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Has any one person had an influence on your personal philosophy? How so?
22 responses total.
One writer that has influenced my personal philosophy is Alan Watts. I grew up at a time when his books on eastern philosophy were very popular. He had a very engaging writing style, and his books made a lot of sense to me at that point in my life.
I guess for me it's not so much a "person", but a culture. The fact that I have spent so much of my life overseas has drastically influenced the way I view the world, both positively and negatively.
Ja, und die Frage ist nur: "Welche Wirkung hat deine personliche Philosophie im Moment? Eine Negative oder eine Positive?"
Good question. At the moment? I guess neither. No, I'd have to say a positive one. If I weren't so anal-retentive, I couldn't get three papers done in a week when faced with a family crisis.
Alan Watts was great. He took esoteric concepts and packaged them so that someone like me could get interested in them. He was a good storyteller, as I recall. For a time, one of the old alternative stations ran his programs; they were very entertaining. I found many other authors to be helpful to me. Among the most influential: M. Scott Peck, _The Road Less Traveled_, _People of the Lie_ Robert Fritz, _The Path of Least Resistance_ William James, __Psychology_ ( and a few others:)) P.D. Ouspensky, _The Fourth Way_ ( My very favorite crazy person ) Don Van Vliet, musician and artist
For political philosophy, it was Jean-Francois Revel.
Dr. Seuss
My most influential was Paul Goodman. I was in college in the sixties, and he was widely read then. He was a philosopher, architect, city planner, poet, and anarchist. His most famous book was "Growing Up Absurd", but authored many others, including: People or Personnel, Like a Conquered Province, Communitas, a set of utopian/anarchist community schemes, Hawkweed (poetry), and Making Do (a novel). He was a prof at Columbia, died about 1972. You can find alot of his books at used book stores around AA. Chicago Taxi Willie.
Over time I collect new "major influences" ... the first I can remember was Sammy Davis junior. I read his auto-biography when I was in 5th grade and was mesmerized. I fell in love with show-biz from reading his book, and came to a clear understanding that people un-like me were still very much *people*. He was a Star. He still had things go wrong in his life. He was Jewish (I was brought up a sheltered Catholic) and he was as spiritual and thoughtful as anyone I had encountered to that time. He was black. I was a sheltered little white girl. I'd seen maybe 2-3 black people in my life to that point. He was a person with emotions I could identify with. In many ways we were very different, but I could empathize with what he went through ... that had a major impact in my life at 10. Then, much later, I read Abbie Hoffman's autobiography. I had grown up in the late 60's and early 70's in a military household. I thought that hippies were an artifact of history, like the pioneers, but crazy. I only came to understand what the whole movement had been about much later. I went through a prolonged "activist" stage, at that point. Much later, again, I began to read feminist authors. Overall, I can't really name one who has more influence on me than the others -- unless I just name the most recent. ;) But as a group, they have has the most far-reaching impact. Except, my mother. She told me often when I was growing up that "You're only as happy as you decide to be" or my father. He told me "If it needs to be done, do it. If you wait for soemone else to get to it, nothing will be done. Take responsibility for what you can do to make a positive difference in your world." (He was refering to housework and job attitude, but it makes alot of sense as a life's philosophy, too. He discovered that, too. At 61, he's a neighborhood activist fighting for better conditions in his part of the city, including environmental clean-up, better police protection, and more responsible political representation.)
Aleister Crowley. Before you assume that he was a Satanist and completely evil, browse through his works. Once you get past his public persona you will realize that he was a brilliant mystic way ahead of his time. Madame Blavatski. Great insights into eastern religions. Robert Anton Wilson. The first to really open my eyes to anarchist phiosophy. Carlos Casteneda. Moral relativism, uniting with your dark side. Anton LaVey. The strength of the dark side! Carl Yung. Nuf said.
My father said: If you keep doing that I'll give you a spanking.
I heard someone say that once, but I think it was in a X rated movie.
Re 11: ...so, vishnu...did you keep doing "that", or did you stop?
Um.. Well, he said it more than once so I couldn't recall what i did on each seperate time. If i believed it was right, I kept on doing it.
Robert Anton Wilson's "schroedingers cat" and stravinski's "rite of spring"
The *one* person would be William Lunnon, a friend I went to school with a long time ago. Sharing the limelight: my parents, a few teachers whose names I can't recall, Rick Cassidy (a teacher whose name I do recall), M. Scott Peck (an author), John Bradshaw (an author), Lao Tsu (an author), Kushida Sensei (a teacher), several other people and/or schools, and myself (a good friend).
Also for me, Jim Coleman (god).
Carla Jung and Joseph Campbell
Me too, I loved Ed Wood's movie _Carl Or Carla_.
Of course I was refferring to Jung's anima "Carla".
My hate for the soviet union, george orwell, influence me a lot and a long time ago bakunin, proudhon, now ayn rand, nietzsche, anatoli Rybakov.
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