Nietzsche’s Warning to Scientists

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
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    Back to the Genealogy of Morals. Nietzsche continually and repeatedly asks the same question: what is the meaning of ascetic ideals? He will find these ideals expressed in four domains: religion, philosophy, art, and science.
    Now, this final third of the Genealogy is ingeniously constructed so as to not reveal the answer to the question, what is the meaning of ascetic ideals?, until the very last sentence of the entire book. All the way throughout, Nietzsche is building up tension, tackling idols and representatives in religion, philosophy, art and science to slowly make his case and expose the different instantiations of these mysterious ascetic ideals until in the final paragraph of the book, he ties everything together and reveals the answer to us.
    The most obvious instances of these ascetic ideals are found in religion. Indeed, one could argue, and Nietzsche basically does argue, that the entire point of religion is to foster an ascetic ideal in man.
    But what is an ascetic ideal? Religion gives us the most straightforward answer. An ascetic ideal, generally, is that ideal which promotes a movement away from the material world, away from the here and now. Religions, in Nietzsche’s view at least, tend to show a general distrust of the material. In the case of Christianity, the material world comes second to the immaterial world, Heaven or the Kingdom of God. In the case of Hinduism and Buddhism, the material world is exposed as illusory or the cause of all suffering. This general distrust of the material is then expressed in specific commandments, almost all of which are geared towards a denial of the material.
    This is the ascetic ideal as it presents itself in religion. In philosophy Nietzsche finds traces of the ascetic ideal starting with the Socratic revolution all the way up to Schopenhauer, so present in the entire Western philosophical tradition. In art, he finds the ascetic ideal most pronounced in the late operas of Richard Wagner, chiefly in his last work, Parsifal.
    But what about science?
    Well, spoilers ahead, Nietzsche will attack science, or rather modern science and accuse it of being another instantiation of this ascetic ideal. But in order to understand this attack, we need to dig a level deeper.
    The ascetic ideal is a principle by which movement away from the material world is encouraged. We saw the examples of fasting, abstinence, prayer, poverty and self-flagellation in religions.
    But this movement is not just a withdrawal from the material world, it’s also a turn away from our material body, which is after all part of the material world. With the exception of poverty, which is directed outwards, most of these ascetic practices are actually directed inwards, focusing on the inner life and the physical body.
    The ascetic practices of these religions are not only about the material world, but in a very literal sense they are about withdrawing from yourself by attacking the material vessel with which you exist in the world, that is to say, your body.
    But the thing is, unless you believe in the soul or the spirit, your body is more or less synonymous with yourself.
    What is the meaning of ascetic ideals?
    For Nietzsche, the ascetic ideals are not simply about hatred or contempt for the material world, but also about contempt for the self.
    Because the cruel fact of the matter is, that the ascetic actually derives pleasure from his suffering. These ascetic feats that require so much willpower, even though they lead to a general state of weakness, are a source of pleasure, or to put in more Nietzschean terms, a source of power. Nietzsche’s grand thesis is that there is pleasure in contempt, pleasure in weakness, pleasure in being hungry, denying yourself food and drink, even pleasure in hurting yourself. This is the paradox that lies at the heart of the ascetic, who outwardly claims to chase neither power nor pleasure, in fact, he claims to chase the exact opposite. He has to derive pleasure from his hard lifestyle, because as an ascetic, it’s the only pleasure he is afforded. His will has nowhere else to go, he has no other way to vent his human desire for power.
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Комментарии • 496

  • @WeltgeistYT
    @WeltgeistYT  2 года назад +17

    Visit brilliant.org/Weltgeist/ to get started learning STEM for free, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription.

    • @JosiahWarren
      @JosiahWarren 2 года назад

      Maybe you should take a subscription to brilliant because you seem to need a better grasp on sience

    • @WeltgeistYT
      @WeltgeistYT  2 года назад

      @Northern_Soul In the future, yes!

    • @WeltgeistYT
      @WeltgeistYT  2 года назад

      @@mooseolini1447 No, no clue who/what that is

    • @richardatkinson4710
      @richardatkinson4710 2 года назад

      Excellent. Thank you. I’d add Nietzsche’s injunction to scientists to turn to the exploration of value. “What a piece of work is man! How noble in reason! how infinite in faculties! in form and moving, how express and admirable! in action how like an angel! in apprehension, how like a god! the beauty of the world! the paragon of animals!”

    • @jamesbarlow6423
      @jamesbarlow6423 2 года назад

      @@JosiahWarren . Haha! Nice try O Champion of Resentment, paragon of weakness!!!😂

  • @jeremycointin1996
    @jeremycointin1996 2 года назад +277

    The whole "pale blue dot" idea always makes my eyes roll. It's completely dependent on us considering our own size as par. I could just as easily start at the atomic level and then consider humans "colossal living universes in which billions of creatures exist to uphold the walking god. In which wars are fought and billions of cities rise and fall."
    It's all a game of perspective ... and the two possibilities cancel each other out .... making the size of the universe inconsequential to how one "should" regard their position and state.

    • @sirazazeloflowkey6424
      @sirazazeloflowkey6424 2 года назад +13

      Massively underrated comment! Also, very yes.

    • @Epiousios18
      @Epiousios18 2 года назад +38

      This is a great point. Sagan's monologue also ignores the fact that we unavoidably _are_ the centers of our "own universe" so to speak. The immensity of the exterior world (both big and small) as relayed to us by pointer readings does not change the fact that our immediate experience of that cosmos is still the basis of all that we know. That immediate/intimate experience should be the starting point as far as how we conceptualize our "position and state." This is something the ancient philosophers/mystics seemed to understand regardless of if they derived the "proper" conclusions from it.
      "Pale Blue Dot" has the same problem as the "we are just apes" viewpoint. Sure, "we are just apes," apes that are the product of billions of years of evolution and that have the ability to formulate a sentence such as "we are just apes." The attempt to minimize oneself ignores the fact that the very ability to be able to do so might be the most extraordinary thing of all.

    • @AARuiz666
      @AARuiz666 2 года назад +1

      I believe that humanity cannot exist without its hypocrisy. therefore just as we can enjoy dwelling in our mind, looking for answers, others have actively used their physical bodies to keep themselves preoccupied with the momentary aspect of existence, "living". It must mean that in order to appreciate our existance to the fullest from the perspective of were just a piece of dust in the universe, we're also the universe which encompasses the existance of miniscule worlds, where we are god.

    • @andreab380
      @andreab380 2 года назад +4

      Yes, very accurate.
      On top of the "perspective" issue you pointed out, there is the very fact that the very picture of the pale blue dot was taken by human means developed thanks to the potential of human thought.
      The very ability to contemplate out own physical smallness comes from the extent of power our intellect and technology have.

    • @TheRealValus
      @TheRealValus 2 года назад +4

      @@Epiousios18 "The attempt to minimize oneself ignores the fact that the very ability to be able to do so might be the most extraordinary thing of all." Your comment reminded me of Nietzsche's "He who despises himself still respect himself as one who despises," and our highest aspiration may be "the hour of the great contempt".

  • @Dutch_bastard_23
    @Dutch_bastard_23 2 года назад +95

    Nietzsche was *lightyears* ahead of his time. The sheer brilliance of his densely packed lines.

    • @mingthan7028
      @mingthan7028 9 месяцев назад

      Nietzhe the Gigachad Roaster

    • @smallscreentv1204
      @smallscreentv1204 9 месяцев назад

      He’s a sophist
      He actually admits this. He gloats about it.

  • @alwaysgreatusa223
    @alwaysgreatusa223 2 года назад +143

    The obvious retort to Sagan's moralizing is that if the world we inhabit is insignificant, then so too is the blood spilled in the attempts to conquer it. The job of the scientist is to report on the laws that govern it, not to suggest moral attitudes we should take towards it, nor towards one another.

    • @tyloniussquib4000
      @tyloniussquib4000 2 года назад +13

      Literally came down here to see if anyone said exactly this

    • @Epiousios18
      @Epiousios18 2 года назад +30

      I like to jokingly refer to Sagan as one of the "high priests" of scientism. Many treat him (and others like him) like some sort of guru or prophet without realizing the irony of doing so.

    • @thewrathematician1911
      @thewrathematician1911 Год назад +21

      Sagan's ethical position is self-refuting in that sense. He posits that human suffering is cosmically insignificant but that the avoidance of it is a moral obligation. But maintaining such a moralistic outlook is undermined if humanity itself has no inherent cosmic value to begin with. What this tells me is that we cannot search outside ourselves for reassurance of the values we hold within. The universe is not responsible for telling us how to live our lives.

    • @Aim54Delta
      @Aim54Delta Год назад

      @@thewrathematician1911
      It is as Nietzsche said - we killed God and live in the shadow.
      God was something beyond ourselves to which our behavior was accountable. The priests of our institutions have always tried to usurp god, and with science found the wonders and miracles to do so within the minds of the more numerous midwits.
      Of course, why should I be nice to other people? Einstein recognized a similar problem and employed meta-causality - the notion that consequences beyond our calculation would be our benefit for good behaviors - but this would merely be a belief to preserve the moral traditions, not a means as to inform what actions are or are not moral.
      Neither is hedonism. Forcibly hooking someone up to an orgasm machine is not moral because it compells them to experience pleasure, nor would it be moral to lure them with addiction under the auspices of free choice.
      Only when another is recognized as an inviolable will do morals follow logically. In prior ages, the world and we belonged to God. Another person was God's creation and to violate that person was to violate God, who would have his account on you.
      Because science can create such wonders as to awe the public and get them to ask for proof of God, the priests are now free to rationalize any behavior as moral as no account of conduct is expected and there is no soul to hold sacred.
      Why should, scientifically speaking, genocide be prohibited? Why should experiments require consent? Why should the lives expended in wars matter? If the individual human being is nothing sacred, then traditional morals are merely an obstacle to the various goals of people who have the will and means to achieve whatever manmade horror lay beyond their comprehension.

    • @Raydensheraj
      @Raydensheraj Год назад +1

      Sagan can propose what he wants, who the hell are YOU to tell him otherwise? Let me guess....you have a preferred version of invisible supernatural superbeeing and think the evolving, heavily denomination - Bible interpretation based dark age moral framework shouldn't be questioned by anyone?

  • @almawlanietzsche
    @almawlanietzsche 2 года назад +104

    you are one of few philosophy channels that actually know what they are talking about and you are criminally underrated.

    • @SolveEtCoagula93
      @SolveEtCoagula93 2 года назад

      How do you make the assessment, ' . . . . . know what they are talking about'? Or is this just an example of cognitive bias? Just curious.

    • @rawazuk
      @rawazuk Год назад +1

      نعم یا مولای

    • @pugdog1107
      @pugdog1107 Год назад +4

      Seriously, so few people who talk about nietzsche understand his arguments

  • @Jabranalibabry
    @Jabranalibabry 2 года назад +50

    Sagan: pale blue dot!
    Nietz: shut it, nerd >:(
    Weltie: lemme explain

  • @willb295
    @willb295 Год назад +18

    I always find myself returning to this video when I feel like I’m at my lowest. There is something so comforting and motivating about the ending of this video. It’s very well made

  • @Rolf-son-of-an-electrician
    @Rolf-son-of-an-electrician 10 месяцев назад +2

    No one gets me pumped like Nietzsche. Who knew the guy who hates everyone, could be such an uplifting voice.

    • @christiansather8438
      @christiansather8438 4 месяца назад +1

      I don’t think he hated everyone. He was deeply human and had to put on a tough guy persona. He saw through the culture so thoroughly, and in doing so foresaw a hellish future for the West. So he comes off as abrasive but he’s just trying to articulate the problems and questions he is encountering. He probably resigned to the notion that his work would only be appreciated long after he passed.

  • @tylermoore4429
    @tylermoore4429 2 года назад +50

    A couple of points before I lose the motivation to post:
    1. Gazing upon the immensity of the cosmos does not necessarily lead to thoughts of our insignificance. It is not just Nietzsche who would object to that sort of equation. I am not sure if Sagan stops at the lessons of kindness and so on, but for Kant "this experience of the irresistibility of nature's power prompts us to realize that we are weak and existentially insignificant in the grand scheme of nature. And yet, it also reveals that we transcend nature as moral agents and systematic knowers." Similarly, there are religions that exploit that same sense of awe to bring your attention back to the mystery of consciousness without which there is no Nature and no awe.
    2. You say being kind to each other does not logically follow from the pale blue dot, but there is an emotional logic that most people can immediately grasp with their common sense. We all share the sense of loneliness and lostness that image evokes - at least it may have evoked these feelings the first time we laid eyes on it. And it is human (or animal) to want protection and consolation in the face of such cosmic indifference. We all display those protective instincts when we see an abandoned kitten shivering in a rain-soaked field. When it comes to the cosmos, we are all in the position of those kittens. There is no one else looking out for us other than us. So the logic is clear enough to me and others, whether it is acceptable to Nietzsche - or the Nietzsche of our imagination, since he is no longer with us - is another story. This is not to say that I completely buy into what Sagan is attempting to do. He is laying the foundations of a secular religion, one based on the vastness and mystery of the cosmos and no longer on anthropomorphic gods. Did it work? Not really. Just like we continue to perceive and act as if the Earth is stationary after being educated about its rotation and revolution, our cosmic surroundings rarely register in our day-to-day consciousness and activities. We continue to live as if we are the center of the cosmos for all intents and purposes and the occasional reminder that we are insignificant specks barely creates a blip before it vanishes.

    • @reuvenpolonskiy2544
      @reuvenpolonskiy2544 2 года назад +7

      Carl Segan have gone to a great length to explain, how irelevant the man and his endeavours.
      Ergo, there is also no meaning in helping others, since they are also meaningless. As well as there is no meaning(or problem) in the blood spelt by the Tyrants.

    • @capitalism2557
      @capitalism2557 2 года назад

      @@reuvenpolonskiy2544 🥵

    • @capitalism2557
      @capitalism2557 2 года назад

      @@reuvenpolonskiy2544 plss let me in phiwosiper 🥺🥺 uwu

    • @andreab380
      @andreab380 2 года назад +6

      Some people are kind, and will have that kind of reaction while faced by shared suffering - be kind, join forces, take care of each other.
      But others will have the same kind of reaction Sagan rejected - conquer more, fight, make yourself safe first.
      We have seen this often in history, especially coming from the powerful ones (I personally think people who became very powerful must have a streak of psychopathic or sociopathic tendencies, a strong disregard for others).
      So the point is that the supposed common-sense emotional appeal of picturing ourselves alone and fragile is not granted. That image has that effect only if you are already that kind of person. It has no genuinely pedagogical or transformative power.

    • @tylermoore4429
      @tylermoore4429 2 года назад

      @@andreab380 Indeed it has no power, as we can glean from the fact that the world has only further deteriorated after that image was widely witnessed. The world is hotter and more polarized while conspiracy theories run amok. My point was that while no reaction follows "logically" from the pale blue dot, Sagan's appeal to be kind is one that makes sense to most people. At one time religion made the same appeal within a different framework (fear of God, the afterlife and so on), and now Carl makes the same argument with the help of Voyager images and so on. If there are psychopathic or autistic people that common-sense logic cannot reach, that's no fault of Sagan.

  • @stellanholgersson7170
    @stellanholgersson7170 2 года назад +3

    the point of sagan speech is that we should be more caring, appreciating more the wonders of life on earth. Science Is not about nihilism, its about understanding nature, which have produced us from a vastness of emptiness and dust. Thanks to science , Nietzsche can make his projection of a future superman.

  • @felipeandrade2470
    @felipeandrade2470 2 года назад +22

    I like these videos that tackle modern issues or events with philosophies of the past (that are still relevant of course). I think Nietzsche had in mind people like you when writing his books to motivate himself.
    Great video, thanks for sharing

  • @cosmicprison9819
    @cosmicprison9819 2 года назад +3

    You can find pleasure in pain; you cannot find pleasure in suffering. Suffering already includes a negative value judgment a priori, much like murder is always illegal by definition.

  • @SuperCaelum
    @SuperCaelum 2 года назад +122

    At first i wasn't happy with Nietzsche's stance on science but i grew to respect his opinion. There's much coldness and nihilism in science. I feel almost obligated to agree with Nietzsche about almost everything because he's helping me fight with depression but I consider myself technocratic transhumanist and thinking of scientists as peddlers of nihilism would be pretty depressing.

    • @user-sl6gn1ss8p
      @user-sl6gn1ss8p 2 года назад +20

      Scientists are for the most part technical-minded people.
      I study physics (undergrad), and most physicists I know don't really seem to have any strong opinions on the interpretations of quantum mechanics - they can calculate, make experiments, advance theory, and that's the realm in which they work.
      They might incidentally, or maybe as an aggregate, end up peddling this or that philosophical ideal - but the average individual? I really wouldn't say so.

    • @Brousey
      @Brousey 2 года назад +13

      Peddlers of arrogance I'd say.

    • @nicolaswhitehouse3894
      @nicolaswhitehouse3894 2 года назад

      Transhumanism is extremely contrary and different to Nietzsche’s overcoming of mankind.

    • @Tehz1359
      @Tehz1359 2 года назад +7

      Could you describe your transhumanism to me? Do you want to merge us with machines, life extension, upload our consciousness to computer sort of thing? What does it mean to you?

    • @DDrew67
      @DDrew67 2 года назад +5

      Stone Cold.....Crazy

  • @jmiller1918
    @jmiller1918 2 года назад +19

    Excellent use of repetition in image and text to reinforce audience learning; you show increasing sophistication of expression, and your goal appears to honestly be that of elucidation and enlightenment. You have done more for fostering an understanding of Nietzsche than anyone since Walter Kaufmann. At first, a critique of asceticism seems to be an untimely meditation indeed, as the West currently flounders in hedonism. But the recent history of a certain enthusiasm for masks and isolation at least on the part of a portion of the population, shows that there is still an appetite for asceticism among some.

  • @tommackling
    @tommackling 2 года назад +42

    I don't wish to criticize this video or its author, but I just want to point out that many of Neitzche's writings weren't serious insights, but "uncomforatble questions" he was posing not just to his readers but also to himself. He had an idea that certain insights were not readily understood because they were emotionally unappealing, and so he sought to dig up "treasure" through exploring what he felt to be the psychologically repellent. Much of what he wrote he did not actually believe, but was just "trying on" or writing "tongue in cheek". In fact he stated in one of his popular books something like:
    "Behold, I have strewn about diamonds and other precious gems. But beware, for amoungst these I have also strewn poisonous snakes." I.e. he knew he was likely revealing valuable insights as well as misleading and poisonous thoughts.
    He was a deep thinker, and full of irony and apparent self contradiction. But he was also a product of his age and limited to what he could know and understand. It is difficult, I think to fairly interpret him, and I think the best interpretations have to remain personal (i.e. what impact did he make on you?) and his judgement must be left to God. So I think a "synopsis" or characterization of Neitzche's thoughts or beliefs might be doing him an injustice of sorts. If one wants to understand what Neitzche had to say, you really need to read his writings for yourself.
    All that being said, I think Neitzche had one of the finest intellects and at the same time, many of the things he wrote, at least literally interpreted are simply wrong. He was human, all too human, and I for one loved him and also forgive him for his great imperfection.
    Cheers

    • @christopherhamilton3621
      @christopherhamilton3621 2 года назад +5

      Absolutely! It’s hard to deconstruct a superficiality without being faced with an accusation of superficiality. Yet FN wasn’t afraid of doing it anyway. How deep your abyss is, is dependent on how deep you’re willing to take it, while maintaining a healthy dose of irony…

    • @tonygumbrell22
      @tonygumbrell22 2 года назад +4

      I read Nietzsche pretty thoroughly but don't necessarily lionize him. My attitude being, he could be wrong. Some I like about him, some I don't.

    • @okplay9446
      @okplay9446 9 месяцев назад

      Reading all these comments makes me realize how insanely genius Nietzsche was - not in the cliche sens, but genius as in unorthodox and misunderstood.

    • @okplay9446
      @okplay9446 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@christopherhamilton3621 I don't know man, plunge too deep and you might just not return

    • @joblakelisbon
      @joblakelisbon 8 месяцев назад

      Which of Nietszche's insights weren't serious?

  • @nicolaswhitehouse3894
    @nicolaswhitehouse3894 2 года назад +14

    I don’t agree with the part that Nietzsche wants human to be the center of the universe. He wants human’s to live according to the cosmos, to be « one » with the cosmos as much intensity as possible. Nietzsche never claimed that he wanted humans to be the center of the universe.

    • @iwtdkmp5081
      @iwtdkmp5081 2 года назад +2

      one could understand that being "one" with the universe makes it the center. I think it can be understood as a subjective center, probably not everyone have the capabilities to "live".
      I dont really care for all the lifestyle tips Nietzsche is doing, so i might be totally ignorant to this.

    • @nicolaswhitehouse3894
      @nicolaswhitehouse3894 2 года назад +3

      @@iwtdkmp5081 Maybe but nevertheless it’s only a selective humans, the « ubermensch » who are capable of living life that way. But not mankind in general.

    • @dp1381
      @dp1381 2 года назад +3

      The irony is that the basis of the Christian ethic IS living in accordance with the order of the cosmos ie the logos, or God.

    • @B1bLioPhil3
      @B1bLioPhil3 2 года назад +1

      @@dp1381 How ironic, right? Our ancestors knew these truths long ago.

    • @omegacardboard5834
      @omegacardboard5834 2 года назад

      @@nicolaswhitehouse3894 It's the Ubermensch who will first be able to, but part of being the Ubermensch is that he gives meaning to everyone else as well

  • @masterkek4243
    @masterkek4243 2 года назад +5

    Science and Nihilism are really two different things. Science is just knowlege. Nihilism is a philosophy of meaning. It observes that there is no meaning in the universe, but that is actually incorrect. That is literal falsehood. It is true that meaning is not a measurable quality in the things around us, but that's because it is a entirely man made abstraction of the world around us. So, there is meaning, just not in the world around us. It's in our heads, and that's not to belittle it's importance. I think meaning is the most important thing to me, because without it I would have nothing to do with my life. Actually, I would say everything is in our heads. Our heads are in our heads too. Meaning is an abstraction of truth obtained through JTB (justified true belief). Just thought I would point that out.

    • @masterkek4243
      @masterkek4243 2 года назад

      @Freshly Made Ghosts Meaning is indeed a subjective measure, but a subjective measure must also be objective because if it wasn't it would break the laws of thermodynamics. What do you think a subjective measure is? Magic fairy dust? This is not superficial, it is actually the truth. Therefore, that declaration that there is no meaning must be false. Yes, I am here to declare that non-existance, indeed, does not exist.

  • @roderich6528
    @roderich6528 2 года назад +5

    This is probably the most important video you've made so far and I fear it won't reach as many as it should. Count on me for sharing it within my reach

  • @acvarthered
    @acvarthered 2 года назад +5

    I realize some of this is due to Nietzsche's chosen semantics, but he makes a fatal flaw. The morals he speaks of are not Christian. The existed long before Christianity was a thing. They are also not arbitrary. They are creations of us and our evolution. They are millions of years in the making. The reason we give meaning to things is because we have evolved to give meaning to things. Because we evolved as social animals we evolved to have the morals we have today.

    • @Mr.PeabodyTheSkeptic
      @Mr.PeabodyTheSkeptic 2 года назад

      100% on point.

    • @fishbrainLTD
      @fishbrainLTD 2 года назад

      Exactly. Heremeticism predates all major religions and is much more simple to comprehend.

    • @vinuzo9548
      @vinuzo9548 16 дней назад

      In other words: we are merely automatons of evolutionary processes, no different to animals. In fact no different to the chemical processes of an inanimate object. Like rocks in space, we are merely bundles of chemicals undergoing chemical processes. There is nothing more significant about a human being than there is about a rock.
      This way of thinking is the nihilism inherent in modern science.

    • @oscarcrocker5212
      @oscarcrocker5212 5 дней назад

      You haven’t read the book, have you?

  • @guilldea
    @guilldea 2 года назад +14

    "Science enforces nihilism", this doesn't sound true to me, I feel like science has a different objective and nihilism is what you personaly feel when learning about those discoveries but you might aswell feel optimisim, awe, fear and many other things. I don't think the nihilist feeling is on science, I think that's on you.
    Evolution theory was not proposed with the intempt of making you feel worthles, simply reality was probed and questioned and that's the answer we found.
    The job of a scientist is never to find out about human concepts like morality, if you are extracting those values form astronomical studies you are using them incorrectly.

    • @Purwapada
      @Purwapada 2 года назад +1

      Yes great point!

    • @jamesmark4880
      @jamesmark4880 2 года назад

      Agree with everything except that morality is off limits to science. Sagan's astronomy is not how knowledge regarding morality will be achieved though, agree.

    • @guilldea
      @guilldea 2 года назад

      @@jamesmark4880 yeah, I should clarify that the branches of science that study human subjects like psychology, sociology etc are still on their infancy and we are still on the fence about them being sciences or merely using science as a tool while modeling human behaviour with a more philosophical approach.

    • @Nana-bv1md
      @Nana-bv1md 2 года назад +7

      Nietzsche is not saying that science is meant to study things like the concepts of morality or human value ,what he is saying is that when we analyze and draw conclusions from these "scientific facts" we get a nihilistic world-view, analyzing science and drawing conclusions from " scientific facts" is not the same thing as doing scientific work and enquiry and discovering new "scientific facts"

    • @low3242
      @low3242 2 года назад

      @@Nana-bv1md "we get a nihilistic world-view" He was wrong, scientists are pushing for space exploration, technological advancements, life enhancing drugs etc. they all want to live and say yes to life otherwise they would just hide in a rural isolated cabin and go mad from their own isolation and die. I don't know how you can call this nihilism. It seems like whatever Nietzsche didn't like, he called it "nihilistic".

  • @ahmedalmahdie
    @ahmedalmahdie 2 года назад +3

    انا اشكرك! اشكرك جدًا وبصدق. كلامك بليغ، حيوي، مُفهم بالمعاني، وفي نفس الوقت، يتحمل مسؤولية نقل العلم بجدية.

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Год назад +2

    WOOOOOOW THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU FOR EXISTING!!!!!! Your channel is changing my life!!! I knew Nietzsche but not like this, now i'm starting to truly understand, and for the first time i'm getting filled with a desire to live, search and experience, break the status quo, one based on wisdom not simply in want. A philosophy that puts us against each other so we can transcend is AMAZING, it gives a holy meaning for our endless fights that is usually seeing as vicious, even defeat and pain become essencial for transformation. The stepping stones for the happy moments are made by this chain of Causality and Butterfly Effect that includes the bad.

  • @PaoloCaminiti
    @PaoloCaminiti 10 месяцев назад +2

    Great quality content. It may be worth noting that subtitles has "aesthetic" ideal for "ascetic" ideal everywhere...

    • @bryanutility9609
      @bryanutility9609 8 месяцев назад

      I’d like to hear more of comparing the aesthetic vs. ascetic use of art, from Nietzsche’s POV but not entirely.

  • @zerakhu
    @zerakhu 2 года назад +2

    I really love this channel, makes Nietzsche more entertaining and engaging than he already is

  • @joshuaallgood7030
    @joshuaallgood7030 11 месяцев назад

    When I was a graduate student in physics, I had a general relativity professor who countered the claim that heliocentrism disproves that the Earth is at the center of the universe by making a metaphysical argument by saying that because I am a conscious being, capable of sight and senses, that I alone am the center of the universe. I think this serves as a Nietzschean counterargument to that framework and also reframes cosmology as life-affirming rather than life-negating.

  • @blackfeatherstill348
    @blackfeatherstill348 2 года назад +6

    I think you are doing Carl Sagan a disservice in focusing on one aspect of his work and thinking, one line of thinking, one "speech" . He is speaking from one perspective in this quote, perhaps an inhuman perspective, to emphasise (later) the significance of the human. He is creative, curious, scientific, and dare I say poetic. In other areas of even this series he holds up the attributes of the human condition as absolutely significant, , and its potential, not just scientific potential, but the potential of being human.
    You could equally quote his line, paraphrasing... "We are literally the stuff of stars, a way for the universe to know itself" . It is not far from Shakespeare, and I know Nietzsche appreciated Shakespeare.

  • @AlexanderBarutti
    @AlexanderBarutti 2 года назад +2

    Your videos are just brilliant. You manage to explain appallingly difficult things in such didadic, easy way. Thank you!

  • @jamesbarlow6423
    @jamesbarlow6423 2 года назад +3

    Superb. So nice to see the Nietzsche I've known for forty years here!

  • @aw7049
    @aw7049 2 года назад +3

    I present myself with the same questions. Found this video extremely suggestive to me and offered interesting ideas to think about. We are nothing individually, but as a collective, I find it so hard to be without “meaning” ( quote intentional). Imagine perceiving in all its glory a universe you were born from, just to find out that it just exists. So hard to swallow. But we always choose to believe in transcendence of some sort.

  • @jelliott0077
    @jelliott0077 2 года назад +2

    Sagan didn’t live long enough to see himself become the villain… which he is now for withholding the truth.

  • @Purwapada
    @Purwapada 2 года назад +10

    I am only a blue dot if I define myself by what is seen as my body. But the body cannot live in a vacuum, the body implies an environment, the environment implies other factors, which imply the entire current state of the entire universe.
    Therefore I am in a strict sense the entire universe. My existence depends on it in the way it is, just as its existence depends on me being here.
    This is the wisdom of the avatamsaka sutra and described with the analogy of Indra's net.

    • @jamesmark4880
      @jamesmark4880 2 года назад +5

      Yes, and what? What use is that realization? You exist in the universe, congratulations, do all the colors of the world fade to black for you now, knowing that they are all one in the same? I'll bet no.

    • @amanakeet
      @amanakeet 2 года назад +4

      @@jamesmark4880 when that realization is merely intellectual, there is no use. When it becomes an emotional and Instinctive realisation, it is all there is to attain.

    • @CeramicShot
      @CeramicShot 2 года назад

      This is just a cheap linguistic manipulation. No, you are not "in a strict sense the entire universe." That is the opposite of a "strict" definition. It is a definition that is so expansive as to be useless. "You" only exist as a mind and personality insofar as your physical brain is relatively intact.

    • @jamesmark4880
      @jamesmark4880 2 года назад

      @@amanakeet Again, what does that look like, emotionally and instinctively knowing that everything is the same? Do you emotionally and instinctively forget to wipe your ass because, with or without shit is the same?

    • @amanakeet
      @amanakeet 2 года назад +2

      @@CeramicShot you are correct there, the brain thinking that it is the universe is in fact objectively false. It depends on the line of demarcation that the brain defines for its own existence compared to what its not, i.e the rest of the universe. When the brain dies, it is not. If its existence is based in its own thoughts then, is its existence really objectively real? It is real in the thought of itself. When one contemplates about what one is excluding one's own thought, there is a flavor of pure witnessing, pure consciousness. That brings alchemical changes in one's own body, and gives one a taste of something that can't be described in "strict definitions". Time to light another spliff.

  • @nicknorizadeh4336
    @nicknorizadeh4336 2 года назад +4

    Unbelievable video reminding us to not give in to the vanity of the world! To put ourselves at center stage even though we will all perish anyway

  • @mrjamesgordon
    @mrjamesgordon 9 месяцев назад

    Brilliant video. Presenting a thinker's thoughts is one thing but using them to interpret other events and thinkers is next level and demonstrates deep thought. I would like to see a comparison of Nietzsche to Guenon.

  • @nighttime4272
    @nighttime4272 2 года назад +2

    Every time I watch a video of yours I am grateful and amazed that I can watch it for free

  • @docnickmacaluso112
    @docnickmacaluso112 Год назад

    Self-affirmation and self-indulgence does not work, and the more one engages in them, the emptier one feels.

  • @tenaciousrodent6251
    @tenaciousrodent6251 6 месяцев назад

    When i look at the stars i think about everything that is out there waiting to be discovered.There is practically no limit to the number of possible worlds! And that is what's comforting. Not feeling "insignificant". We are anything but that. Being self aware is a VERY significant thing.

  • @RishiNigamMusic
    @RishiNigamMusic Год назад +1

    Amazing essay. Very well thought out and thought provoking.

  • @Aim54Delta
    @Aim54Delta 2 года назад +2

    I have always found this hatred of the self to be annoying - especially within the Christian context. It is my belief that a divine entity is responsible for our existence - there is something to be gained by our being alive and experiencing this ... thing ... we call consciosness. I call it a belief because it is a belief. But it comes with some logical consequences.
    The experience is exactly what it is supposed to be. Whether it is part of some process, a lesson, or all of the possibilities in one ... that is perhaps unknowable.
    Looking at this world and deciding it, or ourselves, are somehow flawed or imperfect is either a figure of speech or tantamount to heresy. If one lives as though this world is flawed, one is effectively declaring themselves to know how to make a more perfect existence. To declare god inadequate and to be able to claim his place as his better.
    This doesn't mean we should argue for stagnation - the universe would never allow us to be able to do something unintended by its divine creative force. We are meant to explore and experiment, to document and to debate.
    But one should be cautious when taking into one's self the notion that life is insignificant, that we are meaningless, that we are foreign to nature, etc. It is, within the christian context, the embrace of ideals rooted in claiming to know better than God. One could bypass this by claiming God to simply be malevolent or to otherwise have some utilitarian purpose for subjecting us to an imperfect experience we are supposed to reject...
    But there is a gap in the logic that always reminded me of that line in revelation where it said all would worship the beast and its blaspheme.

  • @ThomasAndersonPhD
    @ThomasAndersonPhD 2 года назад +2

    Have you considered expanding into videos on Philipp Mainländer? or perhaps Peter Wessel Zapffe?

  • @Leonardo-el6sq
    @Leonardo-el6sq 3 месяца назад

    One of the most important videos I've seen on RUclips

  • @opabinnier
    @opabinnier 2 года назад +2

    Very helpful, so congratulations. Weighty note: the Christianity looked at is understandably only the schismatic Catholic/Protestant and deeply ascetic heresy. As an Orthodox I must point out that the apostolic church rejects the imbalance and the nihilism inevitably fostered by asceticism. The old church was always aware of the denaturing temptations lurking within asceticism: the stylite fathers and mothers took up the challenge knowing the dangers. Orthodoxy insists of the value of our physical being; God chose to become one of us, in the flesh. We see temporal existence as having been deified, mystically validated: we are enjoined to enjoy and value every aspect and every moment of life- because it has ultimate and transcendental value.

    • @mingthan7028
      @mingthan7028 9 месяцев назад

      Caths and Prots will say the same thing as you said to defend the faith. Not much different

    • @joblakelisbon
      @joblakelisbon 8 месяцев назад

      ​​@@mingthan7028 Protestantism and Catholicism are internally incoherent. They don't measure up on dozens of their own self-defined metrics. Orthodoxy is, at least internally coherent. Strangely Nietszche's writings are a very good complement to someone learning about the history of the church and Orthodoxy as they transparently show the psychology of the purifying Germanic strain of Protestantism and the sickly priest figure that rules Catholicism. Both of these figures are antithetical to Orthodoxy, which is in fact the first and only true version of Christianity. It's difficult to describe to a Westerner just how watered down and perverted the Western versions of Christianity are compared to the original. In feel, theology and practice they are a totally different religion. I say this as someone raised in a Catholic family in a Protestant school and country. The first time I encountered Orthodoxy in Romania and North Macedonia it was absolutely obvious that what I had seen in the Western churches was a vastly inferior version of faith.
      This doesn't mean that Orthodoxy is ultimately correct - that is a question of faith - but it is at least the true version of what it purports to be - the tradition of followers that started with the apostles.

  • @BlueMeanieReborn
    @BlueMeanieReborn Год назад

    Firstly, thank you very much for clear explanations, quiet narration, and no background music! Very much appreciated! As a huge fan of both Carl Sagan and philosophy, l agree with certain points. When l first saw the pale blue dot photo, it brought tears to my eyes and my immediate reaction was our beautiful home and all of us are vulnerable, and just hanging there in space. Imagine actually floating in space and seeing the earth from that distance, how much you would just want to get home to it and the love you'd have to see it come in to view. The whole earth and everything on it is our home. We have to care for it and each other. That said, sometimes l do get irritated by ppl crowing how insignificant man is etc...for me the deep field image gives me the opposite feeling, we are a precious gem in the cosmic sand. The often hopeless note that some science documentaries end with, is annoying, as is any kind of arrogance, like painful unnecessary experiments on animals.
    However all that being said, as a life long student of philosophy, it has only been in recent years that l've come to realize that scientific explanations are not the things they're trying to explain. Scientists are trying to give ppl the clearest, easiest access to nature, so that we can marvel at it. It's like they are showing us a gate and holding it open so we can get access to the greatest show on earth. Philosophy seems to help ppl access the power of thought. Unlike science, in philosophy the method of wonder and the conclusion and feeling it produces are the same: the joy of wonder and the freedom of critical thinking. Science has wonder too, but the scientist says "Don't stare in wonder at my finger pointing at the moon, stare in wonder at the moon! Be no longer afraid it's an angry god (or whatever), by knowing what it really is, it's a gift to you". If you don't care about their explaination, that's fine, but at least you know what you're dealing with.

  • @martinwilliams9866
    @martinwilliams9866 Год назад

    One is a small speck in the vastness of the Universe, but that same Universe is contained in each of our heads!

  • @blackfeatherstill348
    @blackfeatherstill348 2 года назад +2

    I believe you may have revealed here your own philosophy, and as Nietzsche says, the philosophy reveals something about the philosopher. A particular resistance to the scientific, that goes beyond nietzsche's own views .

  • @AGamer1177
    @AGamer1177 Год назад +1

    Too much blood has been spilled on this Earth...
    When there is a whole UNIVERSE to CONQUER!

  • @yenziwemotha3049
    @yenziwemotha3049 2 года назад +5

    I feel like Nietzsche uses the scientists and science interchangeably, which in my opinion is incorrect. Science as system or collection of things that are cannot have the ascetic ideal, but it's when the subjective mind of the scientists is introduced do we have the ascetic ideal for any comment on the meaning/meaninglessness of that which is, is a statement describing the mind(scientists, Carl Sagan) and not the fact of smallness of Earth in relation to the universe.

    • @joechakib3948
      @joechakib3948 2 года назад

      What if we took into account the implications brought about by the subject matter? From what little understanding I have, it appears Nietzsche concerns himself with the will to power (the human element) and the means from which this will manifests itself into actuality (the platonic? element). Consequently, both elements cannot be excluded from one another and its unfair to mark the interchangeable terminology as incorrect; more precise i would argue is to say the terminology is vague. I think my argument is stronger when applying the same reasoning with religion in that religion, although simply a static system or collection of traditions let's say, is not separable (I think) from the human element because religion does not exist outside the will to power of the people practicing this said system. Likewise, science is very much a human process and possibly a manifestation of people's ascetic ideal. Simply put, taking the will out of these human-made systems, to me, feels like taking the water out of a cup or the light out of a magnifying glass and only then analyzing its properties; doing so in my mind creates categorically different objects from what was initially being analyzed. Interested to hear your thoughts.

  • @projectmalus
    @projectmalus 2 года назад

    having to care for a separate piece is suffering for the ego driven, wanting to care for everything is a reward of the ascetic ideal, which I feel is about dropping off bias that isn't needed in order to feel responsible

  • @_GOD_HAND_
    @_GOD_HAND_ 11 месяцев назад +1

    14:44 Nietzsche cuts down the modern Reddit bugman 150 years before it even exists

  • @mingthan7028
    @mingthan7028 9 месяцев назад

    ''If one is to understand the great mystery, one must study all of its aspects. Not just the dogmatic, narrow view of ascetic idealists''

  • @piras7881
    @piras7881 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great presentation

  • @AngusPearson
    @AngusPearson 2 года назад +5

    You’re suggesting Sagan’s Pale Blue Dot implies a meaninglessness and insignificance of humanity and Earth, but I don’t read it the same - sure, he’s pointing out the meaninglessness of earthly bickering and power struggles when compared to the magnificence of space, that all that we are and have and ever have been is wholly enclosed within a pixel; but to my reading he concludes that what we have is to be cherished and valued all the more so when we realise its precariousness as that tiny speck, the only place in the universe we know of where meaning exists, on that pale blue dot suspended on a sunbeam

  • @stvrdo
    @stvrdo Год назад +1

    Great quality application of Nietzsche to modern science, thank you!
    What did Nietzsche think about Darwinism?

  • @bonetomahawk565
    @bonetomahawk565 Год назад

    Sagan "feels" that humanbeings are insignificant in a vast universe.
    Which comes down to that "feeling" is more important than the material world, as it has the capacity to give it the meaning.
    If the feeling is more important, then it doesn't really matter if we are living in a vast universe or not. What is important would be what we feel about it.
    We still can feel good about ourselves after a bench press even if we know about the size of the universe.

  • @kendrickjahn1261
    @kendrickjahn1261 2 года назад +5

    I think Carl Sagan may have identified the reason that men are cruel to one another. Mankind takes itself way too seriously and doesn't compare himself to the grand scheme of things. We see ourselves as self-important and self-righteous, which is often what creates our cruelty toward one another. I think Sagan's point was simply to address the fact that when we realize we aren't all that significant, we automatically humble ourselves in being more kind to one another, not necessarily because it's an obligation to do so. Sagan understood the usual cause of our cruelty, which stems from our perceptions of being all important. In other words, I'm not sure Sagan is saying that because we are insignificant in the universe that it follows logically that we be kind to each other. Rather, because we are insignificant, if we come to realize this, we therefore will naturally become more humble and kindness will just follow from this realization.

    • @nicolaswhitehouse3894
      @nicolaswhitehouse3894 2 года назад +6

      Being humble and kind towards a realization of that kind is only a consequence. All sorts of thing can happen, as well as cruelty also. If we are so insignificant, why don’t some people just be even more cruel, that can also be a possibility. His statement is purely a moral judgement and nothing else.

    • @kendrickjahn1261
      @kendrickjahn1261 2 года назад +2

      @@nicolaswhitehouse3894 Yeah, may be what's going on. And of course it can go the other way. In fact, we see that happening quite a lot today.

    • @nicolaswhitehouse3894
      @nicolaswhitehouse3894 2 года назад

      @@kendrickjahn1261 i think just like Nietzche said, only a select few « superior man » or the « ubermensch », can overcome this realization, not by kindness nor cruelty, but to live according to the cosmos.

    • @kendrickjahn1261
      @kendrickjahn1261 2 года назад

      @@nicolaswhitehouse3894 I don't know what "living according to the cosmos" even means. We are emotionless? Don't really get it.

    • @nicolaswhitehouse3894
      @nicolaswhitehouse3894 2 года назад

      @@kendrickjahn1261 living accordingly to nature and cosmos. Ecology is exactly that thinking

  • @mingthan7028
    @mingthan7028 9 месяцев назад

    😂Nietzche is the ultimate roaster.
    Ironically, we and he also draw pleasure from roasting and criticizing each other.

  • @radeum1010
    @radeum1010 2 года назад

    Did not see that coming.
    Pure Gold.

  • @sionthomastate3821
    @sionthomastate3821 7 месяцев назад

    Would love to see this channel cover Fydor Dostoevsky's work more as it does with Nietzche.

  • @janchan2258
    @janchan2258 Год назад +1

    I love your videos

  • @Demosophist
    @Demosophist 2 года назад +1

    But the archetypes that stand behind all religions and cultures were, in fact, worlds. They were literally planets. See Velikovsy or David Talbott.

  • @dolphineachonga555
    @dolphineachonga555 Год назад +1

    Question is, why aren't we able to completely cut off this keen sense of nihilism or self denial. Because it's always been there. Humans have always worshipped something they considered to be more powerful or knowledgeable than themselves e,g elements, wizards, mountains, trees, ancestors, science, rulers e.t.c. We've always needed heroes, sages and gods. Why is this? Because we want to live and it's not possible to do it alone. Instinctively, we feel our survival and well being, on some level depends on being part of a group or tribe. A tribe requires social, political and moral consensus to keep it together. Some level of self denial is necessary to ensure this. This is where religion, philosophy and perhaps science come in. They help the society to function more harmoniously. Which makes it possible for many to survive.

  • @Mousa2070
    @Mousa2070 2 года назад

    This is is perfect timing since i have been deep into astronomy lately

  • @BlenderheadX
    @BlenderheadX 4 месяца назад

    Thank you for doing this

  • @johannesclimacus9469
    @johannesclimacus9469 Год назад

    Brilliant video! Keep doing your work!

  • @Over-Boy42
    @Over-Boy42 6 месяцев назад

    I think both Sagan and Nietzsche would see value in each other's point.

  • @chrisgreene2070
    @chrisgreene2070 2 года назад +1

    You're great man. Love the content

  • @MMAneuver
    @MMAneuver Год назад +2

    "In some remote corner of the universe, poured out
    and glittering in innumerable solar systems, there once was a
    star on which clever animals invented knowledge. That was
    the highest and most mendacious minute of "world
    history"-yet only a minute. After nature had drawn a few
    breaths the star grew cold, and the clever animals had to die.
    One might invent such a fable and still not have
    illustrated sufficiently how wretched, how shadowy and
    flighty, how aimless and arbitrary, the human intellect
    appears in nature. There have been eternities when it did not
    exist; and when it is done for again, nothing will have
    happened. For this intellect has no further mission that
    would lead beyond human life. It is human, rather, and only
    its owner and producer gives it such importance, as if the
    world pivoted around it. But if we could communicate with
    the mosquito, then we would learn that he floats through
    the air with the same self-importance, feeling within itself
    the flying center of the world. There is nothing in nature so
    despicable or insignificant that it cannot immediately be
    blown up like a bag by a slight breath of this power of
    knowledge; and just as every porter wants an admirer, the
    proudest human being, the philosopher, thinks that he sees
    on the eyes of the universe telescopically focused from all
    sides on his actions and thoughts" Nietzsche Fragment, 1873: from the Nachlass

  • @CapaneusoftheGnosticLegion
    @CapaneusoftheGnosticLegion 2 года назад +1

    Utilizing consciousness and calling ourselves merely Sentient (the ability to have qualitative experience) is abhorrent.

  • @jayson3900
    @jayson3900 Год назад

    Excellent video! Never would’ve considered this perspective. 10/10

  • @nathanielhellerstein5871
    @nathanielhellerstein5871 9 месяцев назад

    If we are insignificant, then nothing much can come from us. That thwarts our ambition. But also nothing much is required of us. That ensures our liberty.

  • @Gryf_
    @Gryf_ Год назад

    Note that those are only a subcategory of scientists. I'm pretty sure most astronomers would love to work on megastructures to tame all the stars and black holes in the universe. They just don't have infinite money.

  • @ljsmooth69
    @ljsmooth69 2 года назад

    Carl Sagan my first best friend and only friend for quite some time because I was sick when I was born in the hospital never met him I hope he rests in peace.

  • @darkisato
    @darkisato Год назад

    Would love your view on nietzche and Thomas Paine and is u can compare his views also to the stoicism POV 😊

  • @petebrag
    @petebrag 2 года назад

    There is a major error in this video: the transcript uses the word “aesthetic” while the material being discussed is about the “ascetic.”

  • @kidsyx
    @kidsyx 5 месяцев назад

    I love the dicotomy of Nietzsche "the universe is cold and indifferent and your mortality is useless, although we should be kind for kindness sake for within a cruel existence can only be cruler" 😂

  • @balbarard4041
    @balbarard4041 Год назад

    great video!

  • @Mr.PeabodyTheSkeptic
    @Mr.PeabodyTheSkeptic 2 года назад +1

    Sagan was talking about perspective not the semantics of 'insignificant' or 'meanighless'. He makes not judgements in his arguement. The narrator made several poor assumptions and judgements upon Sagan.

  • @TorMax9
    @TorMax9 2 года назад +5

    Looking for meaning is like a fish swimming around looking for water. We are surrounded and imbued with meaning. It's just that our thoughts, our abstractions, our languages, get in the way.
    Don't be stuck in a prison house of language, concepts, models. Use them as tools. Let go and let flow and find out what works best. There's the God-given meaning - what works best. Enjoy spirit and nature - and creativity.
    Creator. Creation. Creativity. Expand the frontiers. Create more - higher, lighter, brighter - meaning from the meaning found all around. It's a state of mind more than the contents of mind. It's an attitude. A consciousness. A mind blown. Lose your mind and find your soul. Transcend your mind. Don't believe everything you think.

  • @vedanshvedansh844
    @vedanshvedansh844 Год назад

    Please bring more videos, Herr. I cant wait to devour them all 🤣

  • @radwanparvez
    @radwanparvez 2 года назад

    Even if I become the UberMansch, and overcome the great void of Nihil Monster,
    the thought doesn't go away, does it?
    "How insignificant I am?"
    Isn't existence is a great play between Joker vs Buddha?
    The snake biting it's own tail...

    • @fishbrainLTD
      @fishbrainLTD 2 года назад

      Everything is matter
      Yet nothing matters

  • @GbrElfunk
    @GbrElfunk Год назад

    Amazing, thank you

  • @hamzach1024
    @hamzach1024 2 года назад

    Remarkable work, Man!
    Thank you.

  • @max-cs9ko
    @max-cs9ko 2 года назад +3

    I had started studying Buddhism and Nietzsche philosophy same time, and i studied more I felt both are similar to each other, first of all Buddhism was misunderstood by most philosopher of 18th and 19th century, Buddhism doesn't believe in asceticism like Hinduism, Buddhism philosophy especially Mahayana believe in concept of "Boddhistva"- A man of great deed who can even leave enlightenment for welfare of humanity, Buddhism also talk anarchy of human society as Dukha and meaning of life by individual value and purpose in life, tbh concept of ubermanch and boddhistva are quite similar, I hope we will see more reasearch about similarities between Buddhism and Nietzsche philosophy

    • @nicolaswhitehouse3894
      @nicolaswhitehouse3894 2 года назад +2

      While I can agree on some similarities on Nietzsche’s philosophy and Buddhism which I agree with you, there is still a notable difference between these two thinking about the attitude towards suffering. While Buddhism is about renouncing, and quitting towards suffering, Nietzsche’s philosophy is about to dive into suffering wholeheartedly, with joy and even accentuating suffering. Nietzsche’s god is Dionysos, aka the same god that we can find in Grece, hindouism, Judaism, a god that doesn’t exist in Buddhism however (certainly not Christianity also). For that instance, Nietzsche’s philosophy is contradictory to Buddhist thinking.

    • @max-cs9ko
      @max-cs9ko 2 года назад

      @@nicolaswhitehouse3894 Buddhism philosophy is not about renouncing and quitting suffering even though most western intellectual believe it, if you read philosophy of Mahayana Buddhism, a person is expected to become a boddhistva a person who use all their power and energy to saving suffering beings in this world rather than entering into salvation, both laymen and monks in Buddhism are expected to remain part of society and serve it. Even, Nietzsche himself wrongly interpreted Buddhism, but if you deeply study Buddhism you will find it's very similar to Nietzsche philosophy

    • @nicolaswhitehouse3894
      @nicolaswhitehouse3894 2 года назад +1

      @@max-cs9ko Thanks for the info, to be completely honest, I studied Nietzsche and not Buddhism, hence why I was typing towards Nietzsche’s view on Buddhism, and subsequently there difference. I would study Buddhism more intensely one day when I have time (currently studying the Old Testament)

    • @nicolaswhitehouse3894
      @nicolaswhitehouse3894 2 года назад +1

      @Boulanger screenshoted, thanks for the advice.

    • @vacuumboots
      @vacuumboots 2 года назад +1

      ​@@nicolaswhitehouse3894 Don't take my word, but my understanding is that the Buddhist "dukkha", what has been translated as suffering, is more akin to "dissatisfaction." There's the two dart analogy from the Pali canon, which is that the first dart is to suffer some injury or pain, and the second dart is to wish you weren't feeling that feeling, and Buddhism concerns the second dart. Therefore it could be seen as a path to accept suffering rather than deny it.
      edit: And I think this contrasts with Nietzsche's description of ascetics because they crave pain, and craving is also something to let go of in Buddhism. Does that still end up nihilistic according to Nietzsche? I'm not sure.

  • @spiderlime
    @spiderlime 2 года назад +1

    arguably sagan had something of a conflict between his knowledge of our place in the cosmos, and his belief in decency and morality. in the present however, the belief advocated by post-humanism moves ever closer toward a delegitimation of humanity's right to exist, and-or it's replacement by A.I. ironically, the supporters of these beliefs never apply them to themselves. they are always preached to the other, who is a "sinner"in the eyes of the new religion.

  • @ljsmooth69
    @ljsmooth69 2 года назад

    The aspect of religion being one of the ideals that should be beliefs religion is a belief that should be categorized as such

  • @KatyWantsToGo
    @KatyWantsToGo Год назад

    1:12 I've traveled the world and we ordinary humans are no reflection of what Segan describes as "us", it's the vile creatures in control that is being described here...

  • @KatyWantsToGo
    @KatyWantsToGo Год назад

    0:20 What that reminds me of is CGI because that's all it is...

  • @georgewbush9326
    @georgewbush9326 Год назад

    Science needs philosophy in order to not turn into self flagellation in the form of nihilism. Science gives us the tools we need to be great and philosophy reminds us of our great potential so that we might not forget how great we are already while on our journey to become even greater.

  • @catsmews
    @catsmews 2 года назад

    Some good ideas for what canvas prints to deck my walls with

  • @arcangel1172
    @arcangel1172 Год назад

    The ending always puts a smile on my face.

  • @MrMomos25
    @MrMomos25 Год назад

    We are small but infinitly complex. Onlybone who doesn't understends the complexity of life and the complexity of human mind and society can downplay the miracol of existing on this planet

  • @thetheoreticalphysicist5852
    @thetheoreticalphysicist5852 2 года назад +4

    Science is science at the end of the day. What we choose to make out of that information is down to us. Is Sagan trying to put us down, or is he trying to showcase from a scientific point of view, the same as Nietzsche is with Zarathustra. That we must rephrase our hierarchy of values confronted with this reality. For many that is an uplifting image, not because of the insignifance of man, but precisesly of our significance as a way for the universe to know itself. Sagan is condemning the same type of unenlightened christian arrogance as Nietzsche is.
    ( I would'nt 100% agree that throwing christian doctrine, throws morality. In a pure space of ideas yes. However, our human nature defines what moral behaviour is. I would reffer Sam Harris here.)

    • @blackfeatherstill348
      @blackfeatherstill348 2 года назад +3

      I agree, perhaps he did not watch the whole series Cosmos. It is as poetic as much as scientific, and if anything elevates the human condition.

    • @mingthan7028
      @mingthan7028 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@blackfeatherstill348
      So poetry, art, culture, ethics and morality may just be a coping mechanism created by enlightened ape brains to handle the eventual nihilistic feelings of Humanity.

  • @jaylewis9876
    @jaylewis9876 2 года назад +2

    Some look at this universe that seems empty and realize we may be the only civilization lucky enough to see it. That makes us amazingly unique and responsible to spread life. If our next discovery is trillions of existing civilizations all over never mind.

  • @mysticrose4430
    @mysticrose4430 2 года назад

    Perfect video, just on time.

  • @avinashverma9599
    @avinashverma9599 2 года назад

    May be there is something to ascetic values if all intellectual persuasion of humanity coming to the same conclusion

  • @NikosAchilleus
    @NikosAchilleus 2 года назад

    Thanks, interesting!

  • @sunritpal9596
    @sunritpal9596 2 года назад +1

    Nice video 👍

  • @Jumpinjalepenos
    @Jumpinjalepenos 2 года назад

    being out in nature helps at keeping yourself grounded

  • @botero01
    @botero01 2 года назад +5

    Sagan´s argument doesn´t work because we are easily the most complex system in the known universe. The grand stars are quite primitive compared to a housefly, they have few elements and types of interactions. And, let us not forget that stars PRODUCE life, so it´s not like we have some antagonistic relationship with them. What is worth more all the dirt in a diamond mine or the one big diamond you find in it? Even on the most primitive level the argument fails: the scale of the stars in cubic meters or whatever does not mean for an instant that life is unimportant. Importance and value are not just about fucking size, a microchip is much more valuable than a huge pile of hay.
    Another argument: this dumb idea that it would be pleasant to be the creations of a superior god. It leads to the conclusion that said god, as great as he is supposed to be, is unable to create something superior to itself. the universe is therefore moving downwards, into decay, at the hands of a lousy creator. In contrast, consider how great the opposite idea is: that complexity comes from simplicity. One little primitive cell in the primitive sea was able to evolve into all the myriad lifeforms we have today, and produce humans, such weird fantastic creatures, able to produce, in laboratory conditions, temperatures much higher than the core of the Sun. The most vulgar of our ancestors is therefore much superior to the christian God, who can create only creatures inferior to itself, and them pout at them endlessly, in between frustrated tantrums where it decides to kill most of them, what a loser, what a dark idea of life! Glad it´s but the delusions of losers (aka slaves)

    • @jamesmark4880
      @jamesmark4880 2 года назад

      Fax

    • @TorMax9
      @TorMax9 2 года назад

      Well put. It's a process. Enjoy the ride and don't get caught up in the particulars. We still don't know the origin of matter and life, why there is something rather than nothing, the conditions that allow evolution to start and continue. Or where your powers of thought comes from. A bolt from the blue.

    • @botero01
      @botero01 2 года назад

      @@TorMax9 we do know all that stuff, that sort of question has within its own answer, the structure of the world is set. We know many facts about the origin of matter, and the origin of life is no mystery, look it up, it´s a chemical process that´s pretty well understood. We also know about where our powers of thought come, the causal chain, we know all this from many angles even. You´re completely mistaken in your outlook. "Enjoy the ride and don´t get caught up in the particulars" I mean, I agree life is enjoyable, but why shouldn´t we focus on particular things? It breaks my heart, this and other comment sections, these are the people inheriting Nietzsche´s work ouf.

    • @botero01
      @botero01 2 года назад

      @@jamesmark4880 FAX lol like the fax machines? Where you trying to make "facts" sound "black" ?

    • @jamesmark4880
      @jamesmark4880 2 года назад +1

      @@botero01 less letters

  • @stevec.5010
    @stevec.5010 Год назад

    knowing, is always a victory over not.

    • @bryanutility9609
      @bryanutility9609 8 месяцев назад

      You in a hurry to memorize the phone book?

    • @bryanutility9609
      @bryanutility9609 8 месяцев назад

      You probably too young to have experienced the phone book 😂

  • @valeriucotorobai7096
    @valeriucotorobai7096 2 года назад

    I find this video SO VALUABLE!