"Logic Demystified" By Anthony Boutelle & Stan Gibilisco
One of the most effective ways to back up an argument about a work of literature would be to use evidence from that book. Someone could pull quotes from the book, and find other evidence from separate sources.
Book of Life After Death
The author of the book Enders Game has used philosophy as evidence to support his ideas about the gay people.
Paul Auster's 1992 novel Leviathan? No. Shea and Wilson's 1975 novel Leviathan? No. It's third in the Illuminatus trilogy. Scott Westerfeld's 2009 novel Leviathan? Maybe. The book was left kind of open ended and there is another novel due to come out as part of a Leviathan series in late 2010. I don't think you mean the 1651 book by philosophy book by Thomas Hobbes. I'm not sure how a philosophy book would have a "sequel", per se.
An ontological metaphor is a metaphor that characterises a non-physical object as a physical entity.eg. "It will take a lot of patience to finish this book" Patience in this case is treated as a quantity.
One highly regarded book on the history of philosophy is "A History of Western Philosophy" by Bertrand Russell.
Diverting the argument to unrelated issues with a 'red herring'. Or, assuming the conclusion of an argument called 'begging the question'
A philosophy book would contain branches of philosophy such as ancient, medieval, Chinese and Persian Philosophy. The book teaches you about Realism, skepticism, Idealism and Rationalism. A very important teaching is Morality.
"Logic Demystified" By Anthony Boutelle & Stan Gibilisco
you could decorate your book with your favourite religion.
It depends.
Brian Davies is the author a book called An Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion. He is a professor of Philosophy at Fordham University. He was born in 1951.
You can start by writing the philosophy book consisting of your own thoughts and views of the world and such of that nature. Then after writing it , you would want to get it revised and then published.
There are literally hundreds of books on the history of philosophy. And they are written by hundreds of different authors.
Isaac Husik has written: 'A history of mediaeval Jewish philosophy' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Jewish Philosophy, Medieval Philosophy 'Philosophical essays, ancient, mediaeval & modern' -- subject(s): Jewish Philosophy, Philosophy, Philosophy, Jewish 'The philosophy of Maimonides'
Stephen Edelston Toulmin has written: 'An examination of the place of reason in ethics' -- subject(s): Ethics, Reason 'The fabric of the heavens' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Astronomy, Cosmology 'Cosmopolis' -- subject(s): Civilization, Modern, History, Intellectual life, Modern Civilization, Modern Philosophy, Philosophy, Modern, Philosophy, Renaissance, Rationalism, Renaissance Philosophy 'The uses of argument' -- subject(s): Logic, Reasoning 'The fabric of the heavens' -- subject(s): Cosmology, History, Astronomy 'An introduction to reasoning'