These essays, written in the spirit of Goethes Epimetheus who "traces the quick deed to the dim realm of form-combining possibilities", display the depth and breadth of Talliss fascination with our lives. Whether discussing philosophical "hardy perennials" like time, or a mundane artefact like ink, Tallis challenges us to think differently about who we are and why we are.
The first part of the book Analysis dives into the deep-end to explore some of the big questions in philosophy: perception, knowledge and belief; time; the relationship between mathematics and reality; and probability and causation. The middle section Tetchy Interludes takes a wry look at some aspects of contemporary art; stupidity (including the authors own); and Christmas. The third part Celebration is more experimental in both its subject matter and treatment. It celebrates the complexity of ordinary, everyday consciousness by contemplating the miracle of speech, artefacts that have transformed our lives (and what they reveal about our cognition) such as the wheel, the sail, and ink; and snapshots of the authors own consciousness on an ordinary day, of past consciousness, as captured in historical memory.
Notwithstanding their diversity in theme and style, these essays share the common aim of discovering and celebrating the submerged riches in the "quick deeds" of our everyday lives and perceptions.
Part 1: Analyses Prefatory Note
1. Seeing and Believing
2. Where is that
Itch? Philosophy from Scratch
3. Knowledge and the Subjective Qualities of
Experience
4. Does Rover Believe Anything?
5. Draining the River and
Quivering the Arrow: Against the Flow and Direction of Time
6. Mistaking
Mathematics for Reality: Where Zeno Went Wrong and So Many Followed
7. Could
the Universe (Even) Give a Toss?
8. Causes as (Local) Oomph Part 2: Tetchy
Interludes Prefatory Note
9. The Shocking Yawn: Art up its Arse
10. The Fight
Against (e.g. my) Stupidity
11. Colonic Material of a Taurine Provenance
12.
Mission Drift Part 3: Celebrations Prefatory Note
13. Ante-Room: On Waiting
14. Voices from a distance
15. Two Fragments of Sculptured Air: Aaarh and
Oops!
16. Lexical Snacks
17. "Honestly, the Worlds gone Quite Mad"
18. The
Librarians Voice
19. Against the Promethean Libel
20. Re-imagining the wheel
21. Sail
22. Mad artefacts
23. A Can of Beans Coda: Ink the artefact of
artefacts. Envoi: Justifying the Search. Index
Raymond Tallis trained as a doctor before going on to become Professor of Geriatric Medicine at the University of Manchester, UK. He was elected Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences for his research in clinical neuroscience. He retired from medicine in 2006 to become a full-time writer. He has published fiction, poetry and over a dozen books of cultural criticism and philosophical anthropology including, most recently, Aping Mankind (2011). He has published two other collections of essays with Acumen, In Defence of Wonder (2012) and Reflections of a Metaphysical Flaneur (2013).