Samsara Diagnostics
Samsara Diagnostics
  • Видео 25
  • Просмотров 5 820
Allergic to the Ancients | with Jonatan Anabalon
This episode of Samsara Audio puts your host Matthew in a reflective conversation with Jonatan Anabalon, a Norwegian middle school teacher with a Master's in Anthropology from the University of Bergen. Matthew and Jonatan met through Samsara Study Group's ongoing Kyoto School reading group, which lead to this conversation about the tensions in various models and analogies for how we approach truth.
This dialogue delves into topics such as the modern versus ancient philosophical outlooks, the concerns with conceptualizing truth as "beyond," and the process of seeking and participating in truth. Furthermore, Matthew and Jonatan explore the metaphorical imagery of the ox-herding pictures in Z...
Просмотров: 123

Видео

Christianity, Sacrificial and Shamanic | with Cleo Kearns
Просмотров 1452 месяца назад
This month’s episode of Samsara Audio features a conversation with Dr. Cleo Kearns (PhD, Columbia) who writes about continental philosophy, science, and the book of Genesis at her Substack (cleokearns.substack.com). Cleo has taught and published for decades about the psychology of religion, the anthropology of ritual, and the reading of the Abrahamic Scriptures. Cleo is a sister in Christ and a...
Taking Lacan to Church | with Mark Gerard Murphy
Просмотров 1794 месяца назад
This week Samsara Audio welcomes Mark Gerard Murphy, author of The Direction of Desire: John of the Cross, Jacques Lacan, and the Contemporary Understanding of Spiritual Direction. Mark teaches mysticism, psychoanalysis, and continental philosophy at St. Mary’s University, Twickenham, and is also actively involved in spiritual direction within the Roman Catholic Church. Together we explored the...
Nietzsche and the Politics of Leisure | with Daniel Tutt
Просмотров 4434 месяца назад
This week I’m excited to share a conversation I had with Daniel Tutt (@emancipations) a Marxist theorist and professor of philosophy at George Washington University, about his recently published book "How to Read like a Parasite: How the Left got High on Nietzsche." His book provides a much needed intervention in Nietzsche studies by rigorously insisting on the need to read Nietzsche in his pol...
Conversation, NOT Conversion | with Joel Carini (The Natural Theologian)
Просмотров 284 месяца назад
In this long overdue episode of Samsara Audio, my old friend @NaturalTheologian (Joel Carini) joins me to discuss his piece “Berating the Godfearers” which raises a host of questions close to both our hearts - how does the Christian ideology of “worldview” get conversion wrong, and consequently disable real conversation along the way? This conversation was born out of years deep inside particul...
Eco-Theology with John Scottus Eriugena (Presentation)
Просмотров 424 месяца назад
This presentation about reading John Scottus Eriugena, a 9th century Irish Neo-Platonist theologian, from an eco-theological perspective was delivered on May 11, 2027 as part of an undergraduate panel at the International Congress of Medieval Studies. In the presentation, I advance a few crucial ways that we could (re-)read Scottus' "Periphyseon" as containing conceptual resources for an ecolog...
Nagarjuna and Hegel | with Quinn Whelehan
Просмотров 2 тыс.7 месяцев назад
This week Quinn Whelehan joins me on Samsara Audio to talk about studying at a Buddhist university, the basic structure of Nagarjuna’s four-fold logic, and what happens when we put Buddhist philosophy in dialogue with Hegel. If you’d like to hear more from Quinn, I recommend his excellent presentations “Hegel, Buddhism, and the Becoming of Spirit,” and “The Living Contradiction” over at Philoso...
Zen in the Midwest | with Shinkyū
Просмотров 528 месяцев назад
I'm joined this week on Samsara Audio by a long-time Twitter mutual Shinkyū (@shinkyu6058 ), a working class Zen practitioner and dharma teacher at the Grand Rapids Buddhist Temple. This conversation brings the reader into a different religious perspective - Zen in small town America where the ancient tradition of Buddhism finds itself in dialogue with a Christian (and post-Christian) culture. ...
Liberating Love Politically | with Dimitri Crooijmans (Actual Spirit)
Просмотров 718 месяцев назад
Two episodes in one month! Things have been crazy at Samsara Audio. This time I had the joy of hosting a conversation with @DialectMaterial (Dimitri Crooijmans). He writes on Substack at dimitricrooijmans.substack.com, and you can follow his RUclips channel for quality philosophical material. Dimitri provided listeners with a master class in understanding and applying Hegel's method to the prac...
Holding space for doubt | with Minnow Park
Просмотров 1489 месяцев назад
This week Samsara Audio hosts a raw conversation with my friend Minnow Park about faith, deconstruction, and re-alignment. Minnow is a writer, coach, and photographer from NYC (likethefish.blog) who helps to organize the online writer's collective Foster (foster.co). Don't miss a single episode of Samsara Audio subscribe today over at Substack (samsara.substack.com) to receive new episodes in y...
Compassion, as a kind of dying | with Javier Rivera
Просмотров 7810 месяцев назад
Episode 4 of Samsara Audio invites Javier Rivera, a writer, veteran, and student of religion at University of Arizona. He has a book coming out in December, but I highly recommend you check out his excellent work at his Substack: javisfunnygmailcom.substack.com/ In this conversation, we explored Javier's experience as a non-traditional student, especially as academia begins to grapple with the ...
Encountering emptiness: A conversation with Vivid Void
Просмотров 22211 месяцев назад
In episode #3 of Samsara Audio, I'm delighted to have Gabe from Vivid Void (Twitter: @VividVoid_) as a guest. He's a mystic, meditator, and thinker who I've followed for a while on Twitter. He also writes at vividvoid.substack.com. In this conversation, we explored: 1. How Gabe started sharing his public journey of healing from trauma 2. How Gabe's spiritual practice began, and the influence of...
Let's deconstruct the Childhood Friend trope in Anime
Просмотров 275Год назад
This video essay is a personal and psychoanalytic exploration of the Childhood Friend trope in anime, especially as read through the anime "Kimi no Iru Machi." You can also read a transcript of the video here: www.samsara.clinic/deconstructing-the-childhood-friend-trope-in-anime/ If you liked what you heard, please like the video and subscribe to Samsara Audio on RUclips. You can also find the ...
Samsara Audio #2 - Emancipation, Christianity, and Tokugawa Japan
Просмотров 55Год назад
Samsara Audio #2 - Emancipation, Christianity, and Tokugawa Japan
Analyzing the contemporary desire for a king
Просмотров 44Год назад
Analyzing the contemporary desire for a king
The Covenant Book: A Barthian Theory of Revelation and Inerrancy
Просмотров 47Год назад
The Covenant Book: A Barthian Theory of Revelation and Inerrancy
What is Jouissance? Enjoyment, Pleasure, Pain
Просмотров 177Год назад
What is Jouissance? Enjoyment, Pleasure, Pain
What is Jouissance? (Original)
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.Год назад
What is Jouissance? (Original)
Samsara Audio #1 - How did human self-destructive behavior emerge?
Просмотров 42Год назад
Samsara Audio #1 - How did human self-destructive behavior emerge?

Комментарии

  • @craigcolbourn8351
    @craigcolbourn8351 3 месяца назад

    I kind of think of it as an illusionary elimination of all fear and lack. When in intense pain, you can get the illusion of not being afraid of it, because you’re already there. Hence, the fear expectation is void. Perhaps intense pleasure can give the illusion of a similar bliss , of all fear being gone.

    • @samsaradiagnostics
      @samsaradiagnostics 3 месяца назад

      I have never thought about it this way, but I really like your perspective! "the bliss of all fear being gone" because we're already in the midst of what we feared most -- and yet we live.

  • @---vj2de
    @---vj2de 5 месяцев назад

    hello I'm not sure if you still reply on these but thought it was worth an ask anyway. I found the idea of jouissance being a mobius strip of pleasure really interesting and the story of a guy getting hit by a car and describing it as jouissance made me laugh, because it made sense in my head, some things we experience can have both aspects of pleasure and suffering simultaneously, or the distinction between them can become blurred, and that would be my definition of jouissance as well. But after a few days of digging through a few different interpretations of it I'm a little confused and was hoping you could clarify, I read that jouissance is thought to be what happens after you transgress the pleasure principle, and my humble understanding of that is "too much pleasure is suffering", or sort of exceeding ecstacy would become dysphoria. Is there something I don't understand completely and what are your thoughts on "exceeding pleasure vs pain and joy at the same time" thank you

    • @samsaradiagnostics
      @samsaradiagnostics 5 месяцев назад

      Hi, friend! Thanks for taking the time to ask a question and engage. I really appreciate it. What I didn't bring into this video, but which is relevant, is the difference between desire and drive in Lacan's formulations. I'm only a couple steps ahead of a beginner when it comes to reading Lacan, but my personal interpretation of things here is that pleasure relates more to desire, whereas jouissance is related more to drive. Desire is a lack or void that we feel must be filled, and thus we search for objects to fill it. Pleasure has this shape to where we feel a tension or conflict and want to resolve it through the acquisition of some object which will correlate with an affective state of resolution. However, drive involves continual repetition around the lack rather than an attempt to fill the lack. Drive enjoys its failure to fill the lack, it enjoys its falling short, it enjoys simply its own repetition. In the realm of drive, I think we find ourselves more on the terrain of jouissance. Jouissance is the intensification of a contradiction through its continual repetition, not the dissolution of the contradiction through the relaxation of pleasure. This intensification is both painful and enjoyable. Ironically then, it is desire which always fails (because it cannot fill its own lack), whereas drive always produces its goal, for its very aim is failure. Did you find this comment helpful at all? Please let me know if you don't feel that I'm properly addressing your question.

    • @---vj2de
      @---vj2de 5 месяцев назад

      @@samsaradiagnostics Hello, well thank you for taking the time to respond I wasnt expecting to hear back from anyone haha. Ah okay, i've always thought of drive as a means to 'drive' yourself pleasure so to speak, in life i've understood drive be used interchangeably as a word for motivation so cheers for pointing that out, I wouldn't have made that distinction on my own. Does lacan talk more about drive in ecrits? you have me really interested in this now, i've always known about Faust and the futility of desire being an endless chase but haven't come across any answer that feels right to me other than schopenhaur's idea of "understanding the pursuit is meaningless but doing it anyway" sort of thing. I feel like I really need this at the moment, or maybe that's just my desire talking haha. I've had ecrits on my bookshelf for a while but have been a little intimidated by after trying and failing to read Being and Nothingness by Satre, any suggestions or your own ideas would be really appriciated. cheers dude

    • @samsaradiagnostics
      @samsaradiagnostics 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@---vj2de Reading "drive" as "motivation" is not bad though, because drive is this insistence which compels us to continually repeat and repeat, almost like something which is undead in us which carries us along. If you want to dive more into Lacan's Ecrits, I'd say two things -- (1) there is going to be a free two-day online conference about Lacan's Ecrits on Feb 24-Feb 25, which I would recommend that you join us for (You can learn more here: philosophyportal.online/writing-for-a-first-cause). I will be presenting on Sunday at 8:30 AM (Pacific). (2) The conference is being hosted by PhilosophyPortal, which is organized by Cadell Last. I highly recommend his RUclips channel @PhilosophyPortal and also his Lacan course at philosophyportal.online/ecrits There is only so much which can be accomplished in an exchange in RUclips comments, so my encouragement is to engage with the PhilosophyPortal community if you are curious and want to learn more, because I've found them to be a helpful and vibrant online community of thinkers.

  • @elementallobsterx
    @elementallobsterx 8 месяцев назад

    Since you mentioned anime, you should watch Ergo Proxy; it’s philosophical anime there is.

  • @O.G.Rose.Michelle.and.Daniel

    “How do we create idols of God?”-that’s an excellent way to frame Barth’s theology as a constant awareness of our tendency to make this mistake. The way you described his hermeneutics very well highlights an approach to the Bible that’s aware that the Bible itself can become an idol, so, to avoid this, how is it we can talk of Jesus himself as the Revelation and the Bible like John the Baptist, “pointing” toward that Revelation? I loved how you explained that, and I really, really, really appreciate the point that “creatureliness doesn’t require errancy”-I agree with the point you made there, which could help bridge some divides between Barth and other Protestant thinkers. No pressure, but if you ever feel compelled to do more work on Barth, I would love to hear it. I went through a Barth phrase 12 years ago, and I’ve always found myself circling Barth, but never finalizing my view. I need to do that work and am interested to hear further your thoughts (though, again, no hurry at all). Thanks again!

  • @O.G.Rose.Michelle.and.Daniel

    Excellent description, and I had no idea that Foucault was hit by a car. That was wonderful how you incorporated that into your explanation of jouissance (which is a word I've never said right once). We indeed enjoy pain and find pain in enjoyment, which means we are very strange...

  • @O.G.Rose.Michelle.and.Daniel

    Brilliant analysis, and the Estuary meeting structure sounds amazing. This is a fascinating topic, and I love how you tied the desire for a king to a desire to be recognized and to "surrender to something," as well as how you compared the structure of "having a king" with how judges were "raised up" in the Torah. I also really like how you compared "having a king" with Kafka. Excellent work!