Jostein Gaarder (Norwegian: [ˈju:staɪn ˈgɔːrdər]; born August 8, 1952) is a Norwegian intellectual and author of several novels, short stories and children's books. Gaarder often writes from the perspective of children, exploring their sense of wonder about the world. He often uses metafiction in his works, writing stories within stories.
Gaarder was born into a pedagogical family. His best known work is the novel Sophie's World, subtitled A Novel about the History of Philosophy. This popular work has been translated into fifty-three languages; there are over thirty million copies in print
Sophie Amundsen (Sofie Amundsen in the Norwegian version) is a 14-year-old girl who lives in Norway in the year 1990. She lives with her mother and her cat, Sherekan, as well as with her goldfish, a tortoise, and two budgerigars. Her father is a captain of an oil tanker, and is away for most of the year.
The book begins with Sophie receiving two anonymous messages in her mailbox (the first asking, "Who are you?", the second asking, "Where does the world come from?") and a postcard addressed to 'Hilde Møller Knag, c/o Sophie Amundsen'. Shortly afterwards, she receives a packet of papers, part of a correspondence course in philosophy.
With these mysterious communications, Sophie becomes the student of a fifty-year-old philosopher, Alberto Knox. Initially, he is completely anonymous to Sophie, but he later reveals more and more about himself. The papers and the packet both turn out to be from him, but the post card is not; it is addressed from someone called Albert Knag, who is a major in a United Nations peacekeeping unit stationed in Lebanon.
Alberto teaches her about the history of philosophy. She gets a substantive and understandable review from the Pre-Socratics to Jean-Paul Sartre. Along with the philosophy lessons, Sophie and Alberto try to outwit the mysterious Albert Knag, who appears to have God-like powers, which Alberto finds quite troubling.
Sophie learns about medieval philosophy while being lectured by Alberto, dressed as a monk, in an ancient church, and she learns about Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir in a French café. Various philosophical questions and methods of reasoning are put before Sophie, as she attempts to work them out on her own. Many of Knox's philosophic packets to her are preluded by more short questions, such as "Why is Lego the most ingenious toy in the world?"
Alberto takes Sophie from the Hellenistic civilization to the rise of Christianity and its interaction with Ancient Greek thought on to the Middle Ages. Over the course of the book, he covers the Renaissance, Baroque, Enlightenment and Romantic periods, with the philosophies that stemmed from them.
Mixed in with the philosophy lessons is a plot rather more akin to normal teenage novels, in which Sophie interacts with her mother and her friend Joanna. This is not the focus of the story but simply serves to move the plot along. After the introduction to George Berkeley, the perspective of the novel shifts to the mysterious Hilde. Sophie and Alberto's entire world is revealed to be a literary construction by Albert Knag as a present for his daughter, Hilde, on her 15th birthday.
The novel continues with Hilde's story as a framing device for Sophie's story, but the stories intertwine as Hilde's understanding of philosophy grows alongside Sophie's understanding. As Albert Knag continues to meddle with Sophie's life, Alberto helps her fight back by teaching her everything he knows about philosophy. That, he explains, is the only way to understand her world. Meanwhile, Alberto's lessons allow Hilde to develop her own understanding of Sophie's world and use her knowledge against her father for exercising too much power over Sophie's world.
This is laced with events that appear to be scientifically impossible, such as Sophie seeing her reflection in a mirror wink at her with both eyes or actually seeing Socrates and Plato. Hilde's book (by her father) ends with Sophie and Alberto disappearing. Gaarder reveals that they have managed to escape Albert Knag's mind into Hilde's world as spirits.
我现在正在看这本书,笔者用的手法我很喜欢,就是属于那种用小说手法串联起来整本书,却讲了很多哲学思想,包括希腊神话到前苏格拉底学派,苏格拉底,柏拉图,亚里斯多德等等,甚至里面有一条叫Hermes的狗,竟然是信使,感觉很有童话的味道,但越往下读越感觉感觉自己的境界还...
评分我现在正在看这本书,笔者用的手法我很喜欢,就是属于那种用小说手法串联起来整本书,却讲了很多哲学思想,包括希腊神话到前苏格拉底学派,苏格拉底,柏拉图,亚里斯多德等等,甚至里面有一条叫Hermes的狗,竟然是信使,感觉很有童话的味道,但越往下读越感觉感觉自己的境界还...
评分我现在正在看这本书,笔者用的手法我很喜欢,就是属于那种用小说手法串联起来整本书,却讲了很多哲学思想,包括希腊神话到前苏格拉底学派,苏格拉底,柏拉图,亚里斯多德等等,甚至里面有一条叫Hermes的狗,竟然是信使,感觉很有童话的味道,但越往下读越感觉感觉自己的境界还...
评分我现在正在看这本书,笔者用的手法我很喜欢,就是属于那种用小说手法串联起来整本书,却讲了很多哲学思想,包括希腊神话到前苏格拉底学派,苏格拉底,柏拉图,亚里斯多德等等,甚至里面有一条叫Hermes的狗,竟然是信使,感觉很有童话的味道,但越往下读越感觉感觉自己的境界还...
评分我现在正在看这本书,笔者用的手法我很喜欢,就是属于那种用小说手法串联起来整本书,却讲了很多哲学思想,包括希腊神话到前苏格拉底学派,苏格拉底,柏拉图,亚里斯多德等等,甚至里面有一条叫Hermes的狗,竟然是信使,感觉很有童话的味道,但越往下读越感觉感觉自己的境界还...
对我影响最大的一本小说,mark一下。现在的生活、未来的打算有一半因之而起、为之而行~ 小小生命中的力量之源。
评分初中的时候如果从同学那借来读了肯定会觉得是本奇书
评分多年之后重读这本书,有了很多不同想法。除了里面引人入胜的哲学史和魔幻色彩之外,更重要的是如果在年轻时候读到这样的作品很,很可能引起对哲学终生的兴趣。不仅仅是哲学,任何学科也是一样的,从儿童的视角,用讲故事的形式,总是比枯燥无味的课本有趣太多。在这方面,我国实在差的不是一点半点
评分大学时就买了中文本,一直没看,去年觉得这个英文版不难,就拿来读了,顺便哲学启蒙下
评分我入门的第一本原版书
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