In the Beginning, there was ... Philosophy.
This is the second part of the episode on humour. It looks at the emotional and sociological functions of humour. Humour is a social phenomenon. The most important distinction is that between conservative and critical functions of humour. Conservative functions re-confirm us a members of a community which shares a sense of humour. Critical functions highlight deficiencies in the way we act, talk and think. Literature: https://jonathansandling.com [https://jonathansandling.com] Stanford Encylopedia of Philosophy [https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/humor/] Internet Encylopedia of Philosophy [https://iep.utm.edu/humor/] Carroll, N.: Humour. A Very Short Introduction. Oxford UP 2014 Critchley, S.: On Humour. Ebook Bradford 2002. Routledge 2002
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