Bernardo Kastrup | The Case for Idealism: full lecture part 1

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 พ.ย. 2024

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  • @skrrskrr99
    @skrrskrr99 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Oh, I've been waiting for this. My philosophy addiction is really bad and DR. KASTRUP has the medicine I need. 💊 💉 💊 💉

  • @cheri238
    @cheri238 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Definitely love listening to Bernado Kastrup. Amazing conversation, and I thank you.

  • @Rhimeson
    @Rhimeson หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    A good video that helped me visualise and understand BK's idea of the dashboard is 'Richard Feynman talks about light', even though he doesn't address consciousness or idealism directly, its the same idea. More grist for the mill, thank you for the interview, looking forward to reading his upcoming book and thinking about this further.

  • @olbluelips
    @olbluelips หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Well-presented, i really enjoyed listening to this

  • @MichaelMcCausland-pg6qs
    @MichaelMcCausland-pg6qs หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    You have one hell of imagination, however you can’t remember something and it’s in a dream state you’re telling me it still took place. Fascinating. Where are these holographic memory stored in the ether and the platonic shapes that’s possible plausible provable impossible

  • @CouplesLite
    @CouplesLite หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Excellent.

  • @SoyOtroTu
    @SoyOtroTu หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As the first Ultra-Minimalist Contemporary Spiritual Polymath in the world (not a Yogi nor a monk), my real "I" wrote the following:
    "The Totality of Existence IS The Universal Mind asking: 'ARE YOU ANOTHER ME?'. Your answer determines your reality. 'No' brings suffering, 'Yes, I AM ANOTHER YOU!' reveals Cosmic Love. This is the ONLY real Freedom: choose your answer and live the consequences. THERE IS NOTHING MORE TO KNOW. Suffer or be happy."
    If some of you want to indict me for doing it so, please talk to my lawyer: Bernardo Kastrup. 😂

  • @singzkva
    @singzkva หลายเดือนก่อน

    Ok I get it now. I'm convinced. It's hard to really go deep. Scary almost lol

    • @adventuresinawareness
      @adventuresinawareness  หลายเดือนก่อน

      In case it helps, in my experience the fear fades, the magic of it increases, and life carries on somewhat as before...

  • @singzkva
    @singzkva หลายเดือนก่อน

    we can imagine a pre-existing hierarchy within each progressively less disturbed state of consciousness. As one moves through cycles of death and rebirth, consciousness becomes increasingly refined, less encumbered by the emotional states that shape physical form. This gradual release from turbulence might allow consciousness to take on forms that are progressively more serene, more fluid, and aligned with a less restricted will. With each death we could be transformed into less disturbed waters and would be able to take on forms that such a place would allow. Until there is but a single form one could take, and that is the form of consciousness at complete rest. --Whatever that would be.

  • @Booklamp53
    @Booklamp53 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for making this public. Would it be possible to release the part of the next lecture where he goes though the slides he didn't have time for?

    • @adventuresinawareness
      @adventuresinawareness  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      We'll be releasing that soon, but meanwhile you can access it here: th-cam.com/video/hqsG99WGjQc/w-d-xo.html

    • @Booklamp53
      @Booklamp53 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@adventuresinawareness Thank you!

  • @joshuabaehr44
    @joshuabaehr44 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    How does analytic idealism fit (or not fit) with arguments for God, i.e., the Necessary Being of Ibn Sina (Avicenna), which says that all for all contingent things there must be a non-contingent, uncaused cause?
    I imagine that universal mind is this Necessary Being, but perhaps not one that 'causes' anything to happen since that would create a kind of duality. Is universal mind a different kind of Necessary Being?

  • @minnjony
    @minnjony หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'm so sorry to have missed the timing of this lecture live. If the "Division of separate objects is merely nominal", how is it that these arbitrary objects have different causal powers? This question keeps bugging me and I'd be so grateful if someone could explain it, thanks.

    • @adventuresinawareness
      @adventuresinawareness  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Such a great question! You could join the sessions in November if you want, and ask this

  • @pavlakosinova7736
    @pavlakosinova7736 หลายเดือนก่อน

    In experiments doing by Michael Levin the individual cells he got from a living organism behaved like individual organisms moving around, catching nutrients and even collecting other free cells. I thing they couldn´t do it without a (very simple) consciousness of their own. How could they separate it off their mother organisms consciousness or gain it another way? (Excuse my English, please.)

    • @adventuresinawareness
      @adventuresinawareness  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I think Bernardo would see it as an example of dissociation - I think its this video in which he goes into more detail, in conversation with Michael: th-cam.com/video/7woSXXu10nA/w-d-xo.html

  • @humbertoormen3482
    @humbertoormen3482 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Maybe somebody could measure the brain activity of a neuroscientist while she or he looks at a measurement of the brain activity of a subject who is having the fear experience, if both measurements are the same it would means that experience and brain activity are the same thing

  • @minnjony
    @minnjony หลายเดือนก่อน

    I also find meta cognition problematic in that surely a will implies meta cognition so why does B.K. think of Universal Consciousness as without it.

  • @pipopipo6477
    @pipopipo6477 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I find Bernardo (and Idealism in general) very interesting but it’s largely unproven or maybe even unprovable and therefore a bit esoteric… I agree wit him though that reality is probably way more complex then we will ever be able to understand and therefore I will remain a absurdist and agnostic probably till the day I die 😂

    • @adventuresinawareness
      @adventuresinawareness  16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I believe his stance is that although its unprovable, we can consider what we have good reason to believe - and the case for idealism is better than competing metaphysics. I hope that helps!

  • @MichaelMcCausland-pg6qs
    @MichaelMcCausland-pg6qs หลายเดือนก่อน

    You can become aware of being completely in synchronicity or synergy as bucky would say with holographic consciousness you’re just babbling about confusion in your own mind. Are you the king of your internal universe? I question that

  • @MichaelMcCausland-pg6qs
    @MichaelMcCausland-pg6qs หลายเดือนก่อน

    So you’re telling me now you know what other people experience that’s impossible for only the individual truly knows what they experience just that I said you better be the king of your own internal universe or the queen if you’re a woman, it doesn’t work in opposite directions, but there are those who are fish souls I haven’t lived very many livesbecause you said intuitiveness it should come to you very early that you are one with all that you are no thing and everything nowhere and everywhere that I/we are one consciousness with all it’s very simple velocity. It’s very ancient and it’s called WYDER.

  • @showponyexpressify
    @showponyexpressify 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Bernardo is a hard nose determinist and completely rejects freewill. May as well be Dawkins. Suggest ANWitehead or Federico Faggin instead. Thanks.

  • @bradmodd7856
    @bradmodd7856 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Despite the amount of words used, this is just plain vanilla dual aspect monism, it doesn't account for the role matter has in reality, it just claims it is a mirror image of the metaphysical

    • @itslightanddark
      @itslightanddark หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      I used to think this about what Bernardo says, but it is an understandable mistreatment. I think that if understood correctly, it’s is mostly a way to language most precisely what is available to know and not-know. It’s more of an epistemic exercise combined with recognizing what doesn’t come along for the ride if alternative epistemologies are truly dropped. It is not dual aspect monism because there is no dual aspect: The singular condition of experience is mind. Matter appears to us as mind. It is the appearance of matter that is mind, and it is matter that is also mind. But neither is matter any more than red light is truly red. I think I’m explaining this badly, but I think it’s perceivable just by noticing that we don’t experience matter, we experience mind. We define matter like a cartographer maps a territory, but as a matter of experience, both the map and the territory are mental. The best way that I have been able to see what Bernardo sees is just by noticing that matter is the needless postulation of an additional ontological category.

    • @ReflectiveJourney
      @ReflectiveJourney หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Nah that would be an upgrade. it is the worst version of idealism downstream from Schopenhauer's misreading of Kant. Getting to Hegelian or Schellingian idealism would be a better upgrade.

    • @ReflectiveJourney
      @ReflectiveJourney หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@itslightanddark This is all starting from the cartesian dream and unable to figure a way out and giving up. Reduction only works when there is an intelligible account of what is happening. It is the not explaining matter just explaining it way the mirror opposite of what dennett does. Although, i would put dennett in leagues above bernardo since his bottom up account is intricate and compelling.

    • @mba321
      @mba321 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      BK posits quite clearly that mind and mentation are the sole ontological primitive, of which matter appears as a representation of activity in that fundamental mentation.
      Very curious how you got "dual aspect monism" out of that.

    • @mba321
      @mba321 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@ReflectiveJourney Dennett is a laughingstock even among a growing number of physicalist thinkers. If you call something totally nonsensical and illogical even from a strictly physicalist perspective as "intricate" and "compelling" I'd say that's more a reflection of you.