If you want to support my work, please consider a paid subscription on my substack: johnathanbi.com Some links to further guide your study: * Join my email list to be notified of future episodes: greatbooks.io * Full transcript: open.substack.com/pub/johnathanbi/p/transcript-for-rousseaus-first-discourse?r=l66v& Companion lectures & interviews: * Rousseau on the importance of heroes: www.johnathanbi.com/p/selfish-heroes-make-great-leaders Texts I referenced (affiliate): * Best translation of the First Discourse: amzn.to/3Xr4NyO * My book notes: www.johnathanbi.com/p/discourse-on-the-arts-and-sciences * Best reading companion to the First Discourse: amzn.to/4chZeXG * My book notes: www.johnathanbi.com/p/rousseaus-critique-of-science-by * Best overview of Rousseau's view on the role of authors: amzn.to/4bX9JQD * My book notes: www.johnathanbi.com/p/rousseau-as-author-by-christopher TIMESTAMPS 00:00:00 0. Introduction 00:05:23 1.1 Critique: Sparta and Athens 00:06:54 1.2 Critique: Self-Interest and Pride 00:14:14 1.3 Critique: Science and the Disease of Contrarianism 00:22:24 1.4 Critique: Science Destroys the Social Fabric 00:29:43 1.5 Critique: Science is Useless 00:35:14 1.6 Critique: Popular Enlightenment 00:39:10 1.7 Critique: Art is Morally Impotent 00:50:03 1.8 Critique: Art’s Second Order Dangers 01:02:52 2.1 Prescriptions: Fighting Enlightenment with Enlightenment 01:10:20 2.2 Prescriptions: Rousseau, the Anti-Revolutionary 01:14:27 2.3 Prescriptions: Art in the Good State 01:21:31 2.4 Prescriptions: Science in the Good State 01:28:15 3. Contemporary Relevance of the First Discourse
Your performantive style is exactly what makes your lectures engaging and doesn't let me get distracted with my thoughts. Philosophy is not supposed to be boring!
You got that right but this is the teaching of philosophical ideas, not philosophy itself. Philosophy is done usually by ones self and without the aid of an instructor and there's only about 4 or 5 every generation that go down as their generations philosophers, the rest end up as teachers, students, novelists, plumbers, etc.
You have the talent. Please create full philosophy lecture series like these. You will probably the only one that will make generations of students learn philosophy.
@@bi.johnathan I love it when asian people try to be supercilious, it's like seeing a monkey on roller skates, means nothing to them - funny for the rest of us.
A first-time viewer’s immediate reaction: Michael Sugrue lives on! Your organic delivery, your comfort and ease, the dynamic flow, the feast of a combination of diachronic and synchronic knowledge, the extraordinary erudition,, well done! While I still mourn Sugrue’s death (there never will be another just like him) Johnathan’s authenticity, genuineness, and monastic like commitment to his craft makes this (and I hope many more to come) video a classic, worthy of listening to every year or two. While it may not be Gospel, your video made my world a whole lot brighter today. You caught me at the ver first line. “If you clicked on a two hour video on philosophy you must be…” Thank you!!!
Dear TH-cam, thanks for your existence 🕊️! This is what the YT Platform was supposed to be in service for increasing knowledge. This young human choose a path of creating and virtue, instead what nowadays many young people do, destruction.
Stumbled upon these excellent lecture …..having recently discovered Oswald Spengler “ the decline of the west “ ….and now this ….has given a perspective to the recent nightmarish view of my reality as a citizen living in London England in 2024 …. I’d been feeling as though a witness to real time moment by moment destruction of my way of life …right before my eyes and not via the benefit of the retrograde hindsight Thank you 🙏🏻
I feel like i stumble upon a forbidden house of thoughts, logic and reason. Like, im in a private boarding school for the highborns, those never televised schools where an monthly intuition fee is $150K, no matter, now im part of it. Thanks for this Lectures Johnathan, you make school look fun and worthy of the name. Genius.....for now.
It's such a pleasure to have found your channel! Your work is so clear and easy to listen to as you explain these ideas so many people would consider inaccessible. I slide in and out of philosophy TH-cam, so thank you for pulling me back in! I'm working my way eagerly through you Girard videos, I knew nothing about him and now I find him fascinating. Also, I'm sure you're told some variation of this a lot, but you dress to the teeth, sir, you always look sharp as a tack! Thank you for providing such high-qaulity content, from the picture quality to the editing to your gently passionate discussions and lectures, completely for free, this is a tremendous resource! Cheers.
I think the most challenging part of this for me is not looking at the concept of pridful intellectualism as a viewpoint that "proves" why I am right and should dislike many individuals in academia today but rather the opposite and understand this is the very viewpoint Rousseau is warning to be weary of. To instead point that view at my own self, to appreciate what I have learned and apply it to my self as a way of life and incorporate it into my actions. These actions then offer a view point better than any contranian statment I can make to another. It also builds on to the view of AI. As we blame and belittle machine learnings systems for "immitating" art or being simple and borining in its ability to dictate, we are falling victim to prideful intellectualism instead of appreciating the systems that lay in front of us in the first place. Or making those same criticisms of our selves. We argue where the hand is pointing instead of appreciating that we have a hand in the first place.
Your pursuit of philosphy and you being available on TH-cam reminded me of the late great Dr. Michael Sugrue. All the best and i wish to see more from you
The whole purpose of being here is to enjoy and explore. This is why both science and art are essential. One could argue that studying the Earth's curvature or even Darwin researching butterflies... might seem insignificant on their own. However, if they spark curiosity and inspire a deeper exploration of nature, then they fulfill their purpose.
Coming from the Gutter myself im extremely grateful i have found this Material Thanks Brotha once again for the knowledge hope one day i can visit these lectures in person till them keep Grinding Carnal...
Absolutely loved this lecture. In the 21st century, I think the wisdom from this discourse reminds us that true art should empower us to live better lives. The tragedy of our times is that such enriching art is getting harder to find due to the rise of mimetics and commodification. It's up to us as individuals to discern and seek out art that truly matters and has depth. Rousseau’s point about the next generation of wise individuals not needing teachers but following the spirit of virtue in the arts by intuition is inspiring, it reminds me of Herbert Marcuse and The Great Refusal. It emphasizes that our attention is precious, and we should focus it on subjects that have genuine substance and depth. To not abandon art, but rather, strive to appreciate and support art that enriches our lives. Again, great talk, looking forward to your next video!
It is the most important practice to remind ourselves daily that we are energetic beings.. coming here over and over to explore the material realm. Death is an illusion. I never get caught up with how intellectual or distinguished one becomes.
@@bi.johnathanit used to be that being right was what was important, however being challenged and proven wrong on different issues is now much more important. At least in my opinion, honor, humility, and integrity. It’s my belief that pride can be replaced with those three words. Am I mistaken.?
listening to this immediately after Ralston College's "Education without Indoctrination: Can it Exist?" is giving me deep identity whiplash, and this as someone who has always loved philosophy and eschewed a formal university education in favor of the path of an auto-didact. especially in light of the inescapability of mimesis/reverse-mimesis on the decisions I've made. well done Johnathan. so glad to have discovered you through David Perell, as i have many other remarkable writers and thinkers. you've compelled me to write, discover, and re-examine. thank you so much.
1:14:46 yes! similar to athenian theater, can we make these philosophical talks be done in an open air theater and be open to all citizenry and not just closed off to ticket holders?
i dont know who you are , but being Based + High IQ & having Money + Taste is a rare combo. combining all of them for creating masterpieces like these and giving them away in a charitable way to the masses is even more beautiful. Hope you find a good woman and birth at least 6 kids. The world needs more of this.
Incredible lecture, you’re very engaging and clear in your speech, you explained the issue very well. I study philosophy and sociology and am looking for any help i can find online for my studies, and this was very helpful. Thank you very much, good luck with the work you do, hope it only gets better with time!
Man as an Alexandrian, I really wish people would stop repeating this myth. The claim that Muslims burned the Library of Alexandria and the infamous quote that is unjustly attributed to Umar ibn al-Khattab were first mentioned several centuries after the incident allegedly took place and recorded by someone known for being prejudiced against Muslims. But these details, from the Caliph's quote to the incredulous six months it supposedly took to burn all the books, weren't written down until 300 years after the fact. These facts condemning Omar were written by Bishop Gregory Bar Hebræus, a Christian who spent a great deal of time writing about Moslem atrocities without much historical documentation.[1] There is no single reliable source that mentions this ever happening. Several other modern historians such as Edward Gibbon, Eusèbe Renaudot, Alfred J. Butler, Victor Chauvin, Paul Casanova, Gustave Le Bon, Eugenio Griffini, Kelly Trumble and Roy MacLeod all rejected this story and described it as a fabricated myth. The Library of Alexandria didn't even exist at the time. It was accidentally burned by the troops of Julius Caesar roughly 700 years earlier, and the establishment ceased to exist after a brief revival in the Roman era, but that was long before the Islamisation. A comment from quora.
1:27:01 changed my life, forever I've focused on impact and making the world a better place, frustrated in believing that it's because of a lack of good teachers. I'm now reassessing this and seeing it as a fixed mindset. The best will aim to be the best regardless of resources but it feels morally right to make things accessible. these do not need to be mutually exclusive.
Amazing What a communactor ! Thanks for the summaries and understanding ! Put this man on all the medias and podcasts ! Is this how it is to study at ivy league !! ?
So deep about intellectuals! At 9:32 “The great founders of the great intellectual traditions don’t write books.” Interesting to note that Mohamed set off a book-based tradition where he claimed he didn’t write the book himself. Have you read it, Jonathan?
This is an interesting format, but I much prefer the podcast setting with an expert. The 2 podcasts with Brian Leiter are the 2 videos that make me subscribe. Is less preachy and more an exploration.
Would be nice to have your lectures numbered so I can make my way through them in an appropriate order when there is one, and know I’ve not skipped one along the way.
Caliph Umar didn't order the burning of the library. It's has something to do with the prejudiced nature of the orientalists who never lose a chance to malign Islam.
A failed entrepreneur found solace in Nietzsche. That's the crux of human rationalization of one's status; getting peace either in 'slave', or in 'master' mentality.
Certainly something fascinating and true concepts, however I still think in as much as democracy produces more bad ideas, in aggregate it still by far produced way more 'good' ideas as well. The ratio is still highly skewed towards bad ideas, but without democratization of communication and media, those good ideas would be buried and never have the footing they do today either. Welp, Rousseau certainly nailed "Hollywood made America" didn't he?
These arguments are not in balance - you can't say that "The art brings people together but all the wrong ways". No. To condemn a whole industry is hardly intellectual nor wise. By The way, it was delightful to see your book add soon after you had declared that great men don't need to write books - they'll be written for them! Sorry, the goal of being the moral superior asks for critisism - you know, that is the way to become superior, to get past a tighter critisism. The end goal of moral critisism is to bring about the higher character in another, but immoral critisism aims to destruction for its sake. I hope all the best for you brother!
everything grows and then dies. not sure why the lengthy dissection. yes once the contrast in the gulf between delusional and the truly knowlegable has calcified, things break.
Is this a scene from a long movie, the camera, the set, the attractive audience, the clothes, the editing... this is not your local philosophy club. Also has a strong Review Brah vibe. Also subbed and i dont even like philosophy.
speaking of Athenians being tricksters, your words are cloaked in wordplay and the poetry of language. Something you are set against. Athenians believed in many gods. the Spartans believed in many gods and in general both communities believed in the same gods and praised both the same way. you are putting the idea forward that says, heroes are better ways to live than intelligence and art. but our country was founded by people who believed just the opposite. they believed the pen was mightier than the sword. that is why this country has a constitution that defines our laws. we are not ruled by an elite god-like group. our civil war showed quite clearly that war is not the answer. during both ww1 and ww2 America was reluctant to enter either war. if we went to war our "heroes" would suffer the most. if they came home at all it would be with broken hearts and minds not to mention a few legs, arms, and other body parts. what this lecture says is that a young person has only developed his body and not his mind. before he thinks, we the elite, will conscript him/her into the armed forces and send him to the front lines. Just like king David did to get rid of his loyal hero. you are saying king david was a voyeur, luster, a massagist, and some kind of power-seeking hero. if you want a woman, go out and take her. seems caveman to me. the truth of the matter is that civilization today claims to be positively affected by the arts. the arts show intelligence and the freedom to think whatever you want to think. your spartan world believes might is right. Of course, Jon Bi will be back at home enjoying his fine wine, reading a book beside the fire with his lapdog and his wife will be preparing dinner like she should be.
One could say . . . that even this lecture is poison. And me thinking now that this lecture is poison is part of the poison of this lecture. There is definitely a trap in this mode of being. Maybe the trap is that the belief that everything is done by humans is in rational self interest and maybe that we need to super impose prescriptions and disregard axioms of the past. All I can be certain of is my ignorance.
Then how do you grow at all? Not just in an intellectual manner. But at all, with this approach? This is why human error or sin exists at all. We will all have vices and things we long for that may be of error...but attempting to live a perfect life denying this leads to that same thing yet in a way worse way.
If you want to support my work, please consider a paid subscription on my substack: johnathanbi.com
Some links to further guide your study:
* Join my email list to be notified of future episodes: greatbooks.io
* Full transcript: open.substack.com/pub/johnathanbi/p/transcript-for-rousseaus-first-discourse?r=l66v&
Companion lectures & interviews:
* Rousseau on the importance of heroes: www.johnathanbi.com/p/selfish-heroes-make-great-leaders
Texts I referenced (affiliate):
* Best translation of the First Discourse: amzn.to/3Xr4NyO
* My book notes: www.johnathanbi.com/p/discourse-on-the-arts-and-sciences
* Best reading companion to the First Discourse: amzn.to/4chZeXG
* My book notes: www.johnathanbi.com/p/rousseaus-critique-of-science-by
* Best overview of Rousseau's view on the role of authors: amzn.to/4bX9JQD
* My book notes: www.johnathanbi.com/p/rousseau-as-author-by-christopher
TIMESTAMPS
00:00:00 0. Introduction
00:05:23 1.1 Critique: Sparta and Athens
00:06:54 1.2 Critique: Self-Interest and Pride
00:14:14 1.3 Critique: Science and the Disease of Contrarianism
00:22:24 1.4 Critique: Science Destroys the Social Fabric
00:29:43 1.5 Critique: Science is Useless
00:35:14 1.6 Critique: Popular Enlightenment
00:39:10 1.7 Critique: Art is Morally Impotent
00:50:03 1.8 Critique: Art’s Second Order Dangers
01:02:52 2.1 Prescriptions: Fighting Enlightenment with Enlightenment
01:10:20 2.2 Prescriptions: Rousseau, the Anti-Revolutionary
01:14:27 2.3 Prescriptions: Art in the Good State
01:21:31 2.4 Prescriptions: Science in the Good State
01:28:15 3. Contemporary Relevance of the First Discourse
What would Girard make of Rosseau?
There appears to be a fair bit of overlap in what they both say?
God bless you
Your performantive style is exactly what makes your lectures engaging and doesn't let me get distracted with my thoughts. Philosophy is not supposed to be boring!
Exactly 🎉
You got that right but this is the teaching of philosophical ideas, not philosophy itself. Philosophy is done usually by ones self and without the aid of an instructor and there's only about 4 or 5 every generation that go down as their generations philosophers, the rest end up as teachers, students, novelists, plumbers, etc.
Exactly
You have the talent. Please create full philosophy lecture series like these. You will probably the only one that will make generations of students learn philosophy.
The more I learn the more I realize how little I know. Thank you for the enlightenment.
On the one hand, I really enjoyed this lecture and learned a lot from it.
On the other hand, it's a poison and an existential threat to society.
Glad you got the message :)
It seems like an antidote to a degenerate society as the West is, and a threat to those in power or elite in social sphere.
@@bi.johnathan I love it when asian people try to be supercilious, it's like seeing a monkey on roller skates, means nothing to them - funny for the rest of us.
A first-time viewer’s immediate reaction: Michael Sugrue lives on! Your organic delivery, your comfort and ease, the dynamic flow, the feast of a combination of diachronic and synchronic knowledge, the extraordinary erudition,, well done! While I still mourn Sugrue’s death (there never will be another just like him) Johnathan’s authenticity, genuineness, and monastic like commitment to his craft makes this (and I hope many more to come) video a classic, worthy of listening to every year or two. While it may not be Gospel, your video made my world a whole lot brighter today. You caught me at the ver first line. “If you clicked on a two hour video on philosophy you must be…” Thank you!!!
His style was a great inspiration!
Dear TH-cam, thanks for your existence 🕊️!
This is what the YT Platform was supposed to be in service for increasing knowledge.
This young human choose a path of creating and virtue, instead what nowadays many young people do, destruction.
Stumbled upon these excellent lecture …..having recently discovered Oswald Spengler “ the decline of the west “ ….and now this ….has given a perspective to the recent nightmarish view of my reality as a citizen living in London England in 2024 ….
I’d been feeling as though a witness to real time moment by moment destruction of my way of life …right before my eyes and not via the benefit of the retrograde hindsight
Thank you 🙏🏻
I feel like i stumble upon a forbidden house of thoughts, logic and reason. Like, im in a private boarding school for the highborns, those never televised schools where an monthly intuition fee is $150K, no matter, now im part of it. Thanks for this Lectures Johnathan, you make school look fun and worthy of the name. Genius.....for now.
Thats not an alternative to studying actual philosophy, this is philosophy for ppl into “self help”
It's such a pleasure to have found your channel! Your work is so clear and easy to listen to as you explain these ideas so many people would consider inaccessible. I slide in and out of philosophy TH-cam, so thank you for pulling me back in! I'm working my way eagerly through you Girard videos, I knew nothing about him and now I find him fascinating. Also, I'm sure you're told some variation of this a lot, but you dress to the teeth, sir, you always look sharp as a tack! Thank you for providing such high-qaulity content, from the picture quality to the editing to your gently passionate discussions and lectures, completely for free, this is a tremendous resource! Cheers.
I think the most challenging part of this for me is not looking at the concept of pridful intellectualism as a viewpoint that "proves" why I am right and should dislike many individuals in academia today but rather the opposite and understand this is the very viewpoint Rousseau is warning to be weary of.
To instead point that view at my own self, to appreciate what I have learned and apply it to my self as a way of life and incorporate it into my actions. These actions then offer a view point better than any contranian statment I can make to another.
It also builds on to the view of AI. As we blame and belittle machine learnings systems for "immitating" art or being simple and borining in its ability to dictate, we are falling victim to prideful intellectualism instead of appreciating the systems that lay in front of us in the first place. Or making those same criticisms of our selves.
We argue where the hand is pointing instead of appreciating that we have a hand in the first place.
Yes.
Your pursuit of philosphy and you being available on TH-cam reminded me of the late great Dr. Michael Sugrue. All the best and i wish to see more from you
Of course your oratory skill is certainly there, hone it! Again, all the best
R.I.P Michael Surge😢
I commend you for remembering Dr Sugrue. He continues to be the perfect example of a professor.
This content is top tier. I can't wait to see where this channel goes
I'm very much delighted after watching your explanation, it allows me to see a different perspective and it's refreshing. keep it up bro!
Your style is very unique on TH-cam. Glad to come across your channel.
Hey man this series you’re doing is awesome! Really enjoying each of these lectures.
Thank you very much for exposing me to these great hidden works. You've earned yourself a new subscriber
The whole purpose of being here is to enjoy and explore. This is why both science and art are essential. One could argue that studying the Earth's curvature or even Darwin researching butterflies... might seem insignificant on their own. However, if they spark curiosity and inspire a deeper exploration of nature, then they fulfill their purpose.
This is excellent work you’re putting out here, Johnathan! Can’t wait to give this a listen.
Thanks as always!
Thanks for engaging with my work ... we are just getting started!
Coming from the Gutter myself im extremely grateful i have found this Material Thanks Brotha once again for the knowledge hope one day i can visit these lectures in person till them keep Grinding Carnal...
Absolutely loved this lecture. In the 21st century, I think the wisdom from this discourse reminds us that true art should empower us to live better lives. The tragedy of our times is that such enriching art is getting harder to find due to the rise of mimetics and commodification. It's up to us as individuals to discern and seek out art that truly matters and has depth.
Rousseau’s point about the next generation of wise individuals not needing teachers but following the spirit of virtue in the arts by intuition is inspiring, it reminds me of Herbert Marcuse and The Great Refusal. It emphasizes that our attention is precious, and we should focus it on subjects that have genuine substance and depth. To not abandon art, but rather, strive to appreciate and support art that enriches our lives.
Again, great talk, looking forward to your next video!
Seeming rather than being, splits your soul into two. @ 00:58:30🙏
Excellent lecture and a cogent reading of Rousseau
It is the most important practice to remind ourselves daily that we are energetic beings.. coming here over and over to explore the material realm. Death is an illusion. I never get caught up with how intellectual or distinguished one becomes.
Love the performance style. Made it very entertaining.
Feeling called out a minute into a video two hours long is wild.
there's more where that came from :)
And yet here I am, love a challenge.
@@bi.johnathanit used to be that being right was what was important, however being challenged and proven wrong on different issues is now much more important. At least in my opinion, honor, humility, and integrity. It’s my belief that pride can be replaced with those three words. Am I mistaken.?
😂😂😂 great candor my friend
can't tell if elaborate sardonic troll or somewhat self aware deliberate high brow poshness. Really owning it either way.
Yeah, you're telling me. It's pretty clearly the latter, I would say.
yep... they mean it. It's a modern take on Michael Sugrue's style. Suprised that world still exists. I except philosophers to be Zizek like.
@@LeoulB Michael Sugrue is quite awesome
@@adamqadmon true, 🍻
just pointing that this esthetic was standard for the time... even the bare minimum of decorum. Today it's an acquired taste.
Well done Johnathan. Great as always, please keep it up.
Incredible production value
listening to this immediately after Ralston College's "Education without Indoctrination: Can it Exist?" is giving me deep identity whiplash, and this as someone who has always loved philosophy and eschewed a formal university education in favor of the path of an auto-didact. especially in light of the inescapability of mimesis/reverse-mimesis on the decisions I've made.
well done Johnathan. so glad to have discovered you through David Perell, as i have many other remarkable writers and thinkers. you've compelled me to write, discover, and re-examine. thank you so much.
What an amazing lecture. Hooked.
Fantastic lecture! If I remember correctly the Chinese phrase is actually the other way around: 书中自有黄金屋,书中自有颜如玉
1:14:46 yes! similar to athenian theater, can we make these philosophical talks be done in an open air theater and be open to all citizenry and not just closed off to ticket holders?
i dont know who you are , but being Based + High IQ & having Money + Taste is a rare combo.
combining all of them for creating masterpieces like these and giving them away in a charitable way to the masses is even more beautiful.
Hope you find a good woman and birth at least 6 kids. The world needs more of this.
lmao this is some kinda compliment
@@Qavsify ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Wow
Lmao 💯
@@Qavsify:p
Incredible lecture, you’re very engaging and clear in your speech, you explained the issue very well. I study philosophy and sociology and am looking for any help i can find online for my studies, and this was very helpful. Thank you very much, good luck with the work you do, hope it only gets better with time!
Man as an Alexandrian, I really wish people would stop repeating this myth.
The claim that Muslims burned the Library of Alexandria and the infamous quote that is unjustly attributed to Umar ibn al-Khattab were first mentioned several centuries after the incident allegedly took place and recorded by someone known for being prejudiced against Muslims.
But these details, from the Caliph's quote to the incredulous six months it supposedly took to burn all the books, weren't written down until 300 years after the fact. These facts condemning Omar were written by Bishop Gregory Bar Hebræus, a Christian who spent a great deal of time writing about Moslem atrocities without much historical documentation.[1]
There is no single reliable source that mentions this ever happening.
Several other modern historians such as Edward Gibbon, Eusèbe Renaudot, Alfred J. Butler, Victor Chauvin, Paul Casanova, Gustave Le Bon, Eugenio Griffini, Kelly Trumble and Roy MacLeod all rejected this story and described it as a fabricated myth.
The Library of Alexandria didn't even exist at the time. It was accidentally burned by the troops of Julius Caesar roughly 700 years earlier, and the establishment ceased to exist after a brief revival in the Roman era, but that was long before the Islamisation.
A comment from quora.
Thank you bro for ypur clarification.
You preach what you are becoming :)
There is madness in everything.
1:27:01 changed my life, forever I've focused on impact and making the world a better place, frustrated in believing that it's because of a lack of good teachers. I'm now reassessing this and seeing it as a fixed mindset. The best will aim to be the best regardless of resources but it feels morally right to make things accessible. these do not need to be mutually exclusive.
Amazing
What a communactor !
Thanks for the summaries and understanding !
Put this man on all the medias and podcasts !
Is this how it is to study at ivy league !! ?
So deep about intellectuals! At 9:32 “The great founders of the great intellectual traditions don’t write books.” Interesting to note that Mohamed set off a book-based tradition where he claimed he didn’t write the book himself. Have you read it, Jonathan?
So reality is self configuring self generative and you are the ultimate judge of yourself. Who is this mysterious self we all refer to?
Good video Johnathan, thanks for posting.
Would love a lecture on GK Chesterton
Excellent
This is an interesting format, but I much prefer the podcast setting with an expert. The 2 podcasts with Brian Leiter are the 2 videos that make me subscribe. Is less preachy and more an exploration.
The new Sugrue. This time with Fight Club references in a Rousseau lecture. Love to see it!
Hey, careful ascribing such comparisons! This guy is nowhere close to professor Sugrue and if he has any humility at all he would agree with me!
ahhhh i needed this one. less words less videos
Would be nice to have your lectures numbered so I can make my way through them in an appropriate order when there is one, and know I’ve not skipped one along the way.
21:51 what makes a comunity is the common help given regardless of individual references
Excellent lecture. I would love details on how to attend.
Wonderful lecture.
The human all of them In a good environment from birth . The intellectual knowledge of life. Thanks
Caliph Umar didn't order the burning of the library. It's has something to do with the prejudiced nature of the orientalists who never lose a chance to malign Islam.
Would mind me asking where your suit is from?
sherlock holmes
Its really nice, must be bespoke, made for his measures
I love this ❤
A failed entrepreneur found solace in Nietzsche.
That's the crux of human rationalization of one's status; getting peace either in 'slave', or in 'master' mentality.
Wonderful lecture infront great listeners
9:25-10:05
I could not find your book on Amazon about Rene Girard
Thanks for the amazing lectures
I think it's not finished. He did put it on his website though.
Wow, that's awesome. I didn't know John Krasinski went into philosophy 👀
That's that pimp shit mein dude. You are heavily appreciated for your insights, my beautiful brother❤️🔥
How can we attend a lecture as an audience member?
do you do live debates? would love to see one with Alex O connor
How can I possibly. attend your upcoming lectures in-person?
Isn’t Omar’s burning of the library of Alexandria debated? 2:15
01:01:04
good video
what is this piano music bro
Certainly something fascinating and true concepts, however I still think in as much as democracy produces more bad ideas, in aggregate it still by far produced way more 'good' ideas as well. The ratio is still highly skewed towards bad ideas, but without democratization of communication and media, those good ideas would be buried and never have the footing they do today either.
Welp, Rousseau certainly nailed "Hollywood made America" didn't he?
good lecture
29:43
These arguments are not in balance - you can't say that "The art brings people together but all the wrong ways". No. To condemn a whole industry is hardly intellectual nor wise.
By The way, it was delightful to see your book add soon after you had declared that great men don't need to write books - they'll be written for them!
Sorry, the goal of being the moral superior asks for critisism - you know, that is the way to become superior, to get past a tighter critisism. The end goal of moral critisism is to bring about the higher character in another, but immoral critisism aims to destruction for its sake.
I hope all the best for you brother!
contemplation is a supplement to living, not the main course
why didnt i got this channel in my recommendations.. i missed a lot
johnathan, are *you* living the good life?
I would love to hear your take on these “issues” based on your own experience, not history.
1:02:50
You could be a bad person even if the education. Science just amplifies you character
were did you come from
Bi's style of presentation seems heavily inspired by the young Michael Sugrue
Can confirm this is true based on him telling me
everything grows and then dies. not sure why the lengthy dissection. yes once the contrast in the gulf between delusional and the truly knowlegable has calcified, things break.
Is this a scene from a long movie, the camera, the set, the attractive audience, the clothes, the editing... this is not your local philosophy club.
Also has a strong Review Brah vibe.
Also subbed and i dont even like philosophy.
speaking of Athenians being tricksters, your words are cloaked in wordplay and the poetry of language. Something you are set against. Athenians believed in many gods. the Spartans believed in many gods and in general both communities believed in the same gods and praised both the same way. you are putting the idea forward that says, heroes are better ways to live than intelligence and art. but our country was founded by people who believed just the opposite. they believed the pen was mightier than the sword. that is why this country has a constitution that defines our laws. we are not ruled by an elite god-like group. our civil war showed quite clearly that war is not the answer. during both ww1 and ww2 America was reluctant to enter either war. if we went to war our "heroes" would suffer the most. if they came home at all it would be with broken hearts and minds not to mention a few legs, arms, and other body parts. what this lecture says is that a young person has only developed his body and not his mind. before he thinks, we the elite, will conscript him/her into the armed forces and send him to the front lines. Just like king David did to get rid of his loyal hero. you are saying king david was a voyeur, luster, a massagist, and some kind of power-seeking hero. if you want a woman, go out and take her. seems caveman to me. the truth of the matter is that civilization today claims to be positively affected by the arts. the arts show intelligence and the freedom to think whatever you want to think. your spartan world believes might is right. Of course, Jon Bi will be back at home enjoying his fine wine, reading a book beside the fire with his lapdog and his wife will be preparing dinner like she should be.
I don't understand why he has the music so inrense that it's hard to undersatnd what he is saying.
How am I watching an intellectual telling me intellectualism is not good for me so I should stop pursuing intellectualism.
Have the intro music be a little quieter - that is the only improvement that can be made to this video lol
One could say . . . that even this lecture is poison. And me thinking now that this lecture is poison is part of the poison of this lecture. There is definitely a trap in this mode of being. Maybe the trap is that the belief that everything is done by humans is in rational self interest and maybe that we need to super impose prescriptions and disregard axioms of the past. All I can be certain of is my ignorance.
Then how do you grow at all? Not just in an intellectual manner. But at all, with this approach? This is why human error or sin exists at all. We will all have vices and things we long for that may be of error...but attempting to live a perfect life denying this leads to that same thing yet in a way worse way.
@@Austin-e5u The way to true growth is through quicker, deeper, and more joyful repentance.
Subbed
I dont think umar burned down the Alexandria liberary
What does it mean to be a domesticated human? What is it to be human?
2h? Thanks.
14:30
Dan Lok's son.
It looks like Johnathan could fix the next James Cameron movie.
Caliph Umar did not burn the library of Alexandria, lol 😂
Who did then?
I thought it was the Turkish General of the Ottoman Empire?
The Printing Press and Its consequences
Johnny B Good!
Dial back the passionate inflection. It's interupting the content like bad acting.
Just read the audience and naturally convey the message.
Kanye roblox suit
I feel alright