I love this.
http://www.coppelia.io/2012/06/graphing-the-history-of-philosophy/
Scroll down a bit to see the whole graph, and an explanation of how it was done.
This is as you will discover not a chronological presentation. The nearness of any two nodes is thematic: so you see Leo Strauss as a satellite of Plato and Eric Voegelin as a satellite of Aristotle.
The size of the node indicates the number of connections, and so indirectly it indicates centrality within the whole net.
Red indicates the Anglospheric analytical tradition, green the European continental tradition.
Enjoy exploring.
http://www.coppelia.io/2012/06/graphing-the-history-of-philosophy/
Scroll down a bit to see the whole graph, and an explanation of how it was done.
This is as you will discover not a chronological presentation. The nearness of any two nodes is thematic: so you see Leo Strauss as a satellite of Plato and Eric Voegelin as a satellite of Aristotle.
The size of the node indicates the number of connections, and so indirectly it indicates centrality within the whole net.
Red indicates the Anglospheric analytical tradition, green the European continental tradition.
Enjoy exploring.
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