Entries by Colin McGinn

Goethe on Italy

I’m reading Goethe’s “Italian Journey”. He remarks during his visit to Rome: “The past year has been the most important one in my life; it does not matter whether I die now or last a while longer, in either case I am content.” People used to ask me whether there was anything about England I […]

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Higher-Order Desire

Higher-Order Desire As we know from the work of Frankfurt, it is possible to have second-order desires directed at first-order desires. For example, the prudent alcoholic may decide, upon reflection, to reject or moderate his desire for alcohol: he desires not to desire alcohol, or to act on that desire. He thinks about his first-order […]

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Bob Dylan’s Philosophy

I just finished reading Bob Dylan’s The Philosophy of Modern Song. There is no philosophy in it but plenty about song. He clearly has never read any philosophy of music, or perhaps any philosophy at all (bit of Nietzsche maybe). I don’t know what he means by “Modern Song”: certainly there is nothing classical in it, though […]

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Ordering Philosophy

Ordering Philosophy Does philosophy consist of a bunch of more or less unconnected problems or is there a pattern to its problems? Is it possible to order philosophy in a natural and illuminating way, with some areas leading naturally to others, or is it that there is just a loose association of problems that historically […]

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Gravity and Consciousness

Gravity and Consciousness It is tempting to see an analogy between the mystery of consciousness and the mystery of gravity. Both arose at around the same time (with Descartes and Newton) as the Scientific Revolution was getting underway. Gravity and consciousness seem “occult” to a mechanistic worldview: the brain and the earth are extended objects […]

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Readership

I’m curious about the demographics of my readership. I have the impression that no one from a North American philosophy department ever comments on this blog. I wonder whether readers would care to tell me whether I am wrong about this. Perhaps readers would like to share their affiliation.

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