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Brandon Gillette
Добавлен 30 ноя 2017
Видео
Locke - Essay Concerning Human Understanding
Просмотров 92Месяц назад
Locke - Essay Concerning Human Understanding
Marx
Просмотров 101Год назад
Intro 00:00 Marx and Engels 01:32 Context 02:45 Revolution (political) in France 03:39 Revolution (philosophical) in Germany 06:28 Revolution (industrial) in Britain 16:48 Alienation 21:23 Exploitation 23:11 Industrial Conditions 28:27 Workers' Revolution 30:08 Marx's Complex Legacy 31:03 Marxist Revolutions 31:30 Organized Labor 33:24 Participatory Government 34:19 Welfare States 36:43 Market ...
Physicalism
Просмотров 98Год назад
Intro 00:00 Ryle's Critique of Dualism 01:00 Conceptual Map 06:20 The Mind/Brain Identity Theory 15:18 Eliminative Materialism 19:28 Functionalism 35:10 Outro 50:50
Identity, Personal Identity, and Locke
Просмотров 134Год назад
Intro/What the Textbook is Doing 00:00 Identity 02:23 Object Identity 06:38 Personal Identity 13:03 Replacement Arguments 17:45 Duplication Arguments 21:21 Locke's View of Identity 27:33 Souls in Theories of Identity 35:00
Dualism
Просмотров 107Год назад
Different Philosophical Eras 00:00 Ancient Dualism 07:35 Medieval Dualism 12:30 Importing Dualism into Christianity 14:32 Descartes and Modern Dualism 20:30 The Mind/Body Interaction Problem 24:44 Descartes' Unsuccessful Reply 31:10 Alternatives to Dualism 35:15
Cigman - Death, Misfortune, and Species Inequality
Просмотров 382 года назад
Cigman - Death, Misfortune, and Species Inequality
humans are mammals. and all mammals are animals.
Thanks
Marx's theory is not some kind of needs-based 'anyone who needs it gets it' kind of theory. It is a very specific historically contextual theory that describes distribution based on social forces, and a proposal on how the existing structures can or must be altered to bring about a more majoritarian distribution. His theory is not what is "obviously stupid", it is you and your mischaracterised understanding of it
Wondering what is missing in the Enquiry that should be valuable to read in the Treatise?
@kredit787 There are a number of topics covered in the Treatise but not the Enquiries (personal identity is one if I remember correctly). The Enquiries are certainly more polished, and where they omit arguments that are found in the Treatise, it is sometimes the case that the argument in the Treatise isn't very good. That said, I think that reading the Treatise makes it easier to see Hume's overall project more easily and how his Enquiries, though published separately, are part of a cohesive enterprise.
@@brandongillette6463 Personal identity is fascinating. Also, the is-ought problem seems not in the Enquiry.
In regard to the image of a chair mistaken for a chair, subreption is the term for conflation of knowledge for experience, the idea of an object for the object itself. This was written by Kant in his dissertation. There is a famous image of a tobacco pipe with a message underneath "This is not a pipe."
after hours of searching a lecture that could make me understand the context of the text than the actual book (Which is mentioned that is hard to understand because it's too academic and formal). THANK YOU MR. BRANDON GILLETTE <3
Exactly, just giving food to kids in Africa or a homeless doesn't dig them out of poverty, similarly to Europe's welfare programs that mostly don't work. There are many tiny bits needed to dig people out of poverty: food, shelter, medicine, infrastructure (roads, internet), low corruption, good judicial system, personal freedom (e.g. to study, move), education, good business environment (e.g. no wars), cultural and psychological issues (e.g. what parents teach their kids). Lack of any of these keeps people poor.
I agree, it shouldn't matter to the mind whether the same experience is provided via a machine or interaction with the physical world, because the mind doesn't have direct access to the physical world anyway, and only though the senses.
FIRST COMMENT!!! Tbh, I never been able to have the first comment - lol.
Watched this video for your class. First comment lol.
Then what would be a good moral view?
There are many options that are better than egoism. Broadly, there are a variety of consequentialist views, the most famous of which is utilitarianism. There are views that establish moral duties by means of rational procedures (famously, Kant's view), and there are pluralism views like W.D. Ross's. Add in virtue ethics, and that constitutes the most mainstream set of moral views in contemporary philosophy. This channel includes discussions of each.
@@brandongillette6463 appreciate it, ill check them out
Very clear and concise, helped me a lot! Thanks from Australia.
The other day, as I was unpacking the trolley after shopping, a young man/ teenager, came running past me fast as he could, and away. I asked the car guard (look it up, maybe?) what was up, and he found out the kid had stolen a jersey (I think you'd call that a "sweater") from one of the clothes stores. The car guard said something like, "He can't be from around here, because that's the wrong way. He should've just asked around and told people his problem. He could've asked me. I've got two jerseys at the moment. I could've given him one." Make of that what you will. As soon as the whole "relative" angle appears, I get suspicious. I suspect that for a large part of the old Soviet time, the "economist-driven countries" actively parasitized the many Neville Chamberlain Faculties of Economics, of the soft, fat world, where you can rely on people to either have a strong impulse not to be too disruptive (except in the odd opposite case), or to only be there to get a credit with the least amout of effort possible to overcome some barrier to better employment. Niceness and laziness already make for easy work injecting the miracle cure package into parts of such environments. And niceness can be worked over - I suspect has been actively worked over - to be extended to implicit bans on wrong-thinking. Don't do that; buy our all new perfectly perfected social engineering plan, and end all your problems forever. I exaggerate. To point out that I have my suspicions, I exaggerate a bit. But not that much. OK, out of the Nebel, then. Medals? I think maybe the explanation for why there are so few Olympic event medals for India is that these are too boring to draw much attention there. They can't compete with cricket, for starters. Among other things, cricket is nice and dangerous. The pitcher is allowed to aim for your head if he wants. And if he hits you, you might die. That's more interesting to watch, and more tempting to waste time participating in than running round and round and round and round. Or jumping over something you couldn't jump over in real life, because the technique would make that too dangerous. Perceptions vary. And then there's the question of "blandness" in food. Depends on what makes for one's personal idea of blandness, I think? (And that's a kinda economic kind of behaviour?) In India a curry that blows the head off a visitor might be "piquant". And it'll make you thin, let never mind be slimming. In one of the fat countries, a sickly sweet cake might damage the taste buds of a visiting Masai, whose tastes are more habituated to things like unsalted blood, or curds and whey.
When Hume talks about "other philosophers" view on the self, what does he think their view is? Which philosophers is he responding to? Descartes?
When it comes to the idea that there is a notion of personal identity that persists through time and over change, Hume is replying to pretty much everybody. The idea that memory undergirds personal identity is Locke's view, so that part of the criticism is directed at him. Hume rejected Descartes' view of an immaterial self on more fundamental ground than its effect on views of personal identity.
Insightful
I don't have a concept of personal identity, I have never needed it nor care for such a concept. I don't even get why other people say they have such, it makes no sense.
Very nicely presented - well done!
This is sooo silly. If there is no self, then who is it that is denying that there is a self? Hume’s self, that’s who!! This self is a continuous process that lasts from birth ‘til death.
By virtue of what is the person that wrote the first paragraph of the Enquiry the same as (and NOT merely similar to) the person that wrote the last paragraph? Each of those people would have acknowledged the similarity, but denied the sameness required to account for a continuous self.
I conceive of a process ontology not a moving but separate snapshot “thing by new thing’ moments in time ontology. There is one person with one self from the first moment in time to the last moment in death: that’s life; that’s one’s self.
Awesome, glad to see a new video!
I disagree with one thing. Anger is a response to a perceived damage to self; emotional, physical, whatever. Pain is physical and wouldn't necessarily involve the self. Anger, I believe, is directly connected to self, as emotion is an extension of self. That's all, great video.
Migration to cities ... 16:50 - 16:59
May be : " up to two to three, or more [pieces] ". , I guess...
Post civil war u.s. rebuilding shoulda been "40 acres , a mule, and three pieces of [potato] gnocchi " then?
Thank you for this video! this makes it much more understandable than my schoolbook!!!!!
Good
Such a helpful and clear overview of Hume's notion of identity! Thank you so much for the tremendous effort and time put into this! I truly hope your videos get more attention.
word
how things got that way already determines whether the pattern can be/is just. the means decide the end.
thank you for this presentation, very interesting topic
I'll be adding some of your explanation to my presentation, goes without saying yes, ill honour name in it Thank you
"Duty of non-malevolence, that is doing no harm...because we're in a social situation and society couldn't long subsist and it would be worse for everybody if..we didn't have that mutual duty of non-malevolence". This sounds like consequentialism.
Yes. Ross clearly believes that an appreciation of the consequences does generate some duties. Though what separates Ross from a pure consequentialism is that he does not think that the only duty is to choose the best overall consequences, and that sometimes, other duties may supersede those duties based on consequences.
I had you as a philosophy professor my freshman year. I have to say you're an absolute genius and I love that I found this series. It was one of the only classes where I felt like I learned something. So many classes are just resuscitation but yours challenged me to think. Thank you for doing what you do sir.
Thank you for the kind words. I always hope people have a meaningful experience but often never really know. Just out of curiosity, how long ago (and where) did you take my class? And how in the world did you stumble upon this channel?
@@brandongillette6463 oh man it was a long time ago! Like 2017/2018ish? It was at a community college. Originally philosophy was my major, I changed it but I always wished I could take more classes.
Thank you for the interesting video. I've learned a lot.
You're welcome Sargent squirrel
2:12 Yeah. I had some medical hunger pangs and it looked like Lois Lowrys Giver gave me some memories of famines of the years past
This was a great video. Thanks for being engaging and clear in your explanations
thank you!
Got this video recommended to me. Interesting Lecture!
No clue why YT recommended this but it was actually really interesting. Good job RUclips algorithm you did something right.
dont know why this was recommended to me but i learnt a lot. Thanks!
hello class
Thanks a lot for this lecture, it was incredibly helpful. Subscribed :)
Thanks Brendon for putting this presentation together regarding Sen's take on the development of freedom. Your example of risk factors for famine interested me because you consider that government is not stupid and has everyone's backs so to speak if a natural disaster were to strike. While this may be true, it is also true that the fixation on economic growth and the energy used and the pollution outputs resultant from economic activities are the same things creating / increasing natural disaster risks through climatic warming and extreme weather events (there is plenty of evidence to support these connections). There has been and will continue to be situations where government disaster relief efforts will fall short due to the many disasters that will result as the planetary boundaries are overstepped. The human superorganism is outstripping resources and polluting the earths systems we rely on for our wellbeing, and our economic beliefs and systems endorse the plundering of resources and largely ignores the externalities of our economic paradigm. It is obvious that Sen uses an economic growth perspective to solve problems such as famine, however, it is economic growth that is causing greater global problems i.e. climate change, ocean acidification, biodiversity loss, toxin dispersal, industrial war institutions. Nevertheless, many politicians and economists claim that more economic growth will solve these problems caused by growth / development. Here’s the catch, any system that attempts to continually grow with finite resources and limited capacities to absorb the waste will fail. “There is a primary cause of the Continuous Critical Problems: It is growth. Exponential growth of energy use, material flows, and population against the earth’s physical limits. That which all the world sees as the solution to its problems is in fact a cause of those problems” , Meadows and Meadows (2007). Denis Meadows (2022) suggests that we do not need more technology to solve the problems caused by growth, that we have enough technology to do what needs to be done, however, there is a lack of will, ethics and norms to make the changes needed.
Hey Brandon. I disagree when it comes to a lack of "feeling" oneself. Sure, the self is transient and it isn't a feeling the same way anger or sadness is. I think the self lies more in the way that those emotions are named, interpreted, and experienced by an individual. Experiences and their categorization are greatly informed by one's own opinions and emotional, and mental landscape - a landscape that lends itself to one creating a framework and interpretive intellect that categorizes experiences/places/people/things based on its (the framework's) qualities. So, would the self not be the constructed interpreter of one's life inherent to and as formed by their experiences? Curious to hear what you think. Best. :-)
I think that we do commonly regard the self as something like you describe. I think it is easy to get the idea that Hume does not think there is a self. I think Hume's idea of the self may well be something like what you describe (if i am reading it as you intend). Hume's point in the material covered in this lecture is that there is no personal identity over time and theough change. To think that there is is to confuse similarity with sameness. If the self is the perspective that tells a coherent story of our experiences (psychologists like Danny Kahneman call this the "remembering self"), then that is something that does change over time. The similarity of my self today with my self yesterday does not entail an identity relation between the two selves. In other places in the Treatise and in the Enquiries, it looks to me like Hume takes seriously the idea of a punctate mind, that is, a mind that contains only one thought at a time. This is a matter of interpretation, but if he really thought that way, then he might deny even the idea of an overall framework, as nothing really "holds together" the totality of our experiences; they just occur in series. Whether his view (whatever it really was) is correct or not is another question. I have found it to be more convincing over time.
It's been a few decades since I read Hume but I think Hume's work is devestating to the idea that there is something fundamentally emprically real about the Self. I think somewhere he refers to a "bundle theory" of self. There was a lot of talk about "substance", "what things were in gthemselves". Leibniz had created the idea of Monads as some kind of fundamental entity. I think both empricism and their discussion of substance fails. As soon as you postulate a Mind and a Body as being absolutely fundamentally two different substances, your in trouble when you try and explain how they relate. The rationalists hung themselves on this hook. Anyhow Hume is an empricist and would have rejected much of Bishop Berkeley, who stated that all we can know is ideas. Hume talked about a bundle theory. Sometimes I see this as if it were a thread or rope. Any fibre in the rope has a short length but gives it's strength to the body of the rope. No fibre continues from the beginning to the end. There is no requirement for either "constant - ness" of each thread, or invariability - each thread is different. The rope as a whole can still be identified and has properties that are not possessed by any particular thread. In this way it constitutes, rightly, the idea of being a "thing". My particular view is the self is a virtual object. We are much more accustomed to the virtual worlds of computers now, these concepts were unimaginable for the rationalists - at least in detail. We know much more about the nature of the world we sense now and know that there are things we cannot sense - for example ultravbiolet light. Our senses provide information to the brain/mind from a very narrow spectrum of reality. Our senses are sculpted by evolution and have many biases and (literally) blind spots. Any narrative that seeks to explain our "impressions" (as the Rationalist names it) must take account of this radical poverty and forever give up on discovering a whole truth. For me truths are valid frames of references, no more. The may have utility, there may be good and bad frames but the data from which we construct must always be partial. Therefore, if we are to examine the consequences of our conclusions, we must be modest and very circumspect.
I find these comments very interesting. I'd like to add that Hune was an empiricist and believed reality could only be derived through the senses. Unfortunately, our senses deceive us. A very pragmatic example of this would be a marshmallow that is dry, vs. one that is applied to heat. According to Hume, the physical substance becomes altered solely because we experience a different type of sensory data (but the substance itself has not changed in terms of its chemical composition, but rather just in terms of its qualitative form. This doesn't change the reality of the substance, but only our perception of it. This is why the rationalist, like Rene Descartes, John Locke, and Leibniz, and before then, plato, with his theory of forms, claimed that there needed to be a way of comprehending why our experiences were as such. Logic is unchanging, while our experiences are fluid and dynamic; it's known as the apriori. It's true that all science grew out of empiricism, since the first people on earth were using their senses to understand the reality they lived in, but again, our senses never allow us to grasp the pure essence of reality, only our perception of it, due to a deception of our senses. Regarding the important to distinguish between persona and identity. I think it is important to note that ones' persona only consists of temporary thoughts, feelings, perceptions, etc., required in specific situations and to fulfill specific tasks like school or work. Hume was also an atheist, so he was fundamentally opposed to the metaphysical concept of intuition. He rejected the idea of causation and essentially believed that every second of existence was a new reality. He uses his skepticism of an objective reality to oppose the idea of being governed under divine control. Unfortunately, though, just because something can not be quantified doesn't mean it's non-existent. To Hume, all that is metaphysical os out of the realm of possibility. Metaphysics is its own field of philosophy that deserves equal merit since it deals with different types of phenomenonology. While Hume mentions that the self ceases to exist while sleeping, this is simply not true. This assertion Hume made was greatly respected as being a product of his culture, as all credible ideas are, but psychoanalysis and modern science have debunked this idea. The brain enters another realm of conscious awareness that is known as the subconscious mind. We can be affected by things we are not even aware of due to a repression of experiences, etc.. If there was no self, we would not be affected by our past and our memories. It would cease to affect us. The fact that we still possess feelings towards the past signifies that something still remains active within us. The psyche, according to Sigmund Freud and Carl jung is the area in the brain responsible for storing these experiences. Also, in most traditional cultures, dreams are a manifestation of the future. They also represent the unique qualities that each person posesses, a d how to go about reaching their potential. This is a form of anthropomorphism, found especially in Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism and jainism, and many traditional philosophies. I do agree with what you guys are asserting. However, the issue itself is more complex and needs to be considered from not only a philosophical perspective but a psychological and theological one too. It's a muti disciplined debate,
Rene Descartes postulated that if a scientist used a brain vat to represent the world through sensory data, we would have no other way of comprehending our experiences, and thus believe that our experiences corelated perfectly with reality. But without logic, it ultimately leads to skepticism and therefore infallibility. If we cannot agree on certain basic, fundamental principles, such as logic, then there really is no point in trying to understand reality. The fact that we study philosophy is precisely because we believe, subconsciously, that something does exist universally. Or the fact that I'm responding to your guys' comments, is a manifestation of the teleology that I possess to persue truth itself. Same with you guys. If we truly percieved reality as being unknown, and therefore held skepticism, then it wouldn't matter anymore and we would therefore stop pursuing these fundamental questions. My point is that we believe we will get somewhere by pondering reality, and this persuit of a unified truth is why we are not content with skepticism itself, otherwise, the philosophical tradition would have ceased to exist thousands of years ago. The fact that it hasn't, I'd because most of us believe we are manifestors of our own destiny. We are not just mere passive observers of the cosmos, we are active participants. We are made from reality and also form reality as well. That's what's unique about humans. We are the only specie that possess the will to trancend our instinctual essence and attain conciousness. Animals cannot understand why they are doing what they are doing. I'm not asserting, however, that we are more valuable than animals, as this is anthropocentrism and i happen to align my views with pantheism, not dualism. I'm simply saying that we have a greater capacity to act, both for good and for evil.
I want to say that I really appreciate this stimulating discussion. And the reason I'm sending other comments is because it won't let me type everything in one. It exceeded the required length.
I'm Spanish speaker, I use to practice my English with your videos cuz I'm follower of people you've brought before
Only law book I bought.
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