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Read Time

2 min read

Our Rating

4.1

Think by Simon Blackburn is a rigorous, well-crafted introduction to the core problems of Western philosophy, best suited to motivated readers willing to engage seriously with complex ideas.

Its intellectual honesty and range make it one of the stronger entries in the genre, despite a Western-centric focus and occasional impatience with opposing views.

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LuvemBooks

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Think by Simon Blackburn Review: Philosophy Made Accessible

Our Rating

4.1

Think by Simon Blackburn is a rigorous, well-crafted introduction to the core problems of Western philosophy, best suited to motivated readers willing to engage seriously with complex ideas. Its intellectual honesty and range make it one of the stronger entries in the genre, despite a Western-centric focus and occasional impatience with opposing views.

In This Review
  • What Works & What Doesn't
  • What Think Actually Argues
  • Where to Buy

What Works & What Doesn't

What Works
  • Covers an impressive range of philosophical domains in a single, readable volume
  • Blackburn writes with genuine intellectual authority, not just reportage
  • Strong prose style — dry, precise, and occasionally witty — keeps abstract material alive
  • Treats readers as capable of following complex arguments without hand-holding
  • The sections on epistemology and ethics are especially well-handled
What Doesn't
  • Firmly rooted in the Western canon, with no meaningful engagement with non-Western traditions
  • Some passages move quickly past opposing views, which may frustrate first-time readers
  • No discussion questions or structured exercises, limiting its use as a course companion
  • Demands sustained concentration — not suited to casual or intermittent reading

What Think Actually Argues

Think: A Compelling Introduction to Philosophy_main_0
Think is not a history of philosophy, and it makes no pretense of being one. Blackburn's central argument is that philosophy's core problems — concerning knowledge, mind, free will, the self, God, ethics, and politics — are not dusty academic puzzles. They are live questions that shape how we understand ourselves and the world. His aim is to equip general readers with enough conceptual vocabulary and historical context to engage these questions honestly and rigorously.
The book works through each major domain of philosophy in turn, introducing the central disputes and the thinkers who shaped them. Descartes, Hume, Kant, and other canonical figures appear not as museum pieces but as participants in ongoing debates. Blackburn treats the reader as an intelligent adult capable of following complex arguments, which is both the book's greatest strength and, occasionally, its most demanding feature.

Where to Buy

You can find Think: A Compelling Introduction to Philosophy on Amazon, at your local independent bookstore, or directly through Oxford University Press.