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Found 72 results for "logic"

Post 100 Books You Must Read

Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

The ultimate bargain: a scholar sells his soul to the devil for unlimited knowledge and worldly pleasure. Goethe's monumental two-part drama—written over 60 years—explores ambition, desire, redemption, and the eternal human striving that defines our existence. The pinnacle of German literature.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 07, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell

Big Brother is watching you. Orwell's terrifying vision of totalitarianism remains the most influential dystopian novel ever written. Winston Smith's rebellion against the Party—and his devastating fate—is a warning that has only grown more urgent with each passing decade.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 07, 2026

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Middlemarch by George Eliot

Few novels capture the full breadth of human experience quite like George Eliot's Middlemarch. Published in 1871-72, this sprawling masterpiece is a profound examination of marriage, ambition, idealism, and the quiet compromises that shape ordinary lives. Often called the greatest English novel ever written, it weaves together multiple storylines into a rich tapestry of provincial life.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jul 07, 2026

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The Sofos - Train Your Brain with Games, Labs & Daily Challenges

A revolutionary educational platform featuring 15+ brain games, interactive physics labs, and curated knowledge libraries covering Philosophy, Physics, Mathematics, and Literature. Train your mind daily with addictive challenges that make learning complex subjects genuinely enjoyable — 100% free.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jan 28, 2026

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Post Top 10 Most Influential Philosophers in World History

Thomas Aquinas — Faith, Reason, and the Harmony of Life

The philosopher who bridged heaven and earth through reason and faith. Imagine a mind so curious that it seeks not only to understand the world but also to understand God, morality, and the ultimate purpose of life. This was the mind of Thomas Aquinas, a 13th-century philosopher and theologian whose work harmonized faith and reason, showing that belief and logic need not conflict, but can illuminate one another.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Jan 12, 2026

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Post Top 10 Most Influential Philosophers in World History

René Descartes — Clarity, Doubt, and the Power of Thinking

The philosopher who taught the world to question everything, starting with himself. Imagine sitting alone in a quiet room, pondering the mysteries of life: What can I truly know? What is real? How do I distinguish truth from illusion? This was the world of René Descartes, the 17th-century French thinker who revolutionized philosophy by teaching the power of clear thought, reason, and self-reflection.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Dec 29, 2025

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Sentimental Education by Gustave Flaubert

If Madame Bovary is a tragedy about the fatal collision of dreams and reality, Sentimental Education is a slow-burn study of how dreams just sort of... fade away. Published in 1869, this is Gustave Flaubert’s most ambitious work, often cited by critics as one of the greatest novels ever written, even if it initially baffled readers.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Dec 27, 2025

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert

Before there was Desperate Housewives or Sex and the City, there was Emma Bovary. Published in 1856, Madame Bovary is the novel that effectively invented modern realism. It caused a massive scandal upon release—Flaubert was literally put on trial for obscenity—because it dared to treat adultery not as a moral failing to be preached against, but as a symptom of a bored, unsatisfied life.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Dec 26, 2025

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Medea by Euripides

If you think modern psychological thrillers are dark, wait until you meet Medea. First performed in 431 BC, this Greek tragedy by Euripides is a blistering exploration of betrayal, rage, and the terrifying lengths a person will go to when pushed too far.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Dec 23, 2025

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison

"I am an invisible man." With that simple, shattering declaration, Ralph Ellison opened his 1952 monumental debut, Invisible Man, and fundamentally reshaped the landscape of American letters. This novel is the sprawling, satirical, and profound journey of an unnamed young Black man from the Jim Crow South to the dynamic, deceptive streets of 1930s Harlem, chronicling his realization that the greatest obstacle he faces isn't outright hatred, but the willful blindness of the white world.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Dec 21, 2025

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