STUDIES IN PESSIMISM by Arthur Schopenhauer - FULL AudioBook | Greatest🌟AudioBooks

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  • Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 672

  • @mihail5927
    @mihail5927 2 года назад +49

    "We generally find pleasure to be not nearly so pleasant as we expected it, and pain very much more painful".

    • @friedrichdostoyevsky491
      @friedrichdostoyevsky491 Год назад +3

      This work reminds me of Nietzsche, in the sense that it takes me forever to go through, do to the high levels of continual mind bombs. All of which requiring much contemplation.

  • @matmallan6099
    @matmallan6099 2 года назад +88

    Schopenhauer really cheers me up.

    • @SkateICon
      @SkateICon Год назад +2

      Oxymoron of a sort

    • @sinqobilebandile6558
      @sinqobilebandile6558 Год назад +1

      Lol I thought I was weird for this but I come back to this and I just feel better. I also just find some parts funny.

  • @icareg
    @icareg 3 года назад +335

    I struggle with loneliness and depression. I like to seek out these kinds of writings because I feel like the only hope is really getting to the bottom of all this. Contemplating the darkest thoughts of life and existence, then gaining some poise and composure off of a solid foundation

    • @eatbliss8895
      @eatbliss8895 3 года назад +32

      That seems very astute of you. Just don't forget, after contemplation, to use your newfound poise and composure in action. Then, with time, the struggle is no longer perceived as a struggle and abates, little by little. Merely dwelling on these thoughts could make the struggle more difficult, without applying the knowledge that comes from contemplation. I hope this makes sense. LOL

    • @mikewallis2987
      @mikewallis2987 3 года назад +11

      Then stoicism would serve you best

    • @dochmbi
      @dochmbi 2 года назад +50

      You are completely correct. Do you know how I'm able to practice saxophone alone for 4 hrs per day? How I find the discipline to do this? Because I fully accept suffering. I assume that life is suffering and there is no escape. Once you fully accept suffering you can do anything. The pain in your mind will no longer stop you. The desire for comfort will not stop you. You can go and work out like crazy or work as hard as you can. Because you fully realize the truth. Suffering is all there is. Then you can choose to go out in a blaze of glory, like a warrior picking up the sword and charging into a pack of Orcs.

    • @crct2004
      @crct2004 2 года назад +12

      Wow, such great comments! Battling suffering has made my life a fruitless endeavor. Perhaps, at the ripe old age of 54 I may yet accomplish something. Thanks all and especially dochmbi.

    • @rsb0000
      @rsb0000 2 года назад +6

      @@eatbliss8895 have you tried writing down why you feel lonely or depressed. It can be very revealing. Reflecting on the written reasons could help one overcome it.

  • @banjogyro
    @banjogyro Год назад +33

    Anyone else find this therapeutic like nothing else?

  • @mechanicman8687
    @mechanicman8687 3 года назад +67

    I hope this will be a good go to sleep program.
    Goodnight h internet family and God Bless

  • @werdswolfe
    @werdswolfe 2 года назад +30

    Schopenhauer was a true genius and the realest of all the great philosophers! I have studied philosophy for many years! I always return to him.

  • @palmtreep5567
    @palmtreep5567 3 года назад +219

    My favorite part: "This is a librovox recording. All Librovox recordings are in the public domain..." Seriously though, this is a great book to listen to when you are suffering. Good day, fellow penal colony citizens. May we atone for our sins in this lifetime.

  • @gabedepaul5407
    @gabedepaul5407 3 года назад +256

    Note - 00:01
    Chapter 1 - On the Sufferings of the World - 02:06
    Chapter 2 - The Vanity of Existence - 35:40
    Chapter 3 - On Suicide - 48:26
    Chapter 4 - Immortality - 1:02:34
    Chapter 5 - Further Psychological Observations - 1:13:46
    Chapter 6 - On Education - 2:06:20
    Chapter 7 - On Women - 2:24:43
    Chapter 8 - On Noise - 3:01:06
    Chapter 9 - A Few Parables - 3:13:45

  • @antwan1357
    @antwan1357 2 года назад +41

    Pessimism is really good for a person in pain as it gives reason , and seems to alleviate my pain as I listen here.

    • @dontbelongherefromanother
      @dontbelongherefromanother 2 года назад +4

      Right

    • @amphilochusofmallus5070
      @amphilochusofmallus5070 2 года назад +10

      Optimism is an insult, as if someone can pretend their well wishes can subvert the suffering of the world. Pessimism is answer to that insult, expressing a desire for better while being truthful about the state of things

  • @allanclark5179
    @allanclark5179 2 года назад +30

    Whirlwind of torment
    Off the deep end
    Fear, madness, descent
    Gone 'round the bend
    As high as a kite
    Sad as can be
    Fall into the night
    Face eternity

  • @SanguineUltima
    @SanguineUltima 2 года назад +40

    I'm really enjoying this, the reader has an excellent voice and pacing. A lot of libravox readers sound really awkward and stilted, but not this guy. Even the parts in Latin and German sound organic and natural.

    • @BeefZupreme
      @BeefZupreme 2 года назад

      Librivox*

    • @jeztaylor6055
      @jeztaylor6055 2 года назад +3

      It’s professor D.E.Wittkower. He’s recorded a number of books on Librivox all of which he reads excellently.

  • @jamesmcgriff8775
    @jamesmcgriff8775 3 месяца назад +2

    My favorite narrator ever. Please do every book of Nietzsche’s pleaseeeeeee! I feel like you sound exactly like Nietzche would if he spoke modern day English. 😂

  • @mahendrakent3177
    @mahendrakent3177 3 года назад +118

    Have read and heard many philosophical talks and books. This video, particularly the first four chapters, are the best summarisation of Eastern and Western thoughts. Well done. And the speaker is brilliant. Simple but effective video.

    • @herzkine
      @herzkine 2 года назад +2

      I always just totally struggle to keep on the Subjekt because i just cant find a librivox voice i dont find distracting " bad". I want to be thankful , appreciative etc, but it always totally puts me off :-(

    • @ivanburdon6354
      @ivanburdon6354 2 года назад +1

      I’m not so sure I’d go so far as to say that, there are other approaches and conclusions to the same connection between religious texts and logical deductions from people’s experiences (as are used to derive the philosophic ideas in this book,) for instance.
      Although this book is definitely great : ) and perhaps in consensus with many people’s perspectives

  • @MotoKringles
    @MotoKringles 2 года назад +30

    I fell asleep to another one of his videos and this came on while I was dreaming. Wow that was one hell of a dream. I woke up after 34 minutes

    • @babaayman9658
      @babaayman9658 2 года назад

      Yeah, this writer went to some pretty dark places

    • @nutznchocolates56
      @nutznchocolates56 2 года назад

      Is that what happened last njght?! i had a hella dream this morning!

    • @Human-li9mm
      @Human-li9mm 2 года назад

      I just had the worst nightmare while I fell asleep listening to this, I wonder why 😢

  • @dokkus
    @dokkus 2 года назад +45

    i’ve listened to this multiple times and you give it a smoothness and calmness I never heard in the text when reading it for myself. thanks for this.

  • @JackVogel2024
    @JackVogel2024 2 года назад +42

    This is one of the most interesting and strangely satisfying books I've ever read/listened to.
    Topics like these are so rarely discussed now a days, some stuff he brought up was like a revelation "He just described something to the t that I've internally been thinking about my all life!..." and you realize you're not the only one thinking about it, however bizzare it might be to social norms.
    And it keeps going like that, right on point with so much.
    Like a great satire of life and the shallow standards we've wrapped around it 🙃
    Oh, and the narrator is f***king perfect for this
    Have to edit and add, one of the last chapters is kind of crazy.
    The way he talks about women is unhealthy, even for that time.
    Perhaps he's right about his observations, but he's leaving out the equally messy sides of men, and it all comes off as some egocentric rant.
    Great intellect he may have had, but bitter af about the ladies

    • @benyamin1059
      @benyamin1059 2 года назад

      He was "bitter" towards females exactly because of his great intellect! The lack of intellect and accountability and hypocritical morals and deceiving ways of women - that turned him off and created his negative view on the natureof himan females (even in his time when the women were still better than modern western women)!

    • @JackVogel2024
      @JackVogel2024 2 года назад +7

      @@benyamin1059 Kind of agree. Women has issues with their moral compass, mostly in the realm of emotions and spirit.
      Still I think that men has just as many issues, just more practical in nature.
      For every cheat, every theft, every lie of a woman, I believe it is matched by a man, though the specifics will differ.
      Women more likely to betray for emotional gain, men for practical gain.
      We're all f****ing idiots, and by pretending ones self is not, true growth becomes impossible, stuck in a loop of blame, anger and denial!
      Intellect and ego are contradictory from ground up, and usually in conflict with each other 🤠

    • @flacjacket
      @flacjacket 2 года назад +1

      You should check out Otto Weiningers Sex and Character. I don't think I can believe that they are right, at least in an absolute sense as I have 3 women in my life who seem to defy their analysis, though I will admit that for the rest of them the shoe is uncomfortably close to fitting.

    • @2013hondafit
      @2013hondafit 2 года назад +2

      @@flacjacket 🤨

    • @dontbelongherefromanother
      @dontbelongherefromanother 2 года назад +1

      I don't believe he cared for women

  • @spartakick300
    @spartakick300 3 года назад +32

    At first, title seemed serious and stern but once I listened to this, the title seemed funny and tongue and cheek. The author is aware of his critical point of view but is able to have a bit of a sense of humor about it. The chapter on noise. Hahaha. The chapter on women was a bit close to home. Made me think of my wife and our relationship. Anyway not a bad way to spend the morning albeit a bit .....pessimistic. hahaha

  • @TheHorse_yes
    @TheHorse_yes 2 года назад +7

    Chapter 7 - On Women - 2:24:43

  • @febo2367
    @febo2367 2 года назад +8

    well, at least, I learned that all librivox recordings are in the public domain

  • @GhostAdvocate13
    @GhostAdvocate13 2 года назад +34

    "On Women" was hilarious. But "On Noise"... oh man. What a gem. As a fellow neurotic I felt so deeply empathetic of his plight, yet at the same time laughed quite heartily, nay, laughed my ass off.

    • @Starlogic21
      @Starlogic21 2 года назад

      'On Women' is complete misogynistic, chauvinistic garbage. I thought he was intelligent until that chapter. He let's himself down badly with all that nonsense. But I guess all men were programmed to think like that in those dark ages. Poor things. 'Forgive them for they know not what they do' springs to mind

    • @tanura5830
      @tanura5830 8 месяцев назад +2

      On women is not hilarious it's serious and no it's not funny

    • @RingWorlds
      @RingWorlds 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@tanura5830 it's also not true.

    • @saintsword23
      @saintsword23 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@RingWorlds Except it totally is, with some details being specific to the time period.

  • @leonardallen7380
    @leonardallen7380 2 года назад +4

    It's the writer, imagine the present moment, listening to the reader, calm yet entertaining the mind, knowing each word has a definition providing a sentence to complete a chapter, in the end a book, when it's finished start a new book. Thank you for sharing, considering Macbeth.

  • @Sarah-oj7bh
    @Sarah-oj7bh 2 года назад +4

    I've always been curious about Schopenhauer. 15 minutes in, and I find myself disagreeing with him, but also quite entertained. He comes across like a grumpy old man, but.. with a heart of gold, if that makes any sense.
    And I'm always here for some Leibniz bashing.

  • @megaltright974
    @megaltright974 8 лет назад +64

    oh my word how mesmerising is this man's voice?

    • @glennlehto-maynard942
      @glennlehto-maynard942 5 лет назад +9

      Totally agree with you about this guys voice I went looking for his name. Found it and thought to share.
      D.E. Wittkower
      He reads a lot more books too.

    • @8xnnr
      @8xnnr 4 года назад +12

      You girls need to stop being a pervert. This is about pessimism not how wet his voice make you.

    • @HowieHellbent
      @HowieHellbent 4 года назад +1

      Meg you look like a hottie

    • @jaffarshah120
      @jaffarshah120 3 года назад +2

      Perfectly in line with the melancholy spirit of the Book

    • @palmtreep5567
      @palmtreep5567 3 года назад +2

      @@glennlehto-maynard942 I'll listen to anything this man narrates! (and Justin, you don't have to be into men to appreciate a lovely voice.)

  • @robertlogan4652
    @robertlogan4652 2 года назад +10

    A tad bit rough on the ladies, but couldn't find any holes in it lol. Spot on spot on.

  • @jusme8060
    @jusme8060 2 года назад +46

    When you discover that we've been lied to about nearly everything, this at least brings back a bit of wonder. I'm so thankful for truth, I knew since a child that something wasn't right about this place, now I can clearly see that life is wonderful and we are only being steered towards hell through deception and degeneracy. The beautiful thing is that you must consent.

    • @CariMachet
      @CariMachet 2 года назад +3

      Genius

    • @TupDigital
      @TupDigital 2 года назад +5

      Wow, I have used the exact phrase "since I was a kid I could feel something wasn't right" to my dad trying to even touch on the absurdity of what's what and what isn't and what we're told. He responded with silence. 🙂

    • @alexheard485
      @alexheard485 2 года назад

      Ghhhgcgghggghghhghugggg Hugh flight high hugging zghgghgggghhghghgh

    • @alexheard485
      @alexheard485 2 года назад

      yghhghhggyhgdhchhhgggghhgghgghhggghghhhghgyghyhhghghhgh

    • @alexheard485
      @alexheard485 2 года назад

      Hh

  • @sydneymorey6059
    @sydneymorey6059 2 года назад +7

    Brilliant Reader. Brilliant Rendition. Brilliant RUclips. Enough to keep my thoughts revolving for a long time.
    Cheers SBM.

  • @charlief8935
    @charlief8935 2 года назад +8

    I fell asleep listening to one audiobook and woke up to this one playing.

    • @BigTone365
      @BigTone365 2 года назад +1

      Same here

    • @minh7980
      @minh7980 2 года назад +1

      lol multiverse moment

    • @remotefaith
      @remotefaith 2 года назад

      That’s incredibly interesting

  • @No_Avail
    @No_Avail 3 года назад +8

    His is the only ASMR I'd be interested in hearing.

  • @numbersix8919
    @numbersix8919 2 года назад +9

    07 Of Women 2:25:00
    Studies in Pessimism was originally published in 1851.
    This chapter is a comprehensive rendition of common attitudes of the time toward women.
    Many will be all too familiar to modern readers.
    08 On Noise 3:01:20
    09 A Few Parables 3:14:00

    • @Foxxionly
      @Foxxionly Год назад +3

      I find it quite funny how 'On Women' receives such excuse. As if many of us here tried to express their awe in regards to the thoughts of Schopenhauer but still feared being labeled as 'misogynists', if they could anyhow relate to that rather humorous depiction of how Schopenhauer saw women at that point of his life. We have not made the world any better than it was back then and it is sad, on the other hand, that we willingly choose to censor our modern thoughts to fit with the agenda given to us by others

    • @goodgat266
      @goodgat266 Год назад +1

      He is still not wrong lmao

    • @numbersix8919
      @numbersix8919 Год назад

      @@goodgat266 C'mon, man!

  • @nahuelpatania3522
    @nahuelpatania3522 Год назад +2

    "...This is why a man who worth anything finds society so insipid" INDEED.

  • @ralphkramden1741
    @ralphkramden1741 3 года назад +107

    Arthur wrote: "There is more to be learned from a single page of Hume than in all the cumulutive tomes of Hegel " 😆

    • @unknowninfinium4353
      @unknowninfinium4353 2 года назад

      Nietzche destroyed him too. Hegel is so complicated but somehow fantasized by socialists.

    • @progskep
      @progskep Год назад +1

      Hegel’s a retard that strokes himself off and writes a thousand volumes explaining how to sit in a chair to try and sound smart. Like most leftist philosophers.

    • @unknowninfinium4353
      @unknowninfinium4353 Год назад +1

      @@progskep you won the internet.

    • @saintsword23
      @saintsword23 5 месяцев назад

      I have to agree. Hegel's dialectic has a pragmatic use, but his philosophy as a whole is fraudulent sophistry. Schopenhauer was mostly right about Hegel.

  • @rdobery
    @rdobery 2 года назад +2

    I'm a pessimist with a bright outlook to the future because I know that eventually I will have been proven right.

  • @jhapara
    @jhapara 3 года назад +19

    What a voice....it's tone is appealing and intriguing

    • @dixonpinfold2582
      @dixonpinfold2582 3 года назад +1

      The way he tries to lay skeptical and disgusted stress on words and phrases which he thinks were written out of skepticism and disgust is simply awful. It shows how far he is below the material and Schopenhauer himself.

  • @friedrichdostoyevsky491
    @friedrichdostoyevsky491 Год назад +6

    With more knowledge comes more suffering -Ecclesiastes

  • @riverbank7971
    @riverbank7971 3 года назад +22

    I like how delightfully upbeat the reader of this audiobook is. Truly innervating.

  • @qazaqtatar
    @qazaqtatar 3 года назад +24

    Excellent reader!

  • @toomanysymbols
    @toomanysymbols 2 года назад +7

    i agree very much with his point about only being able to perceive beauty once you take a step back, either in actual space or in time. in the moment everything is hard, chaotic and really not all that enjoyable. it's only after we have the power of hindsight that we can start manipulating those events and feel control over them. and it's that sense of control and understanding we then perceive as pleasurable , meaningful, beautiful etc. what our electronic devices allow us to do is to enter this state of being at any time in any place. you take out your phone cause you feel you aren't in control of the situation, and by being able to observe instead of participate that feeling goes away.

    • @metalcraftwroughtiron4886
      @metalcraftwroughtiron4886 2 года назад

      Interesting thoughts. Agree with your thinking here. I have noticed myself doing the same thing. I have written down my feelings in the middle of something negative or positive and later returning to these writings thinking that the writer has a negative view of the situation. The reader thinks that as time has passed that the positive situations were better than recorded and the negative not as bad.

  • @opalaa5874
    @opalaa5874 3 года назад +14

    Incredibly accurate analysis of female nature, it'll never seaze to amaze me how on point his observations are.

    • @JustinDown
      @JustinDown 2 года назад +2

      I know dude, the few women you've met and dealt with in life, that's all 3,000,000,000 of them! Makes perfect sense huh. They aren't just fellow human beings with differing views and lifestyles or anything

    • @pantsonfire2216
      @pantsonfire2216 2 года назад +7

      Lol All the people replying are so butt hurt about very obvious yet brilliantly explained modern female nature. Y’all need a reality check

    • @JustinDown
      @JustinDown 2 года назад

      @@pantsonfire2216 gay nigga 🚫🧢

    • @tdob6067
      @tdob6067 2 года назад

      @@pantsonfire2216 this book was written in the 1800’s so I have no idea how it’s in anyway “modern” but ok. Also if you have an underlying detest towards women you’re in for a bad time since we make up half the population lol die mad.

  • @joonbug13
    @joonbug13 3 года назад +9

    Goodnight RUclips family. I love you.

  • @rb2268
    @rb2268 3 года назад +9

    Apparently RUclips reads all our comments. I made a comment on another video about this subject. The next day I had recommendations for Arthur Schopenhauer. A guy I've never heard of or ever typed his name in a search? I didn't know I thought very similar to him. But RUclips did.

    • @TheFlyingBrain.
      @TheFlyingBrain. 2 года назад +4

      The AI that runs the selection algorithms that choose the recommendations you get, Ricky, has taught itself how to analyze and predict what kind of mood you're in right now. Understand this, because you are being actively manipulated by these things if you are on a mobile phone, or on a laptop without good adblockers, are not using VPN, or you use one of the so-called "assistants" like Alexa. People have no idea what's being done to them. This is not done benevolently. The purpose is to make you more tractable - easy to manipulate, so the tech corps can use you to make money, and make you an easier mark from which their advertisers can take your money.

    • @thetaboyswag2307
      @thetaboyswag2307 2 года назад +1

      @@TheFlyingBrain. Personally I must admit, waking up and getting on youtube and seeing videos on philosophy is quite nice. Perhaps this youtube algorithmn could serve very well in those wishing to learn more about certain subjects.

    • @TheHorse_yes
      @TheHorse_yes 10 месяцев назад

      @@TheFlyingBrain. Wait, so why did the algorithm recommend pessimist philosophy then? Doesn't pessimism also imply a critical view? Just wondering where's the manipulation in that. Schopenhauer's works are nonetheless classics, and encourage in critical thinking.

  • @CSHorn
    @CSHorn 2 года назад +3

    Thanks Schope. I was just dubious when i got here.

  • @GregHuffman1987
    @GregHuffman1987 2 года назад +20

    i read one of his books years back. cool to hear a decent audio of his writings

  • @jamesmhango2619
    @jamesmhango2619 2 года назад +5

    Information for those don't pretend. If your testicles itch in public, scratch them Arthur Schopenhauer seems to be advising. We find solace in these writings.

  • @ryanoelckers4620
    @ryanoelckers4620 2 года назад +5

    I listen to this to lull me to sleep

  • @jackielee7506
    @jackielee7506 2 года назад +14

    Hes book perfectly verbalised the ideas I had brewing in my head for a while, except for the chapter he had on women. These ideas on life and existence were a great contribution to my depression and listening to this made me realise that theses are somewhat natural thoughts for coming of age. Absolutely amazing and profound stuff, except for the women chapter, id personally highly disagree with that segment. But Very thought provoking and well written 👍👍

    • @katlynharper6810
      @katlynharper6810 2 года назад +1

      Definitely agreed with this. Absolutely loved the philosophy behind this audiobook, except for the chapter on women beginning around 2:36:00

    • @JohnWick-kh1bu
      @JohnWick-kh1bu 2 года назад +12

      If you disagree on what he said about women then you don't know women and haven't gotten to really know many women. I have. And I 100% agree with what he says.

    • @rickgrimes242
      @rickgrimes242 3 месяца назад

      What he says about women is true but it requires experience to realize it.

  • @ad2094
    @ad2094 2 года назад +7

    Sexism is so fascinating because he goes from talking about how women are often caring for men at their earliest ages and at their last breaths; he goes on to say they take no action and no strength and are children their whole life long. It is fascinating that someone who clearly fancies themselves so observant does not see the inherent contradictions. In this, he has accorded "brutes" more intelligence and respect than women.

    • @Wint3rSalt
      @Wint3rSalt 8 месяцев назад

      His opinion is influenced from the times he was in, sadly genius’s are at times wrong. They’re still human at the end of day.

    • @saintsword23
      @saintsword23 5 месяцев назад

      How is this a contradiction?

  • @Petch1
    @Petch1 3 года назад +21

    The first four chapters are the most interesting. His views on women come across as utter contempt for them. The second to last chapter is a long moan about noise, especially the cracking of the whip. I can relate, although living near a road my annoyance is moped engines or tampered with exhaust pipes.

    • @kenkeyes8148
      @kenkeyes8148 3 года назад +19

      He dares to knock women off the pedestals we've placed them on.

    • @Wildrover82
      @Wildrover82 3 года назад +10

      That's exactly it Ken. he just looks at women the same way they look at each other.

    • @Amanda-ut7gx
      @Amanda-ut7gx 2 года назад +9

      @@Wildrover82 Not all women act like that and it is no excuse to say they are a lesser sex. I’m not trying to say women are better than men or anything, but I think men and women have their upsides as well as their downsides.

    • @progrow6767
      @progrow6767 2 года назад +3

      Noise pollution is real pollution and creates a lot of actual harm to us and other species. As for women, they are humans struggling to use what they have to get what they want, just like all organisms.

    • @arayagerardo
      @arayagerardo 2 года назад

      Everything he says about women is actually true...just look at the west, the fact that so many government programs cater to women is a sign that women are borderline handicap or incapable without help.

  • @dreioo8759
    @dreioo8759 3 года назад +106

    This sounds like agent Smith talking to the captured Morpheus.

    • @XCloudyxGamerX
      @XCloudyxGamerX 2 года назад

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    • @bluepic12
      @bluepic12 2 года назад +2

      @@IIImobiusIII i e

    • @Nevilletheendevour2238
      @Nevilletheendevour2238 2 года назад +3

      Hahaha yooooo I seen this 30 min in.

    • @lemonsquirts2244
      @lemonsquirts2244 2 года назад +1

      ,

    • @jenniferdavis1553
      @jenniferdavis1553 2 года назад

      ​@@bluepic12 aeaaereewae earaarawaeaqreaaaeaa ewe dae for in eeaaluwkwwwaoiii88oi888i8iiiii888i88iiiioieaaeaeawqeeaoiiipiiqe9wwea÷eaaawreaaaaaeawrweareaaeaaeaaea keaw*(÷÷÷×!÷!÷!

  • @ralphkramden1741
    @ralphkramden1741 3 года назад +11

    It ain't all wine & roses in 'this world.

  • @Foxie635
    @Foxie635 3 года назад +23

    He articulated the truth.

  • @progskep
    @progskep Год назад +2

    32:30 Wow I never thought of it like that. I feel like if I manage to truly internalize this worldview I’ll be a lot happier.

  • @simonbelmont1986
    @simonbelmont1986 2 года назад +11

    I love Arthur man...
    He's giving meaning to my life right now

    • @tradertax9798
      @tradertax9798 2 года назад +1

      Just curious, how does a nihilist provide you with meaning?

    • @WillB-wb7zj
      @WillB-wb7zj 2 года назад +2

      @@tradertax9798 Schopenhauer may sound quite nihilistic but in preaching the negation of life he is ascribing it with meaning.

    • @uvindukulathunga3860
      @uvindukulathunga3860 2 года назад

      Wait , thats a counter productive

  • @LaDuBish
    @LaDuBish 2 года назад +5

    much needed right now, the actual light at the actual end of this tunnel!

  • @jessedoof4054
    @jessedoof4054 2 года назад +12

    The world is whatever you think it is, because it is a billion things and you MUST choose your interpretation. You cannot evaluate it wholly.
    When people assert that suffering is the true face of reality, that they peeled and peeled back the layers to find the rotten core they haven't. They've intentional chosen a layer at which to stop peeling, a layer at which to analyse the world and decided THEMSELVES that this suffering analysis is the true analysis.
    We chose our own interpretation, there is no one answer

    • @brickhandle1577
      @brickhandle1577 2 года назад

      You see though, at the end of the day we are living in hell. Although moments of satisfaction exist on this planet, it's like arthur said: each fulfillment of a desire just comes with it another desire. You can delude yourself into thinking the earth is a heaven for only so long until you can't bare to lie to yourself anymore.

    • @SoulDevoured
      @SoulDevoured 2 года назад

      @@brickhandle1577 finding pleasure in the pursuit of desires is how you reconcile this and wisely choosing which desires to pursue. Edison didn't just make 100 failed lightbulbs he enjoyed the process tinkering and learning in each attempt.
      Nihilism like this is like saying there is no point in eating when you will just be hungry again tomorrow... You could instead choose to enjoy the food you have now and possibly even the experience of obtaining and cooking it.
      It is you that chooses to fixate on the unfulfilled desires you have rather than the things you do. But, indeed, it is human nature to constantly pursue more. The pessimistic trap is the idea that you must fulfill each desire to be fulfilled.. when I think it's often just the pursuit of it that we truly innately crave.

    • @brickhandle1577
      @brickhandle1577 2 года назад

      @@SoulDevoured I don't disagree, I was explaining to this other guy the reality that earth is a hell state where things are generally unfair, yes I'm aware that working for things is better than being a nilhist loser

    • @travis6342
      @travis6342 Год назад

      @@SoulDevoured Edison also loved to run egregious amounts of current into animals, especially loved to publicly murder elephants via electrocution in a propaganda campaign against the “dangers” of AC power systems that were in direct competition with his DC power transmission designs

  • @petesfohn5659
    @petesfohn5659 2 года назад +1

    Truth on Modern Society, Women, Noise, etc....,.., A M A Z I N'!!

  • @JaySmurkzTV
    @JaySmurkzTV 4 года назад +30

    This is some of the best dry humour I’ve ever heard 😂😂

    • @palmtreep5567
      @palmtreep5567 3 года назад +1

      Yes! I think lots of people miss that! Which parts did you find funniest?

    • @palmtreep5567
      @palmtreep5567 3 года назад +10

      One part I remember from last night that I found hilarious was his description of the Abrahamic god making this world, then applauded himself and said it's "Very good" That shall not do! hehe!

    • @mashable8759
      @mashable8759 3 года назад

      @@palmtreep5567 poor man hahaha

    • @palmtreep5567
      @palmtreep5567 3 года назад

      Schopenhauer was a miserable old fuk, though. He hated the common man, if that wasn't obvious enough lol

    • @CSHorn
      @CSHorn 2 года назад +1

      I know right! Im havin a great time listening to this. Just the realization of how repulsive and calming this philosophy is. A divine comedy if ever there were one.

  • @maxmanly3122
    @maxmanly3122 2 года назад +7

    That chapter on women is wild but really this is a fantastic listen. Great narration, great translation

    • @paulchristie8452
      @paulchristie8452 Год назад

      It would be interesting 🤨 🧐 🤔 to know what Duke Nukem the white knight would think 🤔 💭 of the Women chapter haha

    • @alexferrercampo7438
      @alexferrercampo7438 Год назад +6

      Bro was red pilled af back in 1851 💀

    • @SinnerOneNine
      @SinnerOneNine Год назад +1

      @@alexferrercampo7438 all great minds of this world were based asf ruclips.net/video/1L1yLY_beuk/видео.html

    • @bub7358
      @bub7358 Год назад

      ​@@alexferrercampo7438nah man that's the black pill, even worse lul

  • @leftyshawenuph4026
    @leftyshawenuph4026 2 года назад +2

    Some really good sleep, with VERY interesting dreams.

  • @shaulascorpion8439
    @shaulascorpion8439 2 года назад +3

    This is about pessimism but I enjoyed listening to it

  • @elperroreggae
    @elperroreggae 3 года назад +55

    44:40 best quote

    • @TheForeverAddicted
      @TheForeverAddicted 3 года назад +7

      wasn't it some hindu god like Brahma that fucked up and created the universe out of like an egg and had to live in it as a form of punishment? :D

    • @dan5609
      @dan5609 3 года назад +3

      I've always wondered why my own existence didn't keep me from being bored. It's always got to be something else a new experience of some sort or another. Just being just is, it needs a little something to make it ok-ish

    • @Ghost-vg6iq
      @Ghost-vg6iq 3 года назад +6

      @@TheForeverAddicted I am a hindu and i approve all of this, God fucked us up man! 😂

    • @vinnyvincent2862
      @vinnyvincent2862 3 года назад

      I think that was Monkey Magic ! . 🤣

    • @Stranglerxx77
      @Stranglerxx77 3 года назад +3

      Without Darkness there is no light

  • @BenJehovah6969
    @BenJehovah6969 2 года назад +2

    True pessimism comes from optimists who become pessimistic toward realists.

  • @sachabruyn3481
    @sachabruyn3481 7 лет назад +19

    who is this reader? I need more of this voice in my life

    • @Ragniirox
      @Ragniirox 7 лет назад +4

      He tells you at the beginning

    • @aquietlife8873
      @aquietlife8873 4 года назад +4

      D.E. wittkower

    • @tituslivius2084
      @tituslivius2084 3 года назад +5

      Nicholas Cage

    • @palmtreep5567
      @palmtreep5567 3 года назад +2

      Did you get to the parts where he reads german and french phrases?

    • @dixonpinfold2582
      @dixonpinfold2582 3 года назад

      @@palmtreep5567 He mispronounces bourgeoisie most gratingly, about a thousand times.

  • @marccampbell7814
    @marccampbell7814 3 года назад +9

    Well that's perked me right up!

  • @everythingabouteverything6233
    @everythingabouteverything6233 3 года назад +33

    I Come Here When I'm Sad🙃

  • @gamingwithmindgame4417
    @gamingwithmindgame4417 2 года назад +2

    All of my friends and family freak out when I put this on... And they never pay attention long enough to learn anything...
    However I believe this and other things like this such as actient Philosophy by the Greeks and such Aristotle and Pluto. I feel should be taught in grade school.

  • @pick734
    @pick734 9 лет назад +11

    opposite view can be proved through all chapters that our direction in life is only a
    view

    • @ralphkramden1741
      @ralphkramden1741 3 года назад +7

      No. Conclusions must be backed by actual factual observations. Otherwise you're talking. turkey🦃 LOL! 😆

    • @theautodan7095
      @theautodan7095 3 года назад

      *#Perspective*

    • @ralphkramden1741
      @ralphkramden1741 3 года назад

      @OnceTheyNamedMEiWasn't Yavool lol

  • @brandtgill2601
    @brandtgill2601 2 года назад +4

    Quality audiobook

  • @ersbay5970
    @ersbay5970 Год назад +2

    Religious people have the Bible, real people have Schopenhauer.

  • @necksugar
    @necksugar 2 года назад

    Shared Joy is Double JOY Shared Sorrow is half the Burden.

  • @JulieHempton
    @JulieHempton 2 года назад +8

    Damn, you read this really well! Thanks 😊

  • @unknowninfinium4353
    @unknowninfinium4353 2 года назад +2

    For anyone interested, Weltgiest has a great summary of Nietzches works.

  • @krainey
    @krainey 2 года назад +2

    Well.. That's cheered me up

  • @abcrane
    @abcrane 3 года назад +11

    I’m love Schopenhauer yet I do not experience my own reality as he describes. I did in the past before I deprogrammed myself from cult programming . This was the catholic cult and the cult of consumerism . But this was not enough to expel pessimism. I found a profound purpose. This purpose, my relentless engagement in it, has transformed my consciousness into a permanently fulfilled state of being. This is not happiness but a deep fulfillment . This is not optimism for that too is a projection on the future. This is being one with my self determined purpose . This is my redemption. No religion no politics but the pure pragmatism of preservation of all that is alive and natural .

    • @jhonfamo8412
      @jhonfamo8412 3 года назад +1

      This is how ive lived for 30 years. Enjoy

    • @deanobliter
      @deanobliter 3 года назад +1

      What was the profound purpose?

    • @abcrane
      @abcrane 3 года назад +2

      ​@@deanobliter my channel, video on project integrity (philosophy and plan for a new economy) this video explains it all. thank you.

    • @justsomebloke6784
      @justsomebloke6784 2 года назад +3

      Yep, I live like this too: happiness is a fools ambition, I use the word contentment where you use the word fulfillment is about the only difference. Contentment does not waver at the arrival of problems to be dealt with, but sets about solving them with equanimity.
      This has been hard won. It is not my original state to be this way, it's a product of having been so profoundly unhappy that I needed to find a way to live with myself, leading to the discovery that the mechanics of just staying alive and well physically, (A lttle like Bhuddist "Chop wood, carry water" meditation.) translated into peace of mind that gradually became a part of my altered character.
      People want to find the on/off switch for transformation: it doesn't exist, it's a process that we're never finished with.

  • @dustinclark9504
    @dustinclark9504 3 года назад +4

    Uhhhh I got a real good feeling about this

  • @banjogyro
    @banjogyro Год назад +1

    There you have it noisy neighbours! Arthur justifies my distaste for your noise

  • @omarysmith7245
    @omarysmith7245 2 года назад +1

    Give me lots of insights. Thank you

  • @dalegriffin6768
    @dalegriffin6768 27 дней назад

    "If somebody doesn't kill you, nature will."... "If love clings, it might as well hate."

  • @phettywappharmaceuticalsll8842
    @phettywappharmaceuticalsll8842 2 года назад +1

    Jesus this came up on my recommended…on a Monday morning as I’m trying to wake up ..not good way to start the day lol

  • @ralphkramden1741
    @ralphkramden1741 3 года назад +7

    Arthur invested his share of the family inheritance in government bonds & earned annual gains twice the salary of a Univeristy professor. His biggest regret near his death was that he might not have time to finish his tome Parerga & Paralipomena. 😆

    • @Moribus_Artibus
      @Moribus_Artibus 3 года назад +6

      The man was a genius. Difficult for many people to swallow, but wonderful for the person who can understand him.

    • @Foxxionly
      @Foxxionly Год назад

      @@Moribus_Artibus agreed. If he weren't a great mind, we wouldn't have heard of him... and I think it is for a reason, that we tend to call lies sweet and the truth bitter :).

    • @sunwukong6917
      @sunwukong6917 Год назад

      Seems more like he wasted away in loneliness instead of having some interaction with others . I mean he just ran from everything he found unpleasant.

  • @gda295
    @gda295 4 года назад +3

    ooh oh always look on the bright side of life [ brian]

  • @fftt9360
    @fftt9360 Год назад +4

    My cat when chill has more glory than most of humanity.

  • @nonnywinner5039
    @nonnywinner5039 2 года назад

    Suffering is to burnout all that is unpure. Without the misery of suffering, there cannot be wisdom, enlightenment, and innovation.

    • @justsomebloke6784
      @justsomebloke6784 2 года назад

      Yep, my only regrets are concerned with the pain I caused to other people while I was thrashing around in the depths of my misery. My own pain has done me good in the end.

    • @fleongoogle2429
      @fleongoogle2429 2 года назад

      = natural education.

    • @nonnywinner5039
      @nonnywinner5039 2 года назад

      @@justsomebloke6784 You have the precious gift of life, so my friend let go of the regrets, best to spend time being a better you now and moving forward.
      The people you think you cause pain to somehow attracted the pain.
      Love your self, learn to forgive, and wish everyone the best.
      FYI,I highly recommend Louis Hay's books, because her advices are practical and realistic.

    • @nonnywinner5039
      @nonnywinner5039 2 года назад

      @@fleongoogle2429 absolutely 💯

    • @justsomebloke6784
      @justsomebloke6784 2 года назад +2

      @@nonnywinner5039 What I describe as regrets do not govern me.
      I deal in terms of my own mistakes and do not ascribe any part of my actions to others. That is for them to work out with themselves.
      Re forgiveness: I have parents who when I was a child abused me in various ways. They are now in their late 80's and I look after them every day and I love them. Please don't talk to me about forgiveness so patronisingly, I think I know a bit about it already.
      FYI: I hate with a passion the type of noxious new-age psychobabble the likes of Louise Hay spouts. I am far more likely to read philosophers like Camus or Schopenhaeur or any of the Stoics when I need to remind myself about the absurdity of life and how to deal with it.
      I know you meant well, but as you can see I need no advice, I'm doing fine.

  • @nicogrande6583
    @nicogrande6583 2 года назад +1

    Engagement.
    Thank ya kindly.

  • @nickshryock7470
    @nickshryock7470 2 года назад +8

    At last a man who understands women.

    • @fleongoogle2429
      @fleongoogle2429 2 года назад +4

      You made my laugh. I will let my wife know this.

  • @colinglass1342
    @colinglass1342 3 года назад +3

    My first impression afther listenig to This Audio book excellent it is very very good incisive thought provoking i found listening to this audio book not boring or differcult to follow but enlightening .Much more involving then NIETZSCHE book BEYOND GOOD AND EVIL Which was FAR more heavy and HARDER to understand of which i found to many complications mixed up notions. I have many books to 📚 to read

  • @slowneutron6163
    @slowneutron6163 3 года назад +5

    I was going to listen to this, but we all no that no good can come from it.

    • @crct2004
      @crct2004 2 года назад +1

      Laughed out loud, thanks!

  • @BT-su1yf
    @BT-su1yf 3 года назад +10

    ok, this narrator does a great job, but I really need to hear this in Werner Herzog's voice now

    • @fleongoogle2429
      @fleongoogle2429 2 года назад

      Where can I find this Hertzog-version!:)

    • @TheHorse_yes
      @TheHorse_yes 10 месяцев назад

      *ElevenLabs AI to the rescue...*

  • @samhur4294
    @samhur4294 2 года назад +2

    Feels like home

  • @otterrivers3765
    @otterrivers3765 Год назад +1

    What we call the individual human mind is actually just a collection of dissatisfactions. The good news is we don't HAVE TO touch that mind.

  • @benparrish672
    @benparrish672 9 месяцев назад +2

    EXISTING IS THE PROBLEM

  • @pplepi
    @pplepi 2 года назад +1

    Millions of people wish they had a friend. They never reach out to make one so should instead embrace their loneliness.

  • @haliaeetus8221
    @haliaeetus8221 2 года назад +10

    As a child I used to believe the women's talks about the nature of society, including men. They particularly did not like men who had views on women, such as Schopenhauer's. Only in my 40's had I enough gathered experience to make my own empirical judgement on these issues and I find myself mostly agreeing with Schopenhauer about women. Even the most logical and mature women still have those certain qualities so they aren't able to distance themselves and think philosophically. My country's government is also now ran by women and it is a complete disaster and betrayal of the people. Worse than the rotten men before those women. Also the first government of tyrants in the history of my country. People should understand nature has designed us to certain functions and now that we've astranged us from them, we have lost beauty, harmony and force.

    • @haliaeetus8221
      @haliaeetus8221 2 года назад

      @@tamsintarshish3905 That is useless. You are the delusional one here. You are clueless because of your bias and inexperience. You dont even know what country, and even if you did, you'd go on superficial perceptions.

  • @samaeltheangelofdeath
    @samaeltheangelofdeath Год назад

    Thank you so much for all these videos, it's greatly increased my intelligence, awareness, and perception, as it does all people, because they're knowledge is obtained from a person. True knowledge is embodied with a human voice. I love all of you who worked on all of this, because it's not just fables, riddles and pair - of - balls, or Bi-balls, it's describing nature and describing people and nefarious things, not in the past, but in mythologies, but IN THE PRESENT TIME, BECAUSE HE WHO WRITES HISTORY, WRITES THE PRESENT, WRITES THE FUTURE! I LOVE YOU! THIS IS YOUR HEAVEN! I'LL FIGHT DAY BY DAY, HOUR BY HOUR FOR A HUNDRED YEARS IF I, MYSELF, ALONE, HAVE TO ERADICATE EVERY BABYLONIAN, CANAANITE, PAGAN, HUMAN SACRIFICING TRANSGENDER MYSELF! PEOPLE DESERVE TO LIVE THEIR LIVES!!!!! NOT WHAT ALL THESE EVIL PEOPLE DO TO US, THAT'S JUST THEM, THAT'S SOLVABLE, REMOVE THEM, EVIL IS GONE!!! THERE ARE NO KINGS, NO QUEENS, NO ANGELS, NO DEMONS, ONLY TRANSGENDER LIARS, AND WE ARE ALL EQUAL, BUT ... THE ONLY LAW, MAKES IT SO IF ONE PERSON IS GETTING DOMINATED BY 100,000, THAT ONE MAN CAN SLAY ALL OF THEM JUST AS EASILY!

  • @xion37
    @xion37 2 года назад +5

    Wow, I didn't know there were people that thought like I do

  • @bloodgoat
    @bloodgoat Год назад +1

    Helps me sleep

  • @garypipich9616
    @garypipich9616 2 года назад +4

    Men love danger and play. That’s why they love women, the most dangerous game. Nietzsche

  • @binder946
    @binder946 2 года назад +2

    Makes sense

  • @karimk8551
    @karimk8551 3 года назад +4

    2:25:00 ultimate red pill

  • @friedrichdostoyevsky491
    @friedrichdostoyevsky491 Год назад

    And only those that are -ready- to hear this can hear this.
    A dishonest person, or a person not ready to be honest, would find no interest, let alone comfort in such a work.

  • @CSHorn
    @CSHorn 2 года назад +11

    Demons sent here to atone for our sins. I fucking love that. Its all revoltingly beautiful.