Beauty and Desecration - Roger Scruton - Power of Beauty Conference

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • Roger Scruton, world-renowned philosopher, writer, and public commentator, delivered the keynote address of the Power of Beauty conference, entitled “Beauty and Desecration."

Комментарии • 176

  • @thomasmcewen5493
    @thomasmcewen5493 8 лет назад +130

    Here in communist/atheist Czech God was banned, it was noticed that he took his attributes with him. One of these attributes was beauty. Everything the atheist state was ugly, you couldn't state why but it was ugly. We became sick for lack of beauty. Thank God their project failed.

    • @antoniolima1068
      @antoniolima1068 7 лет назад +5

      Thomas McEwen lack of idealization, there needs to be a fine balance between what we know and we don't know for life to be interesting.

    • @sanniepstein1007
      @sanniepstein1007 7 лет назад +13

      Yes, the contrast between historic Prague--so beautiful!--and the communist monstrosities is shocking.

    • @kayem3824
      @kayem3824 7 лет назад +3

      Thomas McEwen Actually the "ugly" things you refer to have become very fashionable now as "Brutalist".

    • @openmusic3904
      @openmusic3904 6 лет назад +11

      Same issue with England. It used to be one of the most beautiful and architecturally striking countries in the world, now it is one of the most hideous, with daunting grey tower blocks imposing on the sky. An absolute travesty what the post-war architects did to Britain.

    • @bogthing1
      @bogthing1 6 лет назад +3

      Thank God indeed.

  • @renzo6490
    @renzo6490 5 лет назад +71

    During times of scarcity and hardship, beauty is embraced.
    During times of plenty and excess, we play with oddness and ugliness .
    Films about opulence and high living came out during the Depression.
    The Back To The Land movement and the “Hippy” affectation of poverty flourished in the wealthy post war 60’s and 70’s.
    When we are doing well, we seem to feel safe enough to flirt with degradation.

    • @duncescotus2342
      @duncescotus2342 3 года назад +2

      Yes! In the Thirties, it was all Fred Astaire in gloves, wasn't it. Well not all, but know what I mean.

    • @LS-td3no
      @LS-td3no 3 года назад +1

      @Renzo. Very true. Forgot about that pendulum swing we go through in our society.

    • @matsdehli
      @matsdehli 3 года назад +1

      Brilliant! I think you are right

    • @gardeniainbloom812
      @gardeniainbloom812 2 года назад +1

      Eloquently put but I wonder if it is more banal than that. We get bored and seek balance. Light and dark. Beauty and ugliness.

    • @renzo6490
      @renzo6490 2 года назад +1

      @@gardeniainbloom812
      I'll have to give that some thought.

  • @serpentines6356
    @serpentines6356 6 лет назад +59

    For years I have been talking to people about beauty...Esp. The lack of it in the U.S. when building housing developments...How hideous they are!...I didn't know about Scruton until a few months ago. I was thrilled when I saw he talked about beauty. I just do not understand why so many people care less about beauty.

    • @foundmypebbles3874
      @foundmypebbles3874 5 лет назад +2

      Loraine Mohar I presume the appreciation of beauty is innate but it takes a while for their spirits to readjust, as with formerly incarcerated animals that are reintroduced to nature it takes them a little while to shake themselves free

    • @TMPreRaff
      @TMPreRaff 5 лет назад

      Beauty - and god - are man made. And since god doesn't exist, it's up to man to create beauty.

    • @renzo6490
      @renzo6490 5 лет назад +5

      Serpentine S .....esthetics are abandoned when they interfere with profits.

    • @LS-td3no
      @LS-td3no 3 года назад +1

      @@renzo6490 Yes, unfortunately. I remember hearing a story of someone who interviewed architectural students before they entered school and talked to them about their ideas. After their schooling he interviewed them again, and it seemed their creative ideas were zapped out of them. Very sad.
      I ran into a young man who is going to study architecture. I encouraged him to look up Scruton, and watch his "Why Beauty Matters."

    • @LS-td3no
      @LS-td3no 3 года назад +3

      @@TMPreRaff And where did our value, our love of beauty come from? If we are only an evolutionary, biological mass, then where does love, beauty all our higher dreams, creativity, culture come from? Why aspire to anything other than survival?
      You do not know for sure God doesn't exist.

  • @fritula6200
    @fritula6200 4 года назад +15

    The more man moves away from God, the deeper he reach for ugliness, in everything.
    Beauty will save the world.

    • @Thewonderingminds
      @Thewonderingminds 3 года назад

      Without one's own self realization at hand, sense of godliness remains hearsay.

  • @New-Moderate
    @New-Moderate 3 года назад +16

    I contend that a number of modern artists have contempt for beauty because they know they don’t have the talent to create it.

    • @Blissblizzard
      @Blissblizzard Год назад

      The fox and the grapes.

    • @GeoffreyScott571
      @GeoffreyScott571 Год назад

      It’s actually worse than that. Many modern artists are true masters, but they prefer to create ugliness because they hate beauty.

  • @iga27
    @iga27 8 лет назад +46

    pity the illustrations were missing

  • @MarkReedreber
    @MarkReedreber 9 лет назад +30

    Please get us access to the images he's referencing out of the frame of this video!

    • @merlingeikie
      @merlingeikie 4 года назад

      just mouse on over

    • @misselder1
      @misselder1 3 года назад +1

      @@merlingeikie They’re not on the film at all is what he means. The camera stays on Scruton throughout.

    • @twiceismycheerinessandrest
      @twiceismycheerinessandrest 3 года назад

      Yes pleaseeeee 🥺

  • @charlespeterson3798
    @charlespeterson3798 5 лет назад +27

    I put tape on pause after listening to the Schubert and went over and played my guitar for an hour. It changed my playing more than anything that has happened to me in the last 6 months.

  • @dasglasperlenspiel10
    @dasglasperlenspiel10 8 лет назад +37

    One of Professor Scruton's best lectures, I think. Very thought-provoking and worthwhile.

    • @catinthehat906
      @catinthehat906 3 года назад +3

      When he makes the point aesthetically about his tie at 40:00 I wonder if he knew in advance that it would match almost perfectly with the curtain backdrop?

  • @Sameoldfitup
    @Sameoldfitup 3 года назад +11

    “Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams,

  • @adriatik7070
    @adriatik7070 6 лет назад +14

    There is a lot of ugliness in modern world arts

    • @New-Moderate
      @New-Moderate 3 года назад

      @DOOMSLAYER The only qualification the artist had was the willingness to promote ugly and bizarre art to disturb the observer. This stuff doesn’t just happen. There is a large contingent of art dealers and museum curators that want to desecrate beauty and deny you the sense of awe.

  • @biaedwards4025
    @biaedwards4025 6 лет назад +18

    Beautiful hair...beautiful mind!

  • @voodooshizzle
    @voodooshizzle 9 лет назад +19

    He looks like the love child of Robert Redford and John Hurt.

  • @queenanne5917
    @queenanne5917 4 года назад +6

    Putting up the works as he discusses them would have been a good addition, rather annoying searching them up.

  • @misselder1
    @misselder1 3 года назад +5

    Can some bright person list the works of art here for us to look up? Thanks.

  • @happytheleaf948
    @happytheleaf948 3 года назад +5

    RIP Roger few listen, though the many 'herd'....

  • @kipling1957
    @kipling1957 2 года назад +5

    It’s so easy to fade things like PowerPoint in and out of video footage why on earth would anyone neglect to do so in a talk such as this?

  • @chorusetcantus5109
    @chorusetcantus5109 3 месяца назад +1

    It's such a pleasure to listen to someone who knows what he's talking about, unlike all these self-important pseudo-intellectuals that are so heavily promoted. Requiescat in pace. Too bad he, like C.S. Lewis before him, didn't become a Roman Catholic, as did G.K. Chesterton, despite being so close in understanding and thought evident in Sir Roger often sounding rather Chestertonian.
    51:50 There are totally incompetent painters as well. If you're totally incompetent though, the best way forward is to disguise it by pretending to be a modernist. I think [Willem] de Kooning is a very good example of this. He never could paint: he couldn't draw and he couldn't paint , but he could disguise the fact by making it look as though he had done all that and he got through to the other side.
    56:30 The question is then, given that that purpose governs my reasoning as to what I should be doing now, what governs my reasoning as to whether I have to have that purpose? Is that a right purpose to have? And we all have that question too, you know, we have questions about our means but questions about our ends and learning to choose the right end is [well, ought to be - not so much nowadays] part of education just as much as choosing the right means. Classical philosophers made a lot of this distinction: Aristotle distinguished virtue, which is knowledge of the ends, from from skill, which is knowledge of the means for achieving them and although that's simple - I mean what he said was more complex than that but, you know, you can get the point. And I think that it's something that we all recognize as soon as it's pointed out and then you realize that once you see things in that way that aesthetic judgment has to do with getting the ends right and not the means.
    59:30 To this question from the audience: "I appreciate that you showed the Jeff Coon's piece. Clement Greenberg said that kitsch is art that has had all of its cultural relevancy removed from it so that it can be sold and I think it's a curious thing that Koons... I recently went to a lecture by the head of the Institute of classical art and architecture [the name is actually The Institute of Classical Architecture & Art, and the said architect, its President, is Peter Pennoyer] and he's redesigned Jeff Koons's house in a completely classical style, filled with Great Masters and not a single piece of Modern Art which tells me that Jeff Koons what he's trying to say with his art is, I think, he's trying to make money and he makes a lot. Now my question to that is Clement Greenberg said what's going to cure us of kitsch is the Avante-Garde and so what happens when the Avant-Garde becomes kitsch.
    Scruton replies: 1:00:27 Well, the Avant guard of course was not immune from this disease of making things for sale and indeed Clement Greenberg when he wrote his famous essay on " Avant-Garde and Kitsch " [published in 1939 in the Partisan Review] was explicitly referring to de Kooning as as the the art of the future, was very carefully buying up de Kooning, you know, $1,000 a time and within a few years he was rich too because he everybody believed him. [...] 1:02:11 On the issue of with the with ownership on the issue of Jeff Coon's house this is not an unusual thing uh the architects who are most responsible for desecrating London that's Richard Rogers and Norman Foster, they both live in Georgian houses in protected villages where they wouldn't allow a single intrusion of the stuff that they built.

  • @paulwary
    @paulwary Год назад +1

    I can't understand brutalist architechture. Doesn't even work well functionally, et alone aesthetically.

  • @robinhansen8105
    @robinhansen8105 9 лет назад +7

    Where can you see the images?

  • @ManuLeMayan
    @ManuLeMayan 4 года назад +5

    Would 've been nice to see the 'artwork'.

  • @steveb2145
    @steveb2145 3 года назад +7

    a breath of fresh air

  • @carladifranco5051
    @carladifranco5051 9 лет назад +7

    Scruton: I love you as much as beauty.

  • @sanniepstein1007
    @sanniepstein1007 7 лет назад +4

    While 'artists' are displaying beds they did not build, and pursuing the trite goal of shocking the fuddy-duddies, the truly creative people are working wonders in science and technology. Artists should be embarrassed.
    Yet--
    The Southwest of the US is a realm of true art, full of art that pays tribute to natural wonder, explores native and western tradition, exhibits high craftsmanship, and offers realms of silence and beauty. The artists themselves are left, properly, in the background. All is not lost.

    • @kayem3824
      @kayem3824 7 лет назад

      Sanni Epstein Hellywood?

    • @serpentines6356
      @serpentines6356 6 лет назад

      Hollywood is a very small area...Try looking at a map, and expanding your brain

    • @sanniepstein4835
      @sanniepstein4835 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@kayem3824l was thinking of New Mexico.

  • @Shevock
    @Shevock 3 года назад +2

    Every note of Mahler is true. It may just be a true some listeners don't fully appreciate.

  • @die_schlechtere_Milch
    @die_schlechtere_Milch 4 года назад +3

    I absolutely agree with him about Bouguereau!

  • @thitherword
    @thitherword 3 года назад +3

    I disagree only with the ideas that all art needs to be healing and that a painting has to say something. Can't a Bouguereau just be incredibly technically accomplished art that extols the beauty of the human form?

    • @akiwi177
      @akiwi177 2 года назад

      Yes, but it doesn't have a soul sadly... If it s only technical, then it is also very superficial on the symbolic and meaning level. A bit like what you see on instagram these days.. (of course on the painting level I mean ;-))

    • @eh3345
      @eh3345 4 месяца назад

      Well, what about modesty-where is it in Bouguereau nudes? We can admire the human form without nudity, just go look in the mirror behind closed doors. LOL

    • @eh3345
      @eh3345 4 месяца назад

      He had great skill, but painted inappropriately as far as the nudity goes. His other works (with clothing on) were much nicer to look at, and one actually appreciates the human depicted even more, as they are being respected.

  • @Br1an.J
    @Br1an.J 8 месяцев назад

    I really like how he rarely uses contractions. Hallmarks of austerity and self respect, traits so uncommon now I am sure no one thinks about it at all.

  • @NGrimthrie
    @NGrimthrie 8 лет назад +5

    Brilliant

  • @Sameoldfitup
    @Sameoldfitup 3 года назад

    "But the wicked are like the tossing sea, For it cannot be quiet, And its waters toss up refuse and mud." So Isaiah is a little dirty too, with all that refuse and mud, in addition to the wickedness."

  • @franzitaduz
    @franzitaduz 10 месяцев назад

    Miss you sir, but if you were here, they would cancel you.

  • @sanniepstein1007
    @sanniepstein1007 7 лет назад +1

    Yes, Bouguereau is sappy, but the details are wonderful. Those toes!

  • @jamesfagan7823
    @jamesfagan7823 Год назад

    I can't wait for his lecture on how to assemble a cardboard box in a dark room with one hand tied behind your back, did you ever hear such shit in your life

  • @dixonpinfold2582
    @dixonpinfold2582 2 года назад

    I can't quite agree with him on consensus as he describes it around the 1 hr-5 min. mark. Perhaps he's only summing it up as briefly as possible, but I don't think an intellectual would care to do much injustice to his own views for the sake of concision.
    I do agree there's a strong element of consensus in morality, at least a wish for it which amounts to a wish for harmony. But this wish can't be too insistent or it verges on one for unanimity. Between consensus and the chaos he alludes to there's a territory of disagreement and disharmony, even battle and rancour (not to say violence), that's not a very happy one, but one which can be salutary in a way in which chaos never can. I'll allow that the ridgeline between moral absolutism and moral relativism can only be a rather fine one, but we must always be sure it's at least wide enough to walk on and never a mere razor.
    The way he phrases it could be the grounds for an awful conformity or repression of dissent, in my view. The same words in an authoritarian's mouth would sound sinister, close to a command or threat. A Party official in China or the president of an American university might even put them to use explaining why freedom is dangerous and destructive.

  • @bonsummers2657
    @bonsummers2657 Год назад

    Rogers attire style here is hideous.

  • @danielj2653
    @danielj2653 Год назад

    Good lecture, but I think he hasn't fully understood the parable of the prodigal son.

  • @PJAlaska
    @PJAlaska 3 месяца назад

    This man lives forever in my heart. What an amazing man he was! I am always learning something important from him. Roger has long been a role model and hero of mine

  • @saptarshibhattacharya1448
    @saptarshibhattacharya1448 2 года назад

    Sir rest assured and disturbed, that tie and jacket suits each other and you. Thank you planting a seed of "perception of beauty" in me and making me nervous.

  • @PuerinTheHunter
    @PuerinTheHunter 9 лет назад +2

    Thank you!

  • @AsifKhan-bv3iu
    @AsifKhan-bv3iu 20 дней назад

    Very well articulated

  • @annalisavajda252
    @annalisavajda252 Год назад

    Well beauty with people often gets condemned as vanity in a way that say a beautiful flower or animal does not. You post a picture of some garden online it won't offend people so much as the Victorias Secret Fashion Show but someone likely landscaped the garden watered the flowers etc. just as the models were prepped and organized esthetically also but their human so degrade them as too tall too thin too young "unrealistic" why is that?

    • @Blissblizzard
      @Blissblizzard Год назад

      Jeffrey Epstein didn't kill himself.

  • @acommon1
    @acommon1 8 месяцев назад

    Enjoyed it

  • @michelecrowe1568
    @michelecrowe1568 9 месяцев назад

    ❤😊

  • @WarholsCrystalBall
    @WarholsCrystalBall 3 года назад

    The Purpose of Art Schools Today 15:33

  • @grisg.4121
    @grisg.4121 Месяц назад

    40:22

  • @rickiandavis
    @rickiandavis 2 года назад

    his speaking slowed somewhat, then, he died

  • @lauracaruso2524
    @lauracaruso2524 Год назад

    He looked a little bit like Robert Redford.

  • @josephbrothers4511
    @josephbrothers4511 4 года назад

    would've been nice to see the screen?

  • @dukerbower2228
    @dukerbower2228 3 года назад

    First seconds: Who questions whether beauty matters? Who says nothing is of any value if it has no use? It is a slog to go any further. He likes beautiful things, ok, so does everyone. How, it appears, "we" can "justify to others what exactly it is we want them to do" seems his core, the scary core of so many who like him. I don't think he is a great thinker at all, very sophomoric.

    • @happytheleaf948
      @happytheleaf948 3 года назад

      Have you read any of his work...

    • @grekerbeer948
      @grekerbeer948 2 года назад +1

      We do not Notice those sorts of things, like how instrumental and materialists we have become. He points it out very well and brings our attention to it.

    • @Blissblizzard
      @Blissblizzard Год назад

      Not everyone likes beautiful things, many preferr exaggerated distorted things, the enraged and bitter wallow in ugliness and broken things etc

  • @NeofolkClassics
    @NeofolkClassics 4 года назад +3

    rip my man

  • @Boomset
    @Boomset 9 лет назад

    Would love to provide event management services at next year's event. Connect with us!

  • @josephlancaster7997
    @josephlancaster7997 3 года назад

    Did not the Nazis attack modern art for being 'decadent' ? Political Reaction.

    • @New-Moderate
      @New-Moderate 3 года назад +3

      It doesn’t take a Nazi to indict modern art as decadent.

    • @Blissblizzard
      @Blissblizzard Год назад

      It was decadent, mostly However, (George Grosz was necessary satire and John Heartfelt was effective propaganda) and Nazi Art was anodyne and sickly sentimental and pompous.
      Its not goodies and baddies time.

  • @enchantingamerica2100
    @enchantingamerica2100 2 года назад

    beauty for the win

  • @rickiandavis
    @rickiandavis 2 года назад

    awful camera "work"

  • @alexcarcamo1053
    @alexcarcamo1053 4 года назад

    i like his hair as well as his mind

  • @Desertduleler_88
    @Desertduleler_88 9 лет назад

    Lol, I was thinking it was some relation of Robert Redford.......

  • @teresaloureiro2525
    @teresaloureiro2525 4 года назад

    YOU HAVE SPOKEN ABOUT THE ' WITCH HUNT CULTURE ' .

  • @bobsbigboy_
    @bobsbigboy_ 3 года назад

    beauty can also be filth and confrontational things

  • @NothingHumanisAlientoMe
    @NothingHumanisAlientoMe 4 года назад

    But the only things worthy of desecration are beautiful...
    Ah, to be human and hungry...

    • @Blissblizzard
      @Blissblizzard Год назад

      That's rage.

    • @NothingHumanisAlientoMe
      @NothingHumanisAlientoMe Год назад

      @@Blissblizzard
      Aren't we all in a desperate rage to acquire that calm place?

    • @Blissblizzard
      @Blissblizzard Год назад +1

      @@NothingHumanisAlientoMe Okay, the temporal and material aspects,
      The Bamiyan Buddhas were unique, and are gone forever. (I'm not Buddhist btw)
      The rage to control and to reduce everything to pointy uncomfortable rubble is an unquenchable thirst.
      Tantrums don't bring peace they bring an unassuaged deep anguish, exhaustion and fragmentation.
      The 1st humans were fascinated by repeatable motifs and geometric shapes, Not much found in the buzzing, hyper -adaptive, chaos/complexity of nature.
      We moderns are dispirited by the ubiquity of boxy shapes and straight lines, and there is probably nothing to more uniquely depressing than wind blown grit, dirty concrete walls and strewn discarded detritus. Order and disorder without nature.
      Beauty and sublimity bring peace.

  • @POLMAZURKA
    @POLMAZURKA 3 года назад

    our beauty of dance...

  • @kanchanghosh2423
    @kanchanghosh2423 Год назад

    Excellent.

  • @merlingeikie
    @merlingeikie 4 года назад

    Thank you

  • @sennewam
    @sennewam 4 года назад +2

    God Bless

  • @stephensharp3033
    @stephensharp3033 6 лет назад

    Why is his top button not done up?

    • @DoctorIontach
      @DoctorIontach 6 лет назад +1

      www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47285/delight-in-disorder

    • @New-Moderate
      @New-Moderate 3 года назад

      It’s kind of a “unkempt chic” look.

  • @TMPreRaff
    @TMPreRaff 4 года назад

    All the years deeply studying the concept of beauty, and he still can't do something about his hair.

    • @Blissblizzard
      @Blissblizzard Год назад

      Beauty and vanity and superficiality of commentary - each and all, very different categories.

  • @markradionov3428
    @markradionov3428 6 лет назад +4

    I do agree with the importance of beauty but very much dislike the connection Mr Scruton makes of it with religion/God.

    • @cravis123
      @cravis123 5 лет назад +6

      Because it is possible that you do not understand that true beauty is conected to divine nature.

    • @dalmatinka9084
      @dalmatinka9084 5 лет назад +3

      Then you do not understand his point.
      Like he says, you want the means, but not the end.
      The point of beauty is that it transcends us, transcends us above our animal self to something greater.
      That is what philosophers, like Plato, have said for centuries
      The only thing greater than us can be the Divine.
      That’s why Religions exist, that man can be transcended through the Divine.
      Beauty and art is a means which helps us.

    • @johnstewart7025
      @johnstewart7025 5 лет назад +1

      When people say God, I think "most precious jewel" -- in other words the knowledge that makes life worth living.

    • @simonaivancic528
      @simonaivancic528 3 года назад +1

      but all lovely abd beutiful comes from God.... all other comes from the devil and his diabolical demons and people who are neutral or just plain chooses uglynes , evil, etc..

  • @michaele.2583
    @michaele.2583 8 лет назад +1

    Very appealing - what a pitty, that Scruton is one of those, who want to make their own prudery a general public norm - absolutly disqualifying!

    • @tonyforeman9502
      @tonyforeman9502 8 лет назад +14

      But why should people make their own prurience a general public norm? Why should that not disqualify? What you call prudery, and others might describe as decency or common sense, is in better for the happiness of society. So much of the vaunted sexual revolution has brought misery in its train.

    • @michaele.2583
      @michaele.2583 8 лет назад +2

      Tony Foreman Im sorry for you if anybody should realy have made you unhappy by making his prurience a norm or obligation for you, and I would never advocate it of affirm it, but can you affirm, that it realy happend? I doubt it, but if so, it was surly not me, nor would I be so arrogant to claim to know or even decide (without knowing) what is better for the happiness of others, as you, nor would I be so naive to make happiness the basic foundation for a general norm, but how did Nietzsche so rightously say: "Der Mensch strebt nicht nach Glück, das tun nur die Engländer" - but this is not the philosophy of a true moral, which can only be guided by the right of free choice of the individual, this is the "philosophy" of pc and social-justice workes - as I said: absolutly disqualifying!
      P.S.: On the day the alleged social norm of prurience becomes only half as repressive and general as the tyrany of christian pseudo-moral I might change my opinion and think it over again, but Im pretty sure this idea is quite remote and far-fetched, but havent we seen an elephant jump on a chair at the sight of a mouse yet? Yes. we have!)

    • @tonyforeman9502
      @tonyforeman9502 8 лет назад +5

      I disagree. A tyranny of prudery would be a bad thing and I do not advocate it. I don't think Roger Scruton advocates it either. The laws (or general public norms) that existed before the sexual revolution, and which were more prudish, were I believe better than the newer prurient ones that reflect the free choices of individuals. In fact the free choice of one individual is the oppression of another; a good example of this is abortion law. I think that there should be as much freedom as possible but the law has to fall somewhere and better and happier (which is no bad thing) that it should fall nearer to prudery than to prurience.

    • @michaele.2583
      @michaele.2583 8 лет назад +1

      Dont worry: I perfectly understood that you disagree, and that according to you the law should be closer to prudishness than to free choice (what you call prurience), and I m not surprised that you wouldn´t call that tyranny but rather"happyness" or "interest of the greater good" or simply "law". Im quite sure, that Augustin, the old church-father for example, wouldnt have called himself a tyrannt, nor feel to be one too, when after an orgiastic youth he was hit by a certain hangover and took care, that nobody else like he would have to suffer the same pains, with a similar peace of hypocrisy, which in his case became the foundation of 2000 years christian ethics in respect to sexuality.
      Really, Im not surprised at all, but in the contrary: I would be very surprised when a square or petty bourgeoise who has all the sexual freedoms he needs for himself, would be honest enough to admit his incompetence to judge for others in this respect. Dont worry, I disagree with you, Augustinus or Scruton and the whole bunch of you exactly as much, but I agree in one point: such "laws" have to fall, instead of being resurrected! They have to fall before the feet of the defiled but real right of the free and self-responsible individual superject! So dont forget, that you can talk as pruriently about law as much as you want, all you have on your side is your opinion, and that of some others, but what I have is the right!

    • @tonyforeman9502
      @tonyforeman9502 8 лет назад +5

      So the right to 'free choice' is your all-in-all. But people's choices and interests differ. So whose 'freedom' are we talking about? This is a basis for chaos.
      When I say the laws have to 'fall' somewhere I mean they have to take some form. I think it best that they 'fall' in line with natural law as much as possible. Yes as understood by me, Scruton and Augustine! We did not invent these laws - which we consider freeing - only recognised them, along with the majority of mankind. Your kind of free choice is licence not liberty.

  • @boobsmalloy
    @boobsmalloy Год назад

    I love old Scruton