The War of Ideas: Athens vs Sparta

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  • Опубликовано: 17 сен 2024
  • We are living in Sparta when we ought to be living in Athens.

Комментарии • 929

  • @SargonofAkkad
    @SargonofAkkad  27 дней назад +87

    If you'd like to support me, go and sign up to Lotuseaters.com and enjoy the work we've done on Aristotle: lotuseaters.com/premium-symposium-16-or-the-politics-of-aristotle-part-i-27-04-2023

    • @mstorgaardnielsen
      @mstorgaardnielsen 27 дней назад

      You should look into Welsh thinker Dave Snowden’s cynefin model.
      This lends some perspective to these differet model from an entirely different perspective.
      And he’s funny too.

    • @dogboymalone11
      @dogboymalone11 27 дней назад

      ...FLAT EARTH.
      DBM. ENGLAND.

    • @5seriesTurboz
      @5seriesTurboz 27 дней назад +1

      Pls can you rejoin Beau on Epochs (or ask another Lotus Eater to)? Beau is fantastic but its far more engaging with 2 people discussing.

    • @dogboymalone11
      @dogboymalone11 27 дней назад

      @@box1472 and the little season…
      (Revelation 20: 1-9).
      DBM. England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

    • @dogboymalone11
      @dogboymalone11 27 дней назад

      @@box1472 Jon Levi Channel.

  • @1Life2Little
    @1Life2Little 27 дней назад +588

    This is where you shine Carl. This is your format.

    • @juanconnor8224
      @juanconnor8224 27 дней назад +35

      Agreed 100%

    • @zxyatiywariii8
      @zxyatiywariii8 27 дней назад +17

      Yes, well said.

    • @jimtaylor294
      @jimtaylor294 26 дней назад +13

      Lord Sargon is a man of many talents 😌👌

    • @np4029
      @np4029 26 дней назад +2

      Sargon's audiencd pretending they only follow him for the 1% of historical content that he produces.

    • @goji059
      @goji059 26 дней назад +8

      @@np4029 it's why i started, and why i continue, rarely watch any lotuseater content

  • @MidlifeCrisisJoe
    @MidlifeCrisisJoe 27 дней назад +748

    Anti-fragile Aristotelian Advancement
    VS
    Paranoid Platonic Planners

    • @SomeCanine
      @SomeCanine 27 дней назад +36

      That's certainly one way of framing it. It sounds more like Aristotle was a progressive who thought people could just change with the times where Plato saw the destruction that came from abandoning tradition and order.

    • @bartsanders1553
      @bartsanders1553 27 дней назад

      ​@@SomeCanineNo, Aristotle was obviously a perpetual revolutionary while Plato was a limited revolutionary. The fact you don't know they were both progressive shows what a fascist you are.

    • @marvalice3455
      @marvalice3455 27 дней назад

      ​@@SomeCanine progressives don't believe in virtue, so this reading is worthless.
      You may just as well say Caesar was a fascist

    • @IbnRushd-mv3fp
      @IbnRushd-mv3fp 27 дней назад +20

      @SomeCanine yeah he progressed philosophical life more than commie plato ever did.

    • @shanosummesteros9563
      @shanosummesteros9563 27 дней назад +29

      @@SomeCanine Left/right, progressive/conservative, communist/capitalist - I think it usually boils down to whether the state orientates around individual rights (As USA's constitution is supposed to do) or the greater good. In the end I think the individual will always trump any society because society is only ever an agreement between individuals. The individual is a tangible organic entity, whilst society is an intangible construct of those entities.

  • @Joybuzzard
    @Joybuzzard 27 дней назад +279

    I noticed in university many years ago that the intro to philosophy course was centered on Plato. Many philosophers were presented, but the whole course seemed geared toward the idea that Plato's Republic was the foundation of any respectable philosophy. The professor talked about The Republic as a 'great watershed moment' because it was 'the first attempt at a planned society' which to him was 'the goal of every great philosopher since then'. The professor discussed a lot of different 'planned societies' and how they failed, but his main theme was that a 'planned society' should be the ultimate goal and that the failures of past 'planned societies' were just lessons that needed to be learned on the road to eventually perfecting it.
    When he criticized any given philosopher, it was always about their ideas leading to 'disorder' and 'chaos'.
    It occurred to me that this was the way intro to philosophy was taught in most universities, and that people majoring in all the different 'liberal arts' fields would take an 'intro to philosophy' course as part of that, and that liberal arts graduates were mostly being trained for administrative and social engineering functions, even anthropology and history were taught from an angle that seemed to explicitely promote complex hierarchies and the idea that controlling the day to day personal lives of citizens was part of what defined an 'advanced society'.

    • @campomambo
      @campomambo 27 дней назад +36

      That was nothing at all like my intro to philosophy class. We mostly just focused on all the cliche debates and thought experiments over history. But my philosophy teacher just came across as somebody who was a nerd over philosophers.

    • @nietname2468
      @nietname2468 27 дней назад +2

      Certainly not here.

    • @thek2despot426
      @thek2despot426 27 дней назад +9

      Yeah, I'm almost tempted to think this is fake. It fits almost too perfectly as a stereotype of a communist professor that conservatives worry about to lead me to believe this actually happened.

    • @schmo49
      @schmo49 26 дней назад +34

      Weird.
      My philosophy professor was a trad catholic who thought Socrates was something akin to a saint.
      He redpilled the hundred something freshman class with an argument against abortion using an acorn as an example.

    • @dallassukerkin6878
      @dallassukerkin6878 26 дней назад +25

      So, a 'real' Platonic state has never yet been tried then? :D Hmm ... that sounds familiar :)

  • @trygveplaustrum4634
    @trygveplaustrum4634 27 дней назад +313

    *Thrasyboulos was a legend.*
    An Athenian general who kept scoring victories despite his incompetent peers. When Sparta installed a puppet government, he led a rebellion of peasants to force Sparta back to the table and give Athens back its autonomy. He rejected the puppet government’s offer of a seat at their high table. What a legend.

    • @jeffreyscott4997
      @jeffreyscott4997 27 дней назад +5

      If Aristotle wasn't the greatest man who ever lived, he was.

    • @Jay_76
      @Jay_76 26 дней назад +16

      He was such a legendary General, he was killed by band of peasant farmers, because of the atrocities the soldiers under his command, committed.

    • @FreakazoidRobots
      @FreakazoidRobots 26 дней назад +19

      Is there some kind of Thrasyboulos movement going on right now? I didn't expect to see fanboys and haters of an ancient Greek general in the comments section. When did people get so passionate about this guy?

    • @TheControlBlue
      @TheControlBlue 26 дней назад

      Seems like obtuse foolishness to me.

    • @squidikka
      @squidikka 26 дней назад +12

      @@FreakazoidRobots When you see society around you in decay, you look to the past examples of strength and leadership. Sure, you can find this in many thing other than the romans and greeks, but it's pretty obvious that these cultures birthed the west. It's part tiktok gen latching onto trendy trends (stoicism) and part regular people developing a genuine interest.

  • @Dr3Mc3Ninja
    @Dr3Mc3Ninja 27 дней назад +303

    Keir is so unironically evil.

    • @bhante1345
      @bhante1345 26 дней назад +11

      So, you mean literally evil? Good God I loathe this overuse of the word unironic. "mUah BuT cArL uSeS iT"

    • @TheSoonToBePurgedJackMeHoffIV
      @TheSoonToBePurgedJackMeHoffIV 26 дней назад +2

      ​@@bhante1345take a breath, bud

    • @Hoppelite
      @Hoppelite 26 дней назад +16

      @@bhante1345 yeah i agree with you. Why use the word unironically? As opposed to Keir being ironically evil?

    • @kotarorune
      @kotarorune 26 дней назад +13

      He’s just evil.

    • @ModiRising
      @ModiRising 26 дней назад

      @@Hoppelite Cos it's not evil like moving the chair out from behind someone so that they fall on their arse when they sit down - Kier Starmer branded the public that had legitimate concerns as extremist thugs, doubled-down by giving them huge sentences and ruining their lives over something in most cases they should have been allowed to do, simply because he's culturally Marxist, WEF pocketed tyrant. If there's anything unironically evil, it's that - Our reality.

  • @mikelee9886
    @mikelee9886 27 дней назад +250

    The visual at the end... comparing Athens to Sparta, really really drove that message home.

    • @TransRoofKorean
      @TransRoofKorean 27 дней назад +20

      In some ways, it also just comes down to simpler things: Athens is a more viable central city for a world empire, being on the ocean, etc... much different dynamic than when it's just city-states competing for dominance in their local areas.
      Plus, those last great moments of Athens we tend to depict as its _second_ golden age... as its instability actually _became too great_ under democracy, what with that Peloponnesian War and all. Interesting that Sargon refers to it as lasting...
      It might be more factual to point out that the commie Spartans didn't permit private property and especially _commerce,_ which is going to lead to a lack of those magnificent, stately structures... perhaps it's that cultural asceticism that isn't so lasting.

    • @gemmalittleredcorvette4668
      @gemmalittleredcorvette4668 27 дней назад +8

      @@TransRoofKorean Yes those are good points to consider. The fall of Empires almost always boils down to a combination of factors.

    • @vane909090
      @vane909090 27 дней назад +10

      I thought that was a brutal ending.

    • @Wicker_
      @Wicker_ 26 дней назад

      The Spartans didn't the value the same things that the Athenians did, and so they built no massive degenerate city that could last ages. So what? Athens was at the time, and still is, a degenerate cess pit. Who cares about simply existing for a long time if it's in a horrific state?

  • @wright_handle
    @wright_handle 27 дней назад +165

    A video showing how Athens botched its own form of Democracy would be a perfect complement to this

    • @Wicker_
      @Wicker_ 26 дней назад +15

      Democracy existing at all means you've botched your political system.

    • @Pinkdam
      @Pinkdam 24 дня назад +2

      As would one contrasting Aristotle's thought with that of Bacon.

    • @notsocrates9529
      @notsocrates9529 21 день назад +1

      How do you botch mob rule?

  • @DjDeadpig
    @DjDeadpig 27 дней назад +681

    We are living in a combination of pre civil war Spain, Weimar, the end of Rome and the beginning of the American civil war simultaneously. Historical multieventism works in mysterious ways I suppose.

    • @ItsJustRyan89
      @ItsJustRyan89 27 дней назад +21

      Yeah, we’re not though.

    • @DjDeadpig
      @DjDeadpig 27 дней назад +93

      @@ItsJustRyan89the tensions are growing my friend, this once great island is now situated upon a volcano waiting to explode.

    • @XatubaX
      @XatubaX 27 дней назад +1

      ​​@@ItsJustRyan89yes, everything is ok, we have established morals, economy is booming, crime is controlled, the gov is totally not abusing it's power and everybody is happy...
      Now just smile and nod, clown 🤡

    • @ItsJustRyan89
      @ItsJustRyan89 27 дней назад +18

      @@DjDeadpig agreed. But I don’t see us living in a combination of things that are elementally the same thing - it’s the collapse of a society.

    • @DjDeadpig
      @DjDeadpig 27 дней назад +31

      @@ItsJustRyan89 you know what, you do make a point there since they’re not far off from each other. Suppose we’re both right to an extent. I must empathise though, pre civil war Spain and Weimar in particular have got me suspect for our future, and Shutstaffel Starmer may bring about his own enabling act in due time.

  • @sgtbuckwheat
    @sgtbuckwheat 27 дней назад +186

    The problem is, even if the current managerial class is removed from power, we don't have a virtuous and capable populace that can manage without a managerial class in any western country. A virtuous people must be made, over a lifetime of practicing the virtues, and our current rulers have spent decades actively and passively trying to prevent such a populace from emerging.

    • @alexanderbryant4979
      @alexanderbryant4979 27 дней назад +27

      I disagree. Most people I know work hard. And the young people that I see in my industry after high school or military want to do well and usually do. Things are just tough right now but we have plenty of people with virtue that can move forward

    • @the.parks.of.no.return
      @the.parks.of.no.return 27 дней назад +10

      Ah ha - exactly Plato's Republic watched and evaluated men for decades before allowing them to become a guardian. You don't allow stupid people into power.

    • @patricktennant1585
      @patricktennant1585 27 дней назад +16

      Those men have not disappeared from history. Look to your former military men. Not the young who served a handful of years. But those who reached a level of competency and responsibilities, then decided that the action of keeping things static and following orders from those who are not demonstribly smarter was abhorrent. Then look to the countryside to those who naturally have reached positions of leadership but not those who actively pursue power. These are good men who will do what needs done when given support.

    • @f145hr3831jr
      @f145hr3831jr 27 дней назад

      @@alexanderbryant4979 You cannot deny there was and still is a deliberate effort from current rulers to promote stupidity and degeneracy. Pointing to outliers doesn't disprove that fact.

    • @f145hr3831jr
      @f145hr3831jr 27 дней назад

      @@the.parks.of.no.return And this is why everyone is deliberately made stupid now, so no one can access to power or contribute to solving crises. This deosn't make Plato's system any less of a house of cards as it is.

  • @terraflow__bryanburdo4547
    @terraflow__bryanburdo4547 27 дней назад +120

    Note that the most successful leader of all time, Alexander, was tutored by Aristotle.

    • @IbnRushd-mv3fp
      @IbnRushd-mv3fp 27 дней назад

      All major western changes in zeitgeist were informed by aristotelian ethics.

    • @peterc3262
      @peterc3262 26 дней назад +13

      Do you mean military leader?

    • @Captain_Insano_nomercy
      @Captain_Insano_nomercy 26 дней назад +20

      He was an excellent military General, but idk how great of a ruler he was. I mean we really never got to see

    • @jeremyk9000
      @jeremyk9000 26 дней назад +14

      Given how quickly his empire dissolved, I don't think Alexander could be considered a successful political leader.

    • @kremepye3613
      @kremepye3613 26 дней назад +19

      ​@jeremyk9000 not his fault he died like 30 years early and didn't get a chance to clearly lay out how his dynasty would be 😂

  • @therealthirst8099
    @therealthirst8099 27 дней назад +162

    The likes of the WEF are the modern Platonists among us. They think of themselves as the "Philosopher Kings" that know best, and therefore deserve to rule everyone below them with an iron fist, and be able to shape society however however they see fit.

    • @adrenjones9301
      @adrenjones9301 26 дней назад +13

      Which would be fine if they weren't so bad at this. It's like they are playing chess and decided to take out their own peasants because "they are in the way of the important figures"

    • @therealthirst8099
      @therealthirst8099 26 дней назад

      @@adrenjones9301 They aren't taking out all the peasants, only the ones who have the nerve to demand better. Plato's Republic requires the underclass to basically be uneducated low-IQ GDP cattle who will work all the menial labor and won't question their place in the system. And now you can see why for some the prospect of importing millions of 70IQ people from across the globe is so tempting. They will be easier to control, and only need a modest uplift from the destitution of their homeland to be content.

    • @rucker69
      @rucker69 26 дней назад +18

      @@adrenjones9301 It is never fine.

    • @adrenjones9301
      @adrenjones9301 26 дней назад +17

      @@rucker69 if they did a good job, you wouldn't even know they existed. You wouldn't even ask questions.

    • @eldritchedward
      @eldritchedward 26 дней назад

      @@rucker69 If they were competent or smart enough, your well-being and happiness would be in their own interest. Them being insufferably dumb and selfish, but mostly dumb, is my main problem.

  • @vodkaman1970
    @vodkaman1970 27 дней назад +119

    I studied Plato's Republic many years ago and remember being struck by how little I could agree with Plato's ideas whilst also being in awe of how phenomenally clever he was. It's also interesting to note how little difference there is between the spin and deception of ancient Athens politicians and the politicians of today with their concern for holding power for outweighing their principles.

    • @gwynedd1
      @gwynedd1 26 дней назад +4

      He had predecessors and cited his sources so its collected ancient knowledge , human psychology in particular. . What should scare you is they are running us on it. The bible is based on Laws, and Timaeus. Its also written with inspiration from Homer in some cases directly ripped off. The book of Job is a Greek dialog. Alexandrians implemented it. Monotheism was not invented by the tribe. It was the Greeks with the atom and the monad. The book of Judges describe Greek government. That was not in the Levant. There was a god from Orphic mystery regions called phanes, the one god. The tribe was polytheistic in the 4th century bc and the evidence is overwhelming.

    • @handles_are_a_bit_rubbish
      @handles_are_a_bit_rubbish 26 дней назад

      @@gwynedd1 Christianity is more or less a Hellenised form of Judaism.

    • @vodkaman1970
      @vodkaman1970 26 дней назад +11

      @@gwynedd1 By far the most important of Plato's predecessors was Socrates, his mentor. His writings are far from a distillation of the collected wisdom of the day but an attack on conventional wisdom written in the form of Socrates having conversations with people where Socrates continuously demonstrates that ideas people commonly hold don't stand up to scrutiny when examined with intellectual honesty. Even though Socrates is his protagonist it is very much written in Plato's voice with a bitterness for the Athenian democracy that he sees as a tyranny of the masses that brought about Socrates death.

    • @gwynedd1
      @gwynedd1 26 дней назад +1

      @@vodkaman1970
      Socrates also had his predecessors. There is a long chain passing down one from another.
      Also I think perhaps you glossed over my warning of the state we are in. We are now in the end stages of his plan that is a banking/cartel religion with apocalyptic ideas that are in very active phases including Gaza, Lebanon Rome vs Persia, Leviathan vs Behemoth. Banking was more powerful than the internet is today , then.

    • @lesliemills3153
      @lesliemills3153 26 дней назад +5

      When I read "Plato's Republic," the first thing that struck me was his dietary guidelines: wheat without any luxuries as grapes. Scurvy, anyone? I found it ironic that the first stages of his admittedly simple foundations for the city state was doomed to failure.
      Other parts echoed the failures of other planned societies: Vices like greed could be "taught away." Wars can be won because the Platonic State can play opposing states against each other without consequence. The abolition of the family will eliminate favoritism and government corruption. I have to admire Plato's ability to showcase that you don't know what you think you know, but his take on how to build a society only serves to highlight just how old the fallacy of planned societies are.

  • @chance_ondriezek99
    @chance_ondriezek99 27 дней назад +161

    I’m sitting down for lunch, and Sargon uploads.
    *Perfect timing, my dude*

  • @Unholy_Holywarrior
    @Unholy_Holywarrior 27 дней назад +91

    the goal isnt weimar america, its weimar world

    • @kimchiwasabee
      @kimchiwasabee 27 дней назад +16

      This. Spot on. AF. Be well.
      Greets from Warsaw.

    • @allewis4008
      @allewis4008 27 дней назад +19

      Oy vey, small hat Golden Age!

    • @blueeyedgenghis7365
      @blueeyedgenghis7365 26 дней назад

      The degeneracy hasn’t even started yet, what you’re seeing now is just healthy natural third worldism..

    • @squidikka
      @squidikka 26 дней назад

      Weimar America = Weimar World.

    • @Nudhul
      @Nudhul 24 дня назад

      @@allewis4008 child prostitution on every street corner! very kosher!

  • @WoWisdeadtome
    @WoWisdeadtome 26 дней назад +12

    This feels like a good place to drop this quote:
    "80% of managers add zero or negative value to the companies for which they work."
    - Dr. Jordan B. Peterson

  • @mattharris1801
    @mattharris1801 27 дней назад +122

    Surprised starmer hasn't thrown you in jail yet, glad to hear he hasn't though!

    • @gooutsideeveryday2017
      @gooutsideeveryday2017 27 дней назад +7

      Der Starmer

    • @Dazza_Doo
      @Dazza_Doo 26 дней назад

      Not likely, nothing Carl has said is worth the effort.

    • @adrenjones9301
      @adrenjones9301 26 дней назад +19

      ​@@Dazza_Doowhat about the guy that got 20 months, as a reduced sentence, for saying he didn't want his tax money go to im"""grant ch""ld ra"""it's?
      With that illegal almost anyone is guilty.

    • @jackp492
      @jackp492 26 дней назад

      Relax dude, your living in a fantasy land if you think that’s on the table

    • @Lwydius
      @Lwydius 26 дней назад +13

      @@jackp492 me thinks you are living in fantasy land if you think it isn't on the table.

  • @theAEDan
    @theAEDan 26 дней назад +48

    Aristotles philosophy has one glaring issue that history has shown time and time again. You can educate a group but you can’t make them think.

    • @Sceptis
      @Sceptis 26 дней назад +7

      Tragically true.

    • @liarwithagun
      @liarwithagun 26 дней назад

      You can't make them think, but you can allow them to suffer the consequnces of their mistakes. This is the biggest reason people are making so many mistakes in society today IMO. The government coddles people and gives them ever more money for their mistakes.
      Did you vote in politicians that destroyed your city's social network and caused the breakdown of society? Well, here is a bunch of money to help prevent you from feeling the consequnces of those poor political decisions. Oh, you made bad personal decisions about your lifestyle and are in serious debt? Here is some more free money.

    • @dwwolf4636
      @dwwolf4636 26 дней назад +1

      True.
      But that's still better than to deny the ability exists at all.

    • @theAEDan
      @theAEDan 26 дней назад +2

      @@dwwolf4636 definitely but peoples reticence to think does suggest that making it the central pillar of any societies stability is just asking for trouble.

    • @longiusaescius2537
      @longiusaescius2537 26 дней назад

      How do you incentivise thinking then?

  • @socklips7655
    @socklips7655 27 дней назад +45

    The aspect of a country actively oppressing its own people, while throwing wide the doors to an invading force that has zero intention of integration is still absolutely wild to me.

    • @adrenjones9301
      @adrenjones9301 26 дней назад +6

      It's like a cartoon villain came alive to destroy democracy or something.

    • @jackp492
      @jackp492 26 дней назад +2

      That’s the story as you see it,
      But in chemistry you energise and agitate a reaction by mixing the components in the solution
      And if two things are immiscible then you need to add an emulsifier
      If you don’t have an emulsifier then the two components will seperate on their own as is their nature

    • @Tundra.
      @Tundra. 26 дней назад +5

      @@jackp492 The problem with this comparison is that chemicals are inert and without a will of their own. Neither oil nor water will hunt down and exterminate the other if agitated for long enough.

    • @dugonman8360
      @dugonman8360 26 дней назад

      ​@@adrenjones9301 or it's the inevitable conclusion of every democratic society.

    • @adrenjones9301
      @adrenjones9301 26 дней назад

      @@dugonman8360 I wouldnt call it inevitable. Had we not allowed the poor and the women to vote, it probably would have worked out just fine.
      Then again, the moment wealth becomes the norm, the "Gutmensch" takes over and throws privileges at everyone. And the very People that have been given these unearned privileges, will ensure that everything comes crashing down.
      Maybe it is inevitable, if History has proven one thing, its that People dont learn from History.

  • @lordscrewtape2897
    @lordscrewtape2897 26 дней назад +20

    " education without morals seems to me to be a way to create a more clever devil"...C.S. Lewis......" To educate a man in mind but not in morals is to educate a menace to society " Theodore Roosevelt..

  • @arklaw8306
    @arklaw8306 26 дней назад +27

    Plato wished to avoid civil wars and maintain harmony with a restrained leadership that won't turn into tyranny.
    Aristotle wished for society to act, to overcome challenges and adapt to its circumstances through a sound reasoning that may lead to virtue.
    Britain is all to happy to drive its people to riot with inaction on one hand and tyranny on the other.

    • @dean_l33
      @dean_l33 25 дней назад

      Worst of both wrolds. Both the native who they are supposed to serve and the foreigner who they tried to butter up to hate them

  • @xenocrates2559
    @xenocrates2559 27 дней назад +46

    I'm a great admirer of your thinking, but in this case I think you misrepresent Plato and the nature of his dialogue The Republic. I think the primary misunderstanding is that this dialogue is an extended, and complex, allegory about the nature of the soul and of justice. It is not a blueprint for a perfect society; rather it is a guide for the 'care of the soul' and understanding justice. How do I know this? Plato tells us this in The Republic itself; not just once but several times. // Plato was a master of allegory (e.g. the famous allegory of the cave), but the ability to read allegorically based literary works has been almost totally lost in modernity; I think it is one of the signs that modernity has lobotomized (that's a metaphor) many of our human mental capacities. // Scholars more learned than I have critiqued Popper's misunderstanding of Plato, but an online comment is not the place to unpack this in detail. As always, thank for your thoughtful analyses.

    • @rilindshehu96
      @rilindshehu96 26 дней назад +3

      Thank you

    • @Tom-sd9jb
      @Tom-sd9jb 26 дней назад +8

      I think it needs to be remembered that Carl (as much as I enjoy listening to him) is an Ideologue with a capital "I" and that will always rub off on his interpretation and presentation of information. Same as how a grubby munchkin like Vaush would.
      It's important we make sure we go to the source and listen to opposing opinions on the same subject to find that ever-shifting Golden Mean.

    • @buglepong
      @buglepong 26 дней назад +1

      can allegories be "misinterpreted"? isnt the whole point its just a mental exercise (that usually steelman's your own bias)?

    • @DP-fp1uf
      @DP-fp1uf 12 дней назад

      @xenocrates2559
      I think you are ignoring the cultural/zeigteist part that plays into interpreting an allegory when calling modernity lobotomizing. Like Shakespeare's verse 'laughing like parrots at bagpipe' would not make much sense to a person living now or a person on other side of the world living in japan during Keichō era. That would not be enough to call a japanese in 1600 uncultured, would it?

  • @caffeineandphilosophy
    @caffeineandphilosophy 27 дней назад +175

    Popper fundamentally misunderstood Plato. The sheer volume of effort dedicated to refuting Plato, when the Platonic idea he sought to refute was in fact a thought experimented refuted *by Plato himself* within the Republic, only shows the intellectual shallowness of literalistic minds like Popper.

    • @zachhughes9149
      @zachhughes9149 27 дней назад +49

      Lazy philosophers have made hay for a long time arguing against extreme thought experiments, designed as such and inevitably refuted by their original creators simply to make a point, a point often totally ignored or disregarded by the midwit with a book to sell or a tenure to secure.

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 27 дней назад +4

      @@zachhughes9149 Hay is for horses.

    • @bengale9977
      @bengale9977 27 дней назад +16

      Popper the hack misunderstood Plato, I'm shocked.

    • @GH-lq9fg
      @GH-lq9fg 27 дней назад +14

      That's a silly argument ... people can criticise a thought experiment and it's consequences. It has ZERO relevance what the author of the experiment thinks.

    • @coupledyetivonvanderburg5385
      @coupledyetivonvanderburg5385 27 дней назад +13

      So, engaging in a thought experiment wherein you agree with the conclusions of the creator, though in terms more suited to a contemporary audience, is verboten now?

  • @Melkorleo103
    @Melkorleo103 24 дня назад +4

    Man you have no idea how much better you have become through the years. You inspired me to read more, learn more, do more. Thank you for that. Wish you the best in your carreer, family, life.

  • @pizzatopsy8656
    @pizzatopsy8656 27 дней назад +38

    Sargon my words to you is Don’t Trust Dev

    • @N-A762
      @N-A762 26 дней назад

      Haha is dev doing something with him?

    • @levinicusrex1006
      @levinicusrex1006 26 дней назад +9

      ​@@N-A762he defends destiny, which needs no explanation

    • @N-A762
      @N-A762 26 дней назад

      @@levinicusrex1006 Thats fair maybe I didnt pay enough attention but I didnt hear Dev mentioned in the video

    • @simonwinn8757
      @simonwinn8757 22 дня назад

      Dev is very first order thinking and doesn't have any foresight ability. He needs the trusted sources (tm) to have an opinion.

    • @levinicusrex1006
      @levinicusrex1006 22 дня назад

      @@simonwinn8757 trusted sources= whatever Klaus Schwab/WEF approves of

  • @kracked6868
    @kracked6868 27 дней назад +9

    Thanks, Carl. My daughter and I had a chat about this very topic last night. You show the point I tried to make quite well.

  • @ColeDedhand
    @ColeDedhand 27 дней назад +77

    And where do the ungovernable hordes of imported barbarians fit into this model?

    • @MidlifeCrisisJoe
      @MidlifeCrisisJoe 27 дней назад +21

      Look to the Romans and the battle of Adrianople and the lack of restriction on the Gothic invasion for that lesson.

    • @radagast7200
      @radagast7200 27 дней назад +34

      The mexigoths? Or the Islagoths?

    • @SargonofAkkad
      @SargonofAkkad  27 дней назад +101

      Athens did not extend the franchise to non-Athenians and non-males.

    • @thetruth45678
      @thetruth45678 27 дней назад +34

      ​@@SargonofAkkadB A S E D

    • @CoperliteConsumer
      @CoperliteConsumer 27 дней назад +11

      ​@@SargonofAkkadincredibly based

  • @snakey934Snakeybakey
    @snakey934Snakeybakey 27 дней назад +26

    Ever since I can remember I loved Aristotle and hated Plato. Well done for encapsulating why in words. You Sargon, have a mastery of the English language which deserves praise.

  • @pilroberts6185
    @pilroberts6185 27 дней назад +59

    This is backwards, we are living in Athens when we should be living in Sparta.
    History has taught Sparta poorly and we forget it was the more stable Republic our (American) Founders intended than the arrogant, imperialistic and full of hubris Democracy of Athens.
    Yes Sparta ruled cruelly over the Helots. Who were the Helots though? Descendants of the Messenians who waged constant war upon Sparta. This after Sparta's constant war with Argos. It was defeat or be defeated, enslave or be enslaved. That was the way the world was. Sparta won and to prevent future war the Messenians were enslaved. Remember Athens kept more slaves than Sparta ever had.
    It was the Spartan stability and hegemony which followed that ushered across the Peloponnese and the rest of Greece a Pax Laconia which allowed the rest of the city states to flourish.
    Sparta under Lycurgus developed a governing system based on bicameral executive (2 kings) with a legislative body of citizens. After studying the excesses of Athenian 'Democracy' (as in the Mytilenean Decree) American founders emulated Sparta's more stable decision making governing body and culture. Sparta demurred from foreign entanglements unless forced into it. They only went imperialistic after defeating Athens in the Peloponnesian War, a war they wanted Athens to demure from but arrogant Athens pushed its empire into the Peloponnesian sphere of influence. In victory Sparta could have destroyed Athens but didn't. They were not primitive, in fact it Sparta who demonstrated how highly adaptable it was and defeated Athens at sea (Athen's 'center of gravity'). Sparta wasn't perfect and Athens made great contributions but Sparta's demise then led to Athens demise losing its autonomy to Phillip a generation after that.
    At the end of the day America and all nations of the West need to end their globalist imperialist Modern Liberal/Leftwing Democracy/Oligarchic designs and return to a more love of nation, less expansionistic stoic patriotism of hard work and conservation. If not, sooner or later the Left will send the West unto a fatal Sicilian Expedition folly dooming us all.

    • @lowersaxon
      @lowersaxon 26 дней назад +10

      Exactly.

    • @cal2127
      @cal2127 26 дней назад +6

      ukriane is the sicilian expedition

    • @Captain_Insano_nomercy
      @Captain_Insano_nomercy 26 дней назад +14

      It really blew me away when I started reading about Athens and how absurd they really were as an "advanced society"
      Hubris is the perfect word for them

    • @handles_are_a_bit_rubbish
      @handles_are_a_bit_rubbish 26 дней назад

      Sparta was a fucking shithole though.

    • @longiusaescius2537
      @longiusaescius2537 26 дней назад

      Why didn't they make a bicameral executive then?

  • @warhawk4494
    @warhawk4494 27 дней назад +20

    Ah just the perfect thing to listen to while making homemade Cornbread for supper.
    Keep your heads up,shoulders straight and your powder dry my English cousins. Fight for your Rights and Freedoms! 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸✝️✝️✝️ God Bless Y'all

  • @VindiceLibertas
    @VindiceLibertas 17 дней назад +3

    Carl,
    You're really back on-point, and I think you're moving in the right direction, alongside others, such as TIKHistory and Yaron Brook.
    Some months ago, I wrote about all of this in Ancient Civ as we reviewed Plato's Allegory, detailing the differences in metaphysics and epistemology, likewise Platonist ethics manifesting in political discourse. As of present, I am also integrating this into as much of my academic work as possible in any context I can adapt to it.
    Peikoff's Ominous Parallels, particularly its philosophical contents now consolidated into his Cause of Hitler's Germany, are especially detailed in this area of philosophical corruption throughout the West and its spread to America. If one is to understand the current state of the intellectual battle, it begins here, as does recalibrating our minds to stave off an extension of a totalitarian future.
    If you wish to expand your commentary in this area, I highly recommend you review their works - literary, lectures, and commentary. In fact, I think we need to network together and generate movement as we move to challenge the bad philosophy underpinning our decay as we simultaneously erect the alternative derived from objective philosophy as derived from Aristotle's beginnings.
    Keep up the good work,
    Jeremy

  • @f145hr3831jr
    @f145hr3831jr 27 дней назад +6

    I've talked with quite a few people (including in my own family) who actually thought Platonic dictatorships were the only viable option to manage crises. The problem doesn't stop at people losing decision making skills, it's about people being taught from childhood that only the State has any legitimacy in solving problems too big for atomized individuals to take care of.

  • @cloakbackground8641
    @cloakbackground8641 27 дней назад +12

    Somehow, despite millennia of innovation, all of Western philosophy is still encapsulated as Platonism vs Aristotelianism.

    • @liarwithagun
      @liarwithagun 26 дней назад +2

      That is because these differing ideas are a result of human nature, and that hasn't changed much since then.

  • @Wildpeak_
    @Wildpeak_ 27 дней назад +4

    genuinely love how applicable this is at this very moment; Sargon, thank you

  • @TheRealInscrutable
    @TheRealInscrutable 25 дней назад +2

    This is a very dense 12 minutes. I had to listen. Wait a couple of days. Then listen again.

  • @onlynameMrBlank
    @onlynameMrBlank 26 дней назад +3

    You can see an example of Plato's approach in movies and TV. Shows and movie series that have far outlived their shelf life are still being propped up by Hollywood even though they are constantly failing again and again, yet that doesn't stop them from trying to maintain that status quo. Look at Star Wars. It used to dominate the world, but now, like Sparta, it's a crumbling ruin that people either ignore or laugh at.

  • @Daimo83
    @Daimo83 16 дней назад +1

    Sociologists: compare and contrast 1950s capitalism.
    Actual intellectuals: compare and contrast two historical points of view.

  • @Snake-filledChimp
    @Snake-filledChimp 26 дней назад +8

    If you're on Carl's channel watching this in earnest, know this - you are the contingency that your rulers seek to mitigate.

    • @rhs5683
      @rhs5683 25 дней назад

      Let's go to Wendagoon, ViseGrad24 or anything not celebration the EU-Par...

  • @candidlens
    @candidlens 27 дней назад +9

    We don't know that Republic was meant as an actual model to be instituted. There's much to suggest it displays certain dystopian results that logically follow when certain ideals are seen through to perfection; that is, the extent to which an unrealistic structure must be implemented to bring about ideal results. It may rather serve as a reference point.

  • @JmpaulOfficial
    @JmpaulOfficial 27 дней назад +5

    I’m very happy you are back here.

  • @fal1026
    @fal1026 27 дней назад +7

    I remember in grade school learning the myths of Greece, but never learning anything as tangible as this in HS, & it really should've been part of basic curriculum, but it won't matter in the future anyway when department of education is demolished.

    • @hillehai
      @hillehai 25 дней назад

      These aren't Greek myths though, they're philosophical works by Greek philosophers.

  • @retroman3252
    @retroman3252 26 дней назад +6

    That line "Opportunity- the arch enemy of the manager" It hits me soo hard, if only I could say more.

  • @BlueGrimgrin
    @BlueGrimgrin 27 дней назад +6

    The problem is that the attractiveness of each mode of governance varies in proportion to its achievement. A fully "Aristotlean" society will turn to managerial solutions as those that are broken by crisis rather than improved pile up. The citizens of a perfect rational republic of Plato will realize that they have arrived at a place neither rational nor perfect and tear it down.
    Incidenally, I'd recommend "Voltaire's Bastards" by John Ralston Saul. It's an interesting look at managerialism and rationality, and how the promise of the enlightenment was (in his view) subverted by both.

    • @JesusIsKingAndSavior
      @JesusIsKingAndSavior 27 дней назад +1

      I told my high schools students years ago when in that field of work to REALLY consider whether they should go to a four year college or not, along the strong suggestion to read Voltaire's Bastards before committing to doing so.

  • @joesomebody3365
    @joesomebody3365 26 дней назад +3

    Interesting points, great conclusion at the end. Keep up the great work.

  • @RachelRichards
    @RachelRichards 27 дней назад +2

    I truly appreciate your channel, Sargon. Thank you.

  • @watch-Dominion-2018
    @watch-Dominion-2018 27 дней назад +48

    Greece was on the winning side of WW1 & 2, but wasn't rewarded with Constantinople & Anatolia?
    Why?

    • @zoch9797
      @zoch9797 27 дней назад +29

      Because the Turks went to war, and beat back the Greeks. The rest of the world was weary of war at that point, and fid not wish to engage in more conflict over a city and land that the Ottomans had held for centuries.
      A shame.

    • @watch-Dominion-2018
      @watch-Dominion-2018 27 дней назад +3

      ​@zoch9797 nope, that's not the reason.

    • @gwynedd1
      @gwynedd1 27 дней назад +21

      The point was to free up Palestine for a certain....project there later. Nothing more.

    • @Fenristhegreat
      @Fenristhegreat 27 дней назад +3

      Turkey wasn't a combatant in ww2...
      Why would anyone award a third parties territory away?

    • @LoxleyLockwood
      @LoxleyLockwood 27 дней назад +9

      For multiple reasons actually.
      I'll start with the explanation of Constantinople (which i will call Byzantium from now on) and then focus on Anatolia.
      1) Greece wasnt that supportive or loyal to the Entente and the British and French felt that Greece did not deserve it. (The prime minister and half of the government were pro Entente while the king at the time and the rest of the politicians were for the Central powers).
      2) Byzantium was a city of high importance, one of the most important in the world, and thus it was denied to the small and very minor nation like Greece. The greeks argued back on this that they had to get it because they were the successors of Rome, but unfortunately for them.....they werent. Yes the Byzantine Empire IS Roman Empire still, however the state of Greece was just a modern nation state like Romania or Serbia. Thus the argument was denied by the Entente.
      3) It controlled the only entrance into the Black sea, so the British tried to secure it for themselves via the ''International zone'' thing, a decision forced by Britain's desire to watch over the mediterrean, a bit of imperialism but also the traditional fear of the large Russian empire (yes that turned into the USSR but the Brits were still worried about them nonethless).
      Now, for the Anatolian part.
      Youre wrong on that, partially.
      It was supposed to be given to Greece via the first Ottoman peace treaty (which also gave Kurdistan Independence, East Turkey to the new state of Armenia and southern Turkey to Italy and French Syria), although not entire thing but only the western part of Turkey, going from the strait all the way down to the coasts near Rhodos. Why only that ? Due to the american influence the borders of the new Europe were meant to follow national lines (Hungary for hungarians, Czechoslovakia for czechs and slovaks, etc), and so Greece was supposed to gain the Turkish lands that had Greek population in them.
      According to plan, which failed.
      A military faction of competent troops and commanders under Mustafa Kemal took over the government in Ankara and fought back the French and then the Greek occupation forces, pushing them out of the country (Except for the surroundings of Adana, kept by the French) and this became known as the Turkish war for independence and the Greko-Turkish War.

  • @AoLIronmaiden
    @AoLIronmaiden 18 дней назад

    This was such a well-created video! The flow of information was essentially perfect lol

  • @ForwardFilms121
    @ForwardFilms121 27 дней назад +6

    The UK isn't over, countries decline yes but they will be reborn they will endure

  • @bloodgiant6596
    @bloodgiant6596 26 дней назад +4

    What I think a lot of people don't understand about Plato's Republic, is that its not actually about politics. The entire allegory of the perfect city is meant to just be a metaphor for a person, and how to individually be moral and just. It isn't really meant to be a good system in itself. Which, unfortunately, large numbers of tyrants have decided to ignore or were too self-obsessed to realize.

  • @magister.mortran
    @magister.mortran 27 дней назад +14

    Possibly Sargon's best video ever.
    Plato's principle is present even in the medieval society (philosophers = Church, guardians = aristocracy i.e. warrior class, workers = peasants). It caused 1000 years of stability, or better stagnation. Aristotle's principle shaped Modernity, the Renaissance, the Enlightenment. The state was supposed to be based on a social contract according to Rousseau. And this is the idea of our modern democracies.
    Interestingly neither the Stoics nor the Epicureans agreed with Plato. Still Neo-Platonism was, what gave rise to Christianity and the medieval society that followed. This is also visible in the medieval philosophy of scholasticism, which was strictly top down, based on idealistic principles. It was Modernity that reintroduced Aristotelian empiricism and with it the idea that abstract principles like the state are derived from the multitude of individual instances, i.e. the state is formed by its citizens.

    • @campomambo
      @campomambo 27 дней назад

      When will we finally get over this stupid dark age myth. There was tons of technological, artistic, and scientific advancement that took place during the medieval period.

    • @reactiondavant-garde3391
      @reactiondavant-garde3391 27 дней назад +12

      False, western phylosophy was based on Aristotle in the middle ages and the scholastics were especially not neo-platonists. Neo-Platonism was strong in the eastern church mostly and only became popular for a short time in the Rennesance in the west. Other false narrative is the stangation in the middle ages, entirly basless. After the stabilisation of the west in the early middle ages Europe showed a very high growth rate especially after 1000 until the Black Death thet stoped it for a short while, but after the disaster the growth started again until the late early modern period, in most coutnrise even until the 20th century. This is not just about the population but thecnology as well, in the middle ages especially the agrarian revolution is not worthy, but the phylosophical and theological as well as the architectural development is pretty impressive in the era as well.

    • @dehe82
      @dehe82 26 дней назад +3

      But this would lead to flawed democracies, something Socrates was rightly concerned with.
      In my mind, Plato's ideas provided a structure/framework, whilst Aristotle's provided the method, and Socrates provided the guardrails.
      A republic with democratic mechanisms that exists to protect individual rights.
      The best system we've come up with beyond an actual benevolent dictatorship...

  • @Karn0010
    @Karn0010 27 дней назад +10

    Aristotle's Politics still rings true today, you can look at most things and politics and can find an answer in his work. He was able to see the world for what it is, and not what he thought it ought to be.
    Plato's ideas of utopia are a fucking nightmare.

  • @phiszabo2
    @phiszabo2 27 дней назад +3

    Dude all these years and I think this is your best one. You have a lot of great ones but this one is a1.

  • @isaacmarwell5435
    @isaacmarwell5435 25 дней назад +1

    Bro is back on RUclips coming in hot with foundational content.

  • @VERITASPUREBLOOD
    @VERITASPUREBLOOD 27 дней назад +3

    your knowledge is contagious and very refreshing. honestly your on par with jordan peterson, next level insights and wisdom. great work✌️

  • @auraguard0212
    @auraguard0212 3 дня назад

    Plato: "My people are idiots. I must keep them in place to make them useful."
    Aristotle: "My people are only as dumb as nature allows them to be."

  • @John-b1z3x
    @John-b1z3x 27 дней назад +6

    I would love it if you did a breakdown of Aristotle’s virtue ethics.

    • @bakerboat4572
      @bakerboat4572 13 дней назад

      I would too, but since he's a believer in virtue ethics I wouldn't expect him to address the fundamental flaw in it (which is the same as naturalism, whereby what is "natural" and "good" do not follow from each other, and where virtue theory ignores the ability of humans to simply choose otherwise).

  • @jexthegamer
    @jexthegamer 10 дней назад

    Explained very well! Thank you.

  • @Wully02
    @Wully02 26 дней назад +3

    I am a proud Platonist.

    • @Wully02
      @Wully02 26 дней назад +3

      And no, our ruling class is in no way Platonic, they worship inferior things while killing superior things, they serve the adversary rather than the Being.

    • @bakerboat4572
      @bakerboat4572 13 дней назад +1

      ​@@Wully02 Plus, with the way they maneuver and scheme within politics, aligns quite closely with Aristotle's realpolitik.

  • @jasonsangwin4006
    @jasonsangwin4006 25 дней назад

    This is a fantastic piece

  • @GQBouncer
    @GQBouncer 27 дней назад +17

    2:00 Just to clarify, the "Workers" or "Bronze" class, would also be the filthy rich. The silver and definitely gold class wouldn't be able to own private property. We definitely have different interpretations of Plato's Republic. The key here is that everyone has their own nature and when they perform what their nature is attuned for, it will benefit society. As an example, if a soldier were to take on the role of a shoemaker and a shoemaker were to take on the role of a soldier, their'd be a disaster. The shoemaker-turned-soldier would lack the skills/spirit and discipline needed to protect the city, while the soldier-turned-shoemaker would produce poor-quality footwear. The army, wearing subpar shoes, would likely cripple itself on the march and surrender to the enemy. Point being Sargon, Socrates' was saying when people are not aligned with their true purpose or nature, it leads to a failure of the state and dysfunction of the polis. It's why he didn't even want to have a "reservist" component of the military. The Philosopher King, ideally, would be wise enough to both see through the constraints of 'trending morality' and 'traditional morality.' I should also note, that Socrates didn't like democracy because it "made equals of unequals" which is why I think the Starship Troopers government model is closer to Plato's Republic than would you are putting forward (with respect). All that said, if you read this comment and disagree with me, Socrates would want that because there was nothing that guy wouldn't argue over. Dude was hilarious as much as he was wise.

    • @TheLurker1647
      @TheLurker1647 26 дней назад +4

      What determines who is a soldier and who is a shoemaker, though, in such a society?

    • @GQBouncer
      @GQBouncer 26 дней назад

      @@TheLurker1647 A very good question! In theory, the classes would decided who was eligible to enter. There would also be an obvious self-selection, so for example, if you showed during your upbringing, a particular interest and keenness for, say, blacksmithing, shoemaking, etc. than you would pursue your passion. However, for the higher classes we can use the general outline for who could become the philosopher king. The philosopher king could also be a Woman, and women could also be soldiers if their nature was attuned for it just as men, this was very controversial at the time, but Socrates put that forward. Anyways, First, you had to have high athleticism and fitness, Socrates gave very heavy emphasis to the gym which is often a meme, it's also one of the reasons he liked how Sparta were training their youth. During your training, you would constantly be evaluated, and after being a soldier and first seeing battle than leading in battle, you would carry on under constant evaluation of your peers. You'd vigorously train and study philosophy which was a field that encompassed virtually everything back in its day. In this system, there wouldn't be the "Nuclear Family" but rather, everyone lived communally with the exception of the bronze class who could retain the nuclear family system. Another note, you also had to be good looking haha, no word of a lie, you'd better be pretty and handsome AF if you wanted to be the on top, that was specifically noted by Socrates who himself had made fun of himself for not being particularly handsome. In the end, Lurker, your line of questioning breaks Plato's theory because it eventually would get to questioning the validity of "The Forms" theory that Socrates had put forward in that how can we really know anything and therefor every system is vulnerable to corruption whether intended or not (i.e. deliberate corruption vs bureaucracy).

  • @phoivos
    @phoivos 27 дней назад +8

    to add a bit to the final thought in the video: one of the factors as to why Athens endured while Sparta faded was a fact that the Athenians by en large correctly assessed, which is that a life one enjoys is a life worth fighting hard for, while Spartans were in favor of a much more uptight, war-oriented lifestyle for their people, which wasn't as popular with the people of the vassal states the Spartans had conquered or allied with. The Spartans did not promote their way of life beyond their city state, to expand their power and influence and make an empire (and thus have a better chance of surviving against the more powerful enemies like Rome & barbarians that ultimately destroyed it), while the Athenians succeeded at this very thing

  • @storytellingchampion6438
    @storytellingchampion6438 27 дней назад +25

    In the foreword to Republic it is mentioned that the perfect city envisioned by Plato is a thought experiment meant to showcase how one should structure one's mind to find goodness. (That is my memory of the page, you may refute me if it is too inaccurate to the wording of the book.) Plato himself says in Republic that his hypothetical state couldn't exist in reality and that it would degenerate over time as all things do. Plato's thought experiment was never a vision of how the world should be, but how your mind should be. At least that is as I've understood the book. I am glad to be proven wrong if I am wrong, I just feel like it is false to say that Plato wanted to implement this state in reality.

    • @Richforce1
      @Richforce1 27 дней назад +1

      I think he wanted to but knew he couldn't because humans are just too fallible.

    • @storytellingchampion6438
      @storytellingchampion6438 27 дней назад +9

      @Richforce1 I suppose? But as stated, the perfect society he describes is a thought experiment to locate morality in your mind, not an actual proposal for a realistic society.

    • @Lopaloos
      @Lopaloos 27 дней назад +2

      this 10000 times, wtf

    • @cyberpunk2453
      @cyberpunk2453 27 дней назад +3

      @@storytellingchampion6438 kind of reduces Plato's thought experiment into the hierarchy of needs pyramid, doesn't it?

    • @storytellingchampion6438
      @storytellingchampion6438 26 дней назад +1

      @@cyberpunk2453 How do you mean?

  • @romayoyo4303
    @romayoyo4303 25 дней назад +1

    Hi, I think it would be grate to see ricky gervais on the lotus eaters. He has some very interesting views on his BALR YT channel. He seems to be on the same page as you guys.
    P.S.
    Thank you Carl for all the hard work you have done for all of us over the years.

  • @WompWompWoooomp
    @WompWompWoooomp 27 дней назад +44

    Virgin Plato vs. Chad Aristotle

    • @Richforce1
      @Richforce1 27 дней назад +14

      Thad Saint Thomas Aquinas.

    • @heavywestern5943
      @heavywestern5943 27 дней назад +5

      Sigma Diogenes

    • @Captain_Insano_nomercy
      @Captain_Insano_nomercy 26 дней назад +3

      ​@@heavywestern5943lol
      You realize Diogenes is the best philosopher at the end of the day

  • @user-pq4fr7xt6w
    @user-pq4fr7xt6w 26 дней назад +1

    brilliant sir!

  • @thechuckjosechannel.2702
    @thechuckjosechannel.2702 27 дней назад +5

    Good Afternoon Sargon.

  • @kronosbot5
    @kronosbot5 7 дней назад

    "The more you tighten your grip, Governor Tarkin, the mote star systems will slip through your fingers."

  • @dragonknightleader1
    @dragonknightleader1 26 дней назад +3

    Not to defend Plato, but Plato would have been opposed to infinity immigration because it jeopardizes the stability of the state. So, even by this standard, Two-tier Kier fails.

  • @JCOwens-zq6fd
    @JCOwens-zq6fd 25 дней назад

    Well done sir. I have been saying this forever. As far as I know we here in the US were all taught that our society was founded on neo platonic ideas but almost nobody seems to connect the dots.

  • @flawseeingeye
    @flawseeingeye 27 дней назад +10

    so crazy to think the height of culture was thousands of years ago, and we've been living amongst the rubble ever since.

    • @JesusIsKingAndSavior
      @JesusIsKingAndSavior 27 дней назад

      The timeline is probably a lie since the 1700's.

    • @Richforce1
      @Richforce1 27 дней назад +2

      And to be honest it wasn't all that high. The true great heights will be in a new heaven and new earth, come Lord Jesus 🙏🙏🙏

    • @thedeviousgreek1540
      @thedeviousgreek1540 27 дней назад

      @@Richforce1 Christian bots everywhere

    • @IbnRushd-mv3fp
      @IbnRushd-mv3fp 27 дней назад

      That was probably a lie

    • @jr2904
      @jr2904 26 дней назад +3

      ​@@thedeviousgreek1540 better than the other bots

  • @Coxe1989
    @Coxe1989 27 дней назад +1

    Another excellent evaluation 👏

  • @TorchyThePyro
    @TorchyThePyro 27 дней назад +5

    Maturing is knowing that we live in Athens and should be living in Sparta.
    In any case, Platonists will tell you that Aristotle and Plato are not truly opposed, and all of western society is better for it. The modern zeitgeist against Plato is nonsense.

  • @whisped8145
    @whisped8145 26 дней назад +1

    10:48 That's a Trinity I can comprehend and accept.

  • @Real-Life-Guts
    @Real-Life-Guts 27 дней назад +69

    "Babe wake up, Sargon of Akkad just dropped a vid"

  • @samiam5557
    @samiam5557 23 дня назад

    Well thought out and the message is true!!!

  • @Aristocratic_Utensil
    @Aristocratic_Utensil 27 дней назад +4

    Aristotle > Plato.

    • @leeboy2k1
      @leeboy2k1 27 дней назад +3

      *Christ reconciles the dialectic by giving meta and material emancipation from the abstract.

    • @popeofchina8551
      @popeofchina8551 27 дней назад

      Plato for religion.
      Aristotle for the natural world.

  • @DerrickJLive
    @DerrickJLive 22 дня назад

    Fascinating, thank you

  • @kdash2657
    @kdash2657 26 дней назад +5

    Plato was a gnostic in thought, you can tell this via his Cave allegory and what this video expresses. His world view, which was molded by his mentor, Heraclitus, also a gnostic, has been damaging to intellectual pursuit and is one of the main reasons we are in the state we find ourselves.
    He was also pro-pederasty up until his final years but im sure that's totally a coincidence as well.

    • @bakerboat4572
      @bakerboat4572 13 дней назад

      Plato was not gnostic. This is a facial misreading, and quite easy to find evidence of the contrary.
      If there's any doubt, might I remind you that the Gospel of John isn't gnostic simply for speaking from a non-materialist frame of reference either.

  • @asdisskagen6487
    @asdisskagen6487 21 день назад

    These foundations of Western Culture should be required reading for ALL CHILDREN. Even if someone is allowing their children to be "educated" by the state, they should take the time to familiarize themselves and their family with the Great Books of the Western World.

  • @Snakedude4life
    @Snakedude4life 27 дней назад +5

    You know maybe Socrates had a point.
    🎩
    🐍 no step on snek🇺🇸🇭🇰

  • @SomeCanine
    @SomeCanine 27 дней назад +5

    No, Plato was right. You have it wrong. The problem you're having is that you want to hold onto liberal ideas of freedom and tolerance while also holding onto tradition and order. You cannot have both. You either have order/tradition or freedom/chaos. If you try to mix the approaches, it doesn't work.

    • @Richforce1
      @Richforce1 27 дней назад +1

      It's not Freedom or Order we should hold onto, but God. Come Lord Jesus 🙏🙏🙏

  • @cfluff6716
    @cfluff6716 5 дней назад

    Find it so intriguing how even 2500 years ago there were utopian ideologues who believed philosophers, academics are also at the top of the social hierarchy with the ruling elites.

  • @WorthlessWinner
    @WorthlessWinner 27 дней назад +9

    "The lands of the whole state Lycurgus divided equally among all, that equality of possession might leave no one more powerful than another. He ordered all to take their meals in public, that no man might secretly indulge in splendour of luxury."
    The men of Sparta were permitted " to form promiscuous connections with all the women of the city, thinking that conception would be more speedy if each of the females made the experiment with several men."
    They were crazy slaver war commies (it was banned to do any work except war too)

    • @thedeviousgreek1540
      @thedeviousgreek1540 27 дней назад

      They were also great philosophers and respected as a people. Spartan history as is taught today is just a parody.

    • @cyberpunk2453
      @cyberpunk2453 27 дней назад

      @@thedeviousgreek1540 Citation, Spartans, on Spartans.

    • @reactiondavant-garde3391
      @reactiondavant-garde3391 27 дней назад +3

      @@thedeviousgreek1540 People belive in every source they read. It is pretty sad how little critical thinking is used with historical sources.

    • @thedeviousgreek1540
      @thedeviousgreek1540 27 дней назад

      @@cyberpunk2453 The whole of Greece respected them plus the Romans.

    • @WorthlessWinner
      @WorthlessWinner 26 дней назад +1

      @@thedeviousgreek1540 - i dunno why people read secondary sources when stuff like xenophon (recent translations at least) is readable and informative.
      I think they're massively overrated (polybius assessment of them as "stable which is good but too stable so couldn't grow" to paraphrase, seems correct).

  • @lloydritchey
    @lloydritchey 17 дней назад

    If you haven't done so already, Carl, I would STRONGLY recommend Arthur Herman's history, *The Cave and the Light,* a grand historical tour of the West via the frame of its two most fundamental philosophers.

  • @tailsspin621
    @tailsspin621 27 дней назад +3

    I like Plato's four cardinal virtues. They make it easy for me to describe how a person should act. Unfortunately, most of Plato's other contributions to Philosophy are pretty frustrating to put it mildly.

    • @FrankEscandell
      @FrankEscandell 27 дней назад +1

      Wow, finally someone said this. Those virtues are far superior to the Mosaic (oriental) Revelation

    • @tailsspin621
      @tailsspin621 27 дней назад

      I need to look into the mosaic revelation, but as it stands I love the cardinal virtues. It just sucks the guy who coined them was applying them incorrectly, but at least Aristotle had some sense.

  • @coyoteunclean
    @coyoteunclean 26 дней назад +2

    I'm gonna spend a good week unpacking this, but at first blush: Lycurgus was right, but only insofar as he wanted a static system to produce hard men.
    Mankind hates static systems (cue Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground.)
    So the Aristotelian answer is a scaffolding that provides for individual sovereignty in the face of uncertainty.
    I like it.

  • @TheAquarius87
    @TheAquarius87 26 дней назад +4

    Aristoteles sounds like someone who cleaned his room.

  • @williamdrum9899
    @williamdrum9899 25 дней назад +2

    Not entirely related but I feel like Sparta was the inspiration for the Klingons (or any sci-fi that has a tribe devoted to warfare at the expense of anything else)

  • @larstiranos
    @larstiranos 27 дней назад +3

    Brilliant! Next stop, St. Thomas Aquinas!

  • @gcwyatt
    @gcwyatt 24 дня назад +1

    Of course philosophers and managers want the stability of Plato's Republic. They want to be in charge forever, living a life of leasure and pleasure, never understanding the despots and tyrants they would be.

  • @Zoocsgo
    @Zoocsgo 27 дней назад +7

    2016 vibes

    • @timalley3906
      @timalley3906 27 дней назад +5

      Man 2016 feels like both ancient history and just yesterday at the same time... strange sensation.

    • @zxyatiywariii8
      @zxyatiywariii8 27 дней назад +2

      Ikr, takes me back to why I first started following Sargon. . .

  • @physics2112
    @physics2112 26 дней назад +1

    Like or Dislike: Like. But the argument fails because conservatism is the movement that opposes change.

  • @AngryBootneck
    @AngryBootneck 27 дней назад +3

    THIS IS…. Er….Athens probably

  • @kden9772
    @kden9772 27 дней назад +2

    I just starting reading Thucydides, great start so far

  • @MrBlueBurd0451
    @MrBlueBurd0451 27 дней назад +4

    I don't want to live in either Athens or Sparta. Roma Invicta. Roma Aeterna.

    • @Richforce1
      @Richforce1 27 дней назад +1

      I'd rather the new Jerusalem, come Lord Jesus 🙏🙏🙏

  • @Steelblaidd
    @Steelblaidd 21 день назад

    Fascinating analysis.
    I wonder how much the Platonic influence on Christian theology has encouraged this trend. The apol sovereign God who determines all things reaching its apex of expression in Calvinism seems tailor made to encourage enforced rather than grown virtue.
    As a Latter-day Saint I have been raised on a concept of Devine governance that is more at home in Aristotle's polis than Plato's Republic.
    "I teach them correct principles and they govern themselves." JS Jr.

  • @Gypsygeekfreak17
    @Gypsygeekfreak17 27 дней назад +3

    Hey Sargon

  • @Actaeon-l6d
    @Actaeon-l6d 23 дня назад

    For anyone else interested in the dichotomy between Platonic and Aristotelian thought, Leonard Peikoff has a 50 part history of philosophy series that traces the divergence of the two schools throughout history on RUclips.
    He is an Objectivist but he does a fair treatment of the topic and explicitly states when he is speaking from an Objectivist POV. He is entirely biased towards Aristotle but is explicit about this bias making it easy to parse through it whereas most professors try to hide their bias by claiming a false position of impartiality.
    Anyone who is a fan of Dr. Michael Sugrue's lectures will most definitely appreciate Peikoff.

    • @bakerboat4572
      @bakerboat4572 13 дней назад +1

      Interesting. I would add that I wish Carl announced when he was speaking from his POV, because emphatically Aristotle's philosophy was flawed both by the ability of humans to choose otherwise (from the good and just) and the putative definition that "natural = good" (which is ontologically incorrect).

    • @Actaeon-l6d
      @Actaeon-l6d 12 дней назад

      @@bakerboat4572 Who's Carl lol?

  • @stormbringer_7774
    @stormbringer_7774 27 дней назад +8

    Hello old bean🤪👉🇬🇧

  • @jojipoji2322
    @jojipoji2322 23 дня назад +1

    I don't think I'm being over confident when I say the right will mop the floor with the left