on the book.

Contents

Plato and a Platypus examines the classic categories of philosophy, with concepts explained or illustrated by jokes.

The concept behind the book in the Introduction: “The construction and payoff of jokes and the construction and payoff of philosophical concepts are made out of the same stuff. They tease the mind in the same ways…philosophy and jokes proceed from the same impulse: to confound our sense of the way things are, to flip our worlds upside down, and to ferret out hidden, often uncomfortable, truths about life. What the philosopher calls an insight, the gagster calls a zinger."

Plato and a platypus walk into a bar the book loft 5 22 07


Quote from the book

"A guy comes home from a business trip and finds his wife in bed, a nervous look on her face. He opens the closet to hang up his coat, and finds his best friend standing there, naked. Stunned, he says, "Lenny, what are you doing here?" Lenny shrugs and says, "Everybody's got to be someplace." In this gag, Lenny is giving a Hegelian answer to an existential question. The question is about the existential circumstances in the here-and-now, but the answer is from a grand, universal vantage point, what the latter-day Hegelian Bette Midler called “seeing the world from a distance."

References

Plato and a Platypus Walk Into a Bar Wikipedia