Description

Book Synopsis

How do Humans Think? How should we think? Almost all of philosophy and a great deal else depends in large part on the answers that we provide to such questions. Yet they are almost impossible to deal with in isolation; notions about nature of thought are almost bound to connect with metaphysical notions about where ideas come from, with notions about appropriate arenas for certainty, doubt, and belief, and hence with moral and religious ideas.

The Western tradition of thinking about thinking takes shape with Socrates; among the other important strands covered in this book are Descartes’ recipe for discovering truth through systematic doubt, Hume’s notion that all our ideas are copies of sense impressions, Wollstonecraft’s introduction of the perspective of gender into such questions, and Wittgenstein’s claim that much of the traditional terrain of Western philosophy should be thought of as the proper domain only of linguistic assertion, possessing no content beyond the words.

With each philosopher and school of thought dealt with, Govier shows how ideas about thinking connect to the other elements of the particular philosophy, and brings to life the social and intellectual context that the ideas spring from. Socrates’ Children is thus not only an investigation of notions of thinking and knowing in Western culture; it is a selective general history of much of Western philosophy, from a unique and fascinating perspective.



Trade Review

“…the exposition is consistently good, with much of it being insightful and illuminating.” — Canadian Book Review Annual

“a delightful book, a lively and thoroughly engaging survey of what some of the great Western philosophers have said about the nature, aims, and proper conduct of thought … a unique and worthwhile introduction to the philosophical enterprise.” — Dialogue

Socrates’ Children is philosophically astute and written in the lively and accessible style for which Trudy Govier is justly esteemed.” — Frank Cunningham, University of Toronto



Table of Contents

Preface

1 Socrates, the Sting Ray of Athens

  • Thinking, Questioning, and Arguing
    Discovering That We Do Not Know
    The Quest for Definition
    Observations: The Legacy of Socrates

2 Plato: The Shadows, the Cave, and the Dazzling Sun

  • Paradox and Recollection
    The Divided Line
    Dialectic
    Dialectic and Thinking
    The Sun and the Cave
    Observations
    Myth, Imagination, and Play

3 Aristotle: Finding the Golden Mean

  • Forms in the World
    Aristotle and Plato
    Practical Knowledge and Deliberation
    Strategies for Thinking
    Logic, Argument, and Dialectic
    The Syllogism
    The Principles of Non-Contradiction and the Excluded Middle
    Demonstration and the Complete Science
    Dialectic
    Observations

4 Descartes: Are There Rotten Apples in that Basket?

  • The Method of Doubt
    Cogito Ergo Sum: I think, therefore I am.
    Proofs of God’s Existence
    The Problem of the Cartesian Circle
    Thinking, Error, and Free Will
    Mind and Matter
    Observations: Cartesian Thought, Cartesian Problems

5 Hume: Custom, the Cement of the Universe

  • Hume the Empiricist
    Hume’s Perplexing Arguments
    Induction
    Causation
    The External World
    The Self
    Hume on Scepticism, Belief, and the Will
    Practical Implications
    Observations: Hume’s Problems

6 Wollstonecraft: The Oak that Braved the Storm

  • A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
    Thought and Reason
    Enlightenment and Romanticism; Reason and Emotion
    Observations

7 Kant: The Starry Skies and the Moral Law

  • Rationalism, Empiricism, and Kant’s Theory of Knowledge
    Kant’s Arguments
    Two Distinctions
    Are Synthetic A Priori Judgements Possible?
    Space and Time
    The Categories
    Metaphysics
    Kant on Thinking
    Observations and Criticisms

8 Hegel: Negation and Progress

  • Absolute Idealism
    Hegel on the History of Philosophy
    The Hegelian Dialectic
    What is Hegel’s Dialectic
    Dialectic in the History of Philosophy and Elsewhere
    Some Qualifications
    Examples of Dialectical Development in The Phenomenology of Spirit
    Observations: Reflections on the Hegelian Dialectic After Hegel

9 Beauvoir: More than Kings and Conquerors

  • Existentialism
    Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir
    Beauvoir’s Existentialist Essays
    The Second Sex
    Thinking
    Fiction and Philosophy
    Observations: Applying Philosophy

10 Wittgenstein: Duck-rabbits and Talking Lions

  • The Early Philosophy of the Tractatus:
    Propositions and Pictures
    Saying and Showing
    The Mystical
    Thinking, According to the Tractatus
    The Vienna Circle and Logical Positivism
    Wittgenstein’s Later Philosophy
    A Sceptical Problem and its Resolution
    Private Language and the Egocentric Predicament
    What is Thinking?
    How Wittgenstein Makes Us Think
    Wittgenstein on the Nature of Philosophy
    Observations

11 Contemporary Voices

  • Artificial Intelligence
    The Informal Logic — Critical Thinking Movement
    Deconstruction
    Feminist Epistemology
    Concluding Comments

NotesIndex

Socrates' Children: Thinking and Knowing in the

    Product form

    £32.36

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £35.95 – you save £3.59 (9%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Trudy Govier

    1 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Socrates' Children: Thinking and Knowing in the by Trudy Govier

      Publisher: Broadview Press Ltd
      Publication Date: 30/08/1997
      ISBN13: 9781551110936, 978-1551110936
      ISBN10: 1551110938
      Also in:
      Philosophy

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      How do Humans Think? How should we think? Almost all of philosophy and a great deal else depends in large part on the answers that we provide to such questions. Yet they are almost impossible to deal with in isolation; notions about nature of thought are almost bound to connect with metaphysical notions about where ideas come from, with notions about appropriate arenas for certainty, doubt, and belief, and hence with moral and religious ideas.

      The Western tradition of thinking about thinking takes shape with Socrates; among the other important strands covered in this book are Descartes’ recipe for discovering truth through systematic doubt, Hume’s notion that all our ideas are copies of sense impressions, Wollstonecraft’s introduction of the perspective of gender into such questions, and Wittgenstein’s claim that much of the traditional terrain of Western philosophy should be thought of as the proper domain only of linguistic assertion, possessing no content beyond the words.

      With each philosopher and school of thought dealt with, Govier shows how ideas about thinking connect to the other elements of the particular philosophy, and brings to life the social and intellectual context that the ideas spring from. Socrates’ Children is thus not only an investigation of notions of thinking and knowing in Western culture; it is a selective general history of much of Western philosophy, from a unique and fascinating perspective.



      Trade Review

      “…the exposition is consistently good, with much of it being insightful and illuminating.” — Canadian Book Review Annual

      “a delightful book, a lively and thoroughly engaging survey of what some of the great Western philosophers have said about the nature, aims, and proper conduct of thought … a unique and worthwhile introduction to the philosophical enterprise.” — Dialogue

      Socrates’ Children is philosophically astute and written in the lively and accessible style for which Trudy Govier is justly esteemed.” — Frank Cunningham, University of Toronto



      Table of Contents

      Preface

      1 Socrates, the Sting Ray of Athens

      • Thinking, Questioning, and Arguing
        Discovering That We Do Not Know
        The Quest for Definition
        Observations: The Legacy of Socrates

      2 Plato: The Shadows, the Cave, and the Dazzling Sun

      • Paradox and Recollection
        The Divided Line
        Dialectic
        Dialectic and Thinking
        The Sun and the Cave
        Observations
        Myth, Imagination, and Play

      3 Aristotle: Finding the Golden Mean

      • Forms in the World
        Aristotle and Plato
        Practical Knowledge and Deliberation
        Strategies for Thinking
        Logic, Argument, and Dialectic
        The Syllogism
        The Principles of Non-Contradiction and the Excluded Middle
        Demonstration and the Complete Science
        Dialectic
        Observations

      4 Descartes: Are There Rotten Apples in that Basket?

      • The Method of Doubt
        Cogito Ergo Sum: I think, therefore I am.
        Proofs of God’s Existence
        The Problem of the Cartesian Circle
        Thinking, Error, and Free Will
        Mind and Matter
        Observations: Cartesian Thought, Cartesian Problems

      5 Hume: Custom, the Cement of the Universe

      • Hume the Empiricist
        Hume’s Perplexing Arguments
        Induction
        Causation
        The External World
        The Self
        Hume on Scepticism, Belief, and the Will
        Practical Implications
        Observations: Hume’s Problems

      6 Wollstonecraft: The Oak that Braved the Storm

      • A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
        Thought and Reason
        Enlightenment and Romanticism; Reason and Emotion
        Observations

      7 Kant: The Starry Skies and the Moral Law

      • Rationalism, Empiricism, and Kant’s Theory of Knowledge
        Kant’s Arguments
        Two Distinctions
        Are Synthetic A Priori Judgements Possible?
        Space and Time
        The Categories
        Metaphysics
        Kant on Thinking
        Observations and Criticisms

      8 Hegel: Negation and Progress

      • Absolute Idealism
        Hegel on the History of Philosophy
        The Hegelian Dialectic
        What is Hegel’s Dialectic
        Dialectic in the History of Philosophy and Elsewhere
        Some Qualifications
        Examples of Dialectical Development in The Phenomenology of Spirit
        Observations: Reflections on the Hegelian Dialectic After Hegel

      9 Beauvoir: More than Kings and Conquerors

      • Existentialism
        Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir
        Beauvoir’s Existentialist Essays
        The Second Sex
        Thinking
        Fiction and Philosophy
        Observations: Applying Philosophy

      10 Wittgenstein: Duck-rabbits and Talking Lions

      • The Early Philosophy of the Tractatus:
        Propositions and Pictures
        Saying and Showing
        The Mystical
        Thinking, According to the Tractatus
        The Vienna Circle and Logical Positivism
        Wittgenstein’s Later Philosophy
        A Sceptical Problem and its Resolution
        Private Language and the Egocentric Predicament
        What is Thinking?
        How Wittgenstein Makes Us Think
        Wittgenstein on the Nature of Philosophy
        Observations

      11 Contemporary Voices

      • Artificial Intelligence
        The Informal Logic — Critical Thinking Movement
        Deconstruction
        Feminist Epistemology
        Concluding Comments

      NotesIndex

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account