This bold fascinating book seeks to inhabit other philosophical traditions, with humility but without patronisingly exempting them from the critique he applies to ours... Deft [and] rigorous
- Jane O'Grady, Financial Times
There to fill the Sapiens-size hole in your life
Observer
Terrific. The intellectual and spiritual generosity of this book makes it an essential text for our fractious and dangerously divided era
- Richard Holloway,
Such scope, and such lucid, lightly worn learning. Enlightening, perspective-shifting, mind-expanding - a superb tour through world philosophies with an erudite and friendly guide
- Sarah Bakewell,
Timely and important...this is his best [book] to date... Enthralling... This ingenious and open-hearted book is about the art of living well, something the West's philosophy has often neglected
- Stuart Kelly, Scotland on Sunday
Fascinating and unexpected... a dazzling kaleidoscope... [Baggini] has a true gift for making the difficult accessible in lapidary prose... Worth reading and re-reading
- Marina Vaizey, Arts Desk
What I loved about Julian Baggini's How the World Thinks: A Global History of Philosophy was its spiritual and intellectual generosity, and the author's ability to engage sympathetically with philosophical traditions that do not conform to his own preferred rationalist approach
- Book of the Year selected by Richard Holloway, Tablet
If you've ever wondered why the West tends to reward individual success, why some religions prioritise speech and some silence, or what lessons can be drawn by comparing Vincent Van Gogh and Michael Winner, this is a book for you
History Revealed
One of the great philosophical popularisers of his age... Baggini summarises and explicates with the greatest precision, compression and élan
- Christopher Bray, Tablet
One of the great unexplained wonders of human history is that written philosophy flowered entirely separately in China, India and Ancient Greece at more or less the same time. These early philosophies have had a profound impact on the development of distinctive cultures in different parts of the world. Baggini also looks at the differences between east and west and different religions
Four Shires Magazine
Ground-breaking
- Sarah Dennis, Oxford Times
Eye-opening
Prospect
[For] a broader audience with no philosophical training... Baggini [...] is cheerful and wide-eyed, moving from one big idea to another like a food lover at an opulent buffet
TLS
Highly readable
Times Higher Education
A brilliantly accessible coalescence of thought and belief from around the world...A triumph of comparative philosophy with widespread relevance for the way we live today
- Book of the Month, Waterstones
There is also a need for books that explain non-Western philosophical traditions to the interested non-specialist. Julian Baggini's How The World Thinks is an excellent example of this genre
TLS