But for a non-professional, I think starting with one of those encyclopedic summaries of the ideas of the major western philosophers throughout history is a good place to start. If one of the philosophers seems to actually have something useful or rational to say that one can understand, THEN one can move on to read his actual writings with his complete arguments.
Exactly. I am not really interested in reading writings from actual philosophers because I find most philosophers
extremely confusing, and when I am confused I get bored

and then I put the book down.
For instance, Wikipedia's article on
Pragmatism states the following in the first paragraph:
"Most of the thinkers who describe themselves as
pragmatists consider practical consequences or real effects to be vital components of both meaning and truth. Other important aspects of pragmatism include anti-Cartesianism, radical empiricism, instrumentalism, anti-realism, verificationism, conceptual relativity, a denial of the fact-value distinction, a high regard for science and evolution, and fallibilism."

The above description for Pragmatism is utterly confusing for non-philosophers like myself. I don't know what anti-this and anti-that are, and I'm guessing that instrumentalism has nothing to do with music??? I have read that paragraph over and over again and I still am no close to understanding what pragmatism is than when I read it the first time.
I just want a general overview of the subject in, and
this is the important part, layman's terms by a recognised authority in the field. Then when I find a philosopher that I like (perhaps William James) and that has ideas that I can relate to and have an interest in
then I can start reading their works.
If someone who has no background and a passing interest in RC theology then I won't reccommend that he read Aquinas'
Summa Theologica, however; I will recommend a small catechism, a recognized RC author, a good introductory book, etc. I hope I'm getting my point across
And another good starter book I might mention is "The History of Philosophy" by Will Durant.
Thank you
