Simon Critchley, “Did you hear the one about the philosopher writing a book on humour?”
Philosophy is a funny business and some philosophers are funny people. The philosopher asks you to look at the world awry, to place in question your usual habits, assumptions, prejudices and expectations. The philosopher asks you to be sceptical about all sorts of things you would ordinarily take for granted, like the reality of things in the world or whether the people around you are actually human or really robots. In this regard, the philosopher has, I think, a family resemblance with the comedian, who also asks us to look at the world askance, to imagine a topsy-turvy universe where horses and dogs talk and where lifeless objects become miraculously animated. Both the philosopher and the comedian ask you to view the world from a Martian perspective, to look at things as if you had just landed from another planet. With this rough resemblance in mind, I became interested in jokes, humour and the comic and I have just finished writing a short book on the topic.


February 10th, 2008 at 12:40 pm
The link is missing from the “Continue reading here”
February 10th, 2008 at 12:43 pm
Sorry about that. Fixed now.
February 16th, 2008 at 12:12 pm
Don’t have time to read the article right now (I will eventually); I just scanned…but I noticed you didn’t mention the most recent philosophical book on humor, namely, Ted Cohen’s Jokes.