But what if (and that if is undoubtedly true) our existential causes came from a robust profit making industry that infiltrated its interests into every function of our society?
While the existing power structures often feel overwhelmingly powerful and unchangeable, nihilism and existentialism have a key blessing to share: these systems were built by humans and can, therefore, be unbuilt by them. Fate, luck, astrology, and divine watchmakers didn't make systemic racism, housing inequity, or wealth disparities. Our ancestors left us with that bag. If we organize ourselves with the intention to unpack it and make it better, we can.
Hi Michael. Your comments made me realize something. I think we, as fans of the channel, would be really interested in how YOU changed your mind over the years. We watch this channel for its content, but we trust it because we trust you. If I could watch 10 or 20 minutes about where you started, how you evolved, which views you had that changed, where you realized you were young dumb and ... I would really be enthrawled. Maybe post it on another channel, but to actually better understand the mind (as well as your team's) that's feeding offering me all these great ideas, I'd be even more captivated than I already am. Thanks for the great work. Good luck in the future.
Cool idea for sure - I've done this a bit on the philosophy videos I've made on our patreon, but would be good to have something like this for everyone. I'll aim to do it on an upcoming stream for sure.
I am close to finishing Ethics of Ambiguity and I feel like de Beauvoir does an excellent job of grounding Sartre's Existentialism and giving the philosophy a solid ethical framework. As mentioned in this video, she brings social and political dimensions that feel so real even (especially?) now. It's also not as dense as other existential works that draw heavily from the phenomenology tradition, making it a must-read!
Marginal disagreement here. I’ll start by saying that also love this work but I think it’s worth mentioning that it’s somewhat of an answer or a correction to In Search of a Method wherein Sartre was trying to do the same thing: 1) marry existentialism to Marxism and 2) come up with an ethics.
@MCSorry holy shit you are right. This is the second time I’m being corrected on this point. I did a video on the first chapter, introducing it as a work released in the 80s and my friend had to remind me that it came out 40 years before. I think it’s the brilliance of the work that keeps throwing me off. Same with the complete translation of second sex. Genius and way ahead of its time.
What are we doing? Brings to mind Daniel Johnston’s line “we know what we’re doing, we’re marching to hell.” There’s hope in that realization, I suppose.
Thank you for this. It's been almost 20 years of my life searching for something to concisely describe existentialism as effectively as my philosophy course in uni. This really did it.
I would love to hear more about Camus and absurdism. I struggle to imagine Sisyphus happy and would like to know how one embraces and simultaneously revolts against absurdity?
Thank you for making this video! Anyone watching likely has access to online versions of all of these fantastic philosophers. I recently finished Black Skin, White Masks. As far as personal actions, getting organized in a minority rights/libreration movement, mutual aid network or socialist org is the most effecting thing a person can do.
I am unwritten Can't read my mind I'm undefined I'm just beginning The pen's in my hand Ending unplanned Staring at the blank page before you Open up the dirty window Let the sun illuminate the words that you could not find Reaching for something in the distance So close you can almost taste it Release your inhibitions Feel the rain on your skin No one else can feel it for you Only you can let it in No one else, no one else Can speak the words on your lips Drench yourself in words unspoken Live your life with arms wide open Today is where your book begins The rest is still unwritten Oh, oh, oh I break tradition Sometimes my tries are outside the lines We've been conditioned to not make mistakes But I can't live that way Staring at the blank page before you Open up the dirty window Let the sun illuminate the words that you could not find Reaching for something in the distance So close you can almost taste it Release your inhibitions Feel the rain on your skin No one else can feel it for you Only you can let it in No one else, no one else Can speak the words on your lips Drench yourself in words unspoken Live your life with arms wide open Today is where your book begins Feel the rain on your skin No one else can feel it for you Only you can let it in No one else, no one else Can speak the words on your lips Drench yourself in words unspoken Live your life with arms wide open Today is where your book begins The rest is still unwritten Staring at the blank page before you Open up the dirty window Let the sun illuminate the words that you could not find Reaching for something in the distance So close you can almost taste it Release your inhibitions Feel the rain on your skin No one else can feel it for you Only you can let it in No one else, no one else Can speak the words on your lips Drench yourself in words unspoken Live your life with arms wide open Today is where your book begins Feel the rain on your skin No one else can feel it for you Only you can let it in No one else, no one else Can speak the words on your lips Drench yourself in words unspoken Live your life with arms wide open Today is where your book begins The rest is still unwritten The rest is still unwritten The rest is still unwritten Oh, yeah, yeah
Finally!!! I am sure that Michale has been excited about this one since he's fascinated with Kierkegaard. Sometimes Sartre seems to be almost consciously ignored... Super happy for the video!!!
Another phenomenal (one might even say... phenomenological) video! Thank you, Wisecrack team, for your awesome work. Some topics to explore for the channel: - Object Oriented Ontology (see: Graham Harman and Timothy Morton) - Family Abolitionism (see: Sophie Lewis) - Peter Turuchin's cliodynamics - the phenomenological Animism of David Abram - the Analytic-Continental Divide - a deep dive into the philosophical foundations of conservatism (a truly wild ride) - Syl & Af Ko's anti-colonial veganism - utopianism as an aspect of political ideology and strategy - democratic socialism vs wokeist progressivism
This would be fascinating to hear some thoughts on. I believe double consciousness extends to all people who try to square citizenship with the existential reality of being a human in a social environment
Holy freaking moly. What ever my RUclips algorithm is it keeps taking me to better and better places. This is the best place yet and I’ve been at it almost a year. W wow do you do terrific stuff! I’ll spend actual money, which I don’t really have to listen to more of this
I hope you get your publishing money you are owed But I would hate to be the intern working at ROman and Littlefield Internation Publishing on monday, receiving 99 new emails with the subject 'WHERE IS BURNS' MONEY"
I genuinely enjoy all of the information and viewpoints this channel delivers and expresses. Although I am not qualified to comment articulately on several of the philosopher’s exclamations covered, I thoroughly enjoy learning and absorbing the information everyone brings. I will always have a deep appreciation and admiration for the time and execution this team delivers with every submission this team uploads for the masses. From the bottom of a naive, more than casual viewer, Thank you very much.
I suppose existentialism is like sex, pumping away trying to get something out of it, and if you eventually do get somewhere you are left deflated and with a feeling of dismal emptiness.
I dig this channel. I loved Donald Palmer's Sarte 4 Beginners. I have had the park made unavailable to me. I have made the park unavailable to others. I have felt the absence of Paul. Paul was a waiter but the Cafe is gone. Great Channel.
Wisecrack really helped inspire my first book. Even skimming over it now, I see the themes this channel brought up and codifed for me. Cosmic existentialism. Wabi-sabi. Much love from a fellow thinker!
After I converted to Catholicism, I went to college intending to become a philosopher. After a while they cut off my financial aid and I had to drop out. And in a few years I realized Catholicism was a mistaken detour for me. But that experience has left me with a lot of questions about the philosophers I just got a taste of when I was in school. That philosophy department had a thing for early Husserl - I even dipped my toe into Logical Investigations - and Max Scheler. I think they saw them as providing adequate answers to what were otherwise dead ends in some major trends in late 19th & early 20th century philosophy. A few of them had a thing for Gadamer and Ricoeur. I'm saying all this, of course, because I think it would be cool for Wisecrack to do videos on these guys. Oh, and Eric Voegelin too. And maybe a video on the use of "gnosticism" in the 20th century, whether as an epithet much loved by conservative Catholics, or as a serious system of thought. That would be interesting.
Since Zizek is an avowed Hegelist, I think there need to be more Hegel videos. And then maybe something somehow that might explain the general mindset of those in Slavic or Balkan countries. (Yugopnik)
You should do a video about Camus' absurdist philosophy, which is similar but also kinda different from mainline existentialism. Also thanks for shouting out Sartre's later works, I'll def check those out soon.
4:44 you better double check that... In an interview in Les Nouvelles Littéraires, 15 November, 1945, Camus said point-blank: “I am not an existentialist.” He went on to say, “Sartre and I are always surprised to see our names linked. We have even thought of publishing a short statement in which the undersigned declare that they have nothing in common with each other and refuse to be held responsible for the debts they might respectively incur. It’s a joke actually. Sartre and I published our books without exception before we had ever met. When we did get to know each other, it was to realize how much we differed. Sartre is an existentialist, and the only book of ideas that I have published, The Myth of Sisyphus, was directed against the so-called existentialist philosophers.”
The part about how little sense it makes to stick to the same ideas is something I wish more analysis of philosophers would include. I've heard it mentioned that Wittgenstein was very different between his younger and older writings, but not much any other great philosophers. While he didn't live long, I wouldn't be surprised if changing his mind is part of why no one is good at interpreting Nietzche.
Really 💙 your philosophy videos! Would you ever consider doing a video on the utility and limits of Stoicism. Particularly the tension between its classical notions of 'deterministic pantheism' and practical applications of the dichotomy of control.. 👍🏼
I liked the "4th wall break"-like elements in this video... it makes it more personal, and they were placed when I was about to loose interest and braught me back in... with a good balance of this... it gives the video a pretty good structure
It'd be great if you guys did a video (or videos) of modern day philosophers (IE still alive) and how different philosophical concepts may (or may not) have changed with some of these philosophers.
I think that there is one aspect of the dialectic between freedom and constraint that deserves more attention. Freedom and constraint are paradoxically linked, and so cannot easily be divided into a good/bad binary. To explain what I mean, consider what is required to master a skill, drawing, for example from a state of absolute ignorance. The first stage of learning is the first discovery of a potential capacity- that a pencil makes graphic marks, and that graphic marks can be used to produce an image. The second stage is the stage of creative play- the exploration of the relationship between your actions, the the results,they produce, and the way those reults feel- scribbling and doodling. After some time, one may find that the absolute freedom to make any mark is also a constraint, because they can't direct the outcome in any meaningful way. The third stage, deliberate practice, is the deliberate imposition of constraint in the form of disciple, which narrows ones options from a potentially infinite of actions to a very narrow set of those that yield the results you want, in drawing, these are the skills of form, composition, perspective, value, etc. After that is another round of creative play, exploring the full potential of the skills won through deliberate practice. This cycle repeats back and forth, occasionally punctuated the the unexpected discovery of new degrees of freedom and constrained more broadly by wider context of need (ie, you can't just sit around and draw all day forever, you have to make a living for yourself more comprehensively). Given the liberatory direction of philosophy as a project, it is understandable why freedom is usually held in higher regard than constant- philosophy is intended to free the thinker from the restraints of convention after all- but I think this is a misreading of the situation. After all, the billionaire tycoon is an extraordinary free individual, largely unconstrained by physical or social resistance, and billionaires also fucking such and make things harder for everyone else to support that freedom. Rather than attempt to assign absolute moral value freedom and constraint (freedom=good, constraint=bad), we should recognize them as moral qualities insofar as the dynamic relationship of freedom and constraint within a material system yields ethically charged outcomes, good or bad. We humans, as autonomous beings within the system, have the freedom to choose how to respond to our circumstances and shape the world, and we humans are also social animals living within a material ecosystem, constrained by the laws of physics and our biological needs and the conventions of the communities on which we depend. It's a far more complex relationship with freedom and constraint than simple moral absolutes, but it's also more grounded and useful approach to the matter
Mike, I gotta be real with you. You're not my real Jared, and you never will be. But that's on me. It's not fair of me to expect you to be someone you're not. You are OK. Actually, you're kinda really rad. So let me say, from the heart, for reals, that you may not be my real Jared, but hey. You have grown on me. And that means that yes. You are. My real. Mike.
This video finally unlocked an understanding of the relationship between Existentialism, platonism, and rationalism. I've been reading a lot of Giordano Bruno and this helped me figure out some of the underlying philosophy I was grappling with. Honestly, another problem with existentialism I have is the belief in an unknowable universe as science has been shown to provide methods for predicting the universe, with particular regard to physics and chemistry which can get really precise about the natural laws of the universe. Perhaps there are things science will never be able to predict fully, but the reality is clearly ordered in a predictable way for much of the known universe, and as far as I can tell there's no reason to believe that it can't all be predicted.
Excellent video on Existentialism. Are you able to do one on Gabriel Marcel's idea of hope & despair (in his Homo Viator: Introduction to a Metaphysic of Hope)
Hi Michael, can you please do a fireside chat with Alain de Botton for about an hour or 1.5 hours? I love the ideas you both present, and would love to see the discussion ❤
I've been reading a lot of Stirner lately and I feel like he has the most correct assessment of the interaction of the "freedom" of the individual but also the limits placed on them by spectres
I get the objective/social angle, but the important over-arching bit is that the universe has no inherent meaning. As Sam Harris put it, It cares as much for us as it did the Dinosaurs and an asteroid could wipe us out sooner than we would like to think about. It's human to wonder and ask about why there is something rather than nothing, but asking "why the universe" is just as silly a question as "why mount Everest". A lot of the time "why" is not a relevant or useful question. Humans project agency onto too many things that we shouldn't. This is exactly how religions are created and upheld. Existentialism is not just a useful and more accurate life philosphy, but a tool against irrational, unreasonable, and/or unrealistic dogma and discourse. The "burden" of making your own life as meaningful as you want, and understanding there is no after-life, means you cherish this life and your very limited time on this pale blue dot.
8:29, yes to the t-shirt, but the question is more important. Really, what are we doing? What are we focusing on? If we know that there is a decline in population and a climate crisis, what are we doing? What should we be focusing on?
No discussion on Husserl and phenomenology? Feels important when looking at existentialism and especially early existentialism. Maybe a separate video on Husserl?
Hey guys, great video. I actuality read the Ethics of Ambiguity and the Second Sex from de Beauvoir, and my opinion is that Existentialism is still relevant today (more than ever now I'd argue). America especially seems to have narrowed their social discussion around justice (for good reasons), but I think people certainly need to be reminded to take responsibility for the greater good (the definition of what that is can be argued). I'd like to see what your take is on the philosophy of minimalism. I recently came across a Netflix documentary uploaded to RUclips.
Topic is closed your hemispheres are locked through natural law, it's a process after taking all these continental courses in advanced philosophy of the mind and psychology.
Who are these people that film all the stock footage? It's really weird, when you think about it. "Today I filmed a single take of a man with a tablet in front of a fancy car, then after lunch, we brought in the fake third world orphan girl and had her look sad on a doorstep. Emmy nomination is as good as mine this time!"
I like to joke that Existentialism ruined me. I learned about Existentialism in high school, and the teacher explained it in this way (or maybe I didn't understand her correctly): that I didn't need to do homework if I didn't want to. My parents, or school, can't force me to do homework, and I should decide for myself if that's something I want to do. So consequently, I realized that I put a lot of effort in school because that's what my parents expected of me, it wasn't something that I personally had a lot of interest in. So I stopped doing a lot of my homework, and my academic grades took a bit of a nosedive. So in hindsight, I would say that you should be careful about teaching Existentialism to teens.
That's like free choice without the responsibility. I was there once too, yet when I read Sartre, I overthougt my bad live choises and realised, that I was the one making them. Still took me a while to get a grip. But that insight was helpfull.
This debate about freedom really reminds of a quote from The black prism by Brent Weeks: "Maybe when you were born on the top of the mountain you could pretend the mountain didn't matter, but those who climbed it and those born at its base who could never climb at all knew differently."
I've been waiting for this video for a long time you guys. I think early existentialism is popular for the same reason that CBT, Stoicism, yoga and manifesting are popular right now, because you can do it all by yourself. And I'm not so sure that's politically radical. Declaring yourself or other people to be a priori free might be a good pep talk but that just seems like another form of idealism, just another essence to cling to. I think that Frank Herbert did it better. We are born unfree as animals, but we must train ourselves to be free in the only the ways that humans can. You are born unfree, but you have to fight for your mental freedom. This is a much more gradual process than Sartre just declaring that you are free.
The capacity to resist, and the choice to resist, are the key common threads of both Existentialism and Absurdism. It is in that choice, to accept things as they are or to resist and attempt to change how things are, where we find radical free will.
Also as far as if I can do it all from my living room via thinking. It’s the difference between prediction (thinking) and experimentation (action). Experimentation is a more organic method if you think about it
I have to disagree with the conclusion. It's not that existentialists weren't aware of the constraints that limit the individual's expression, they just didn't emphasize it. Kierkegaard's point is that while these 'quantitive determinations' change the demands on finding one's authenticity remains practically the same in all epochs. I fear that not focusing on the individual but on society creates this implicit notion that 'I know how I could find my authenticity but I am being suppressed' - this sort of Camusian idea that Sisyphus is happy through his hatred of the injustice of the world (Camus criticized existentialism btw). Alongside freedom, Kierkegaard also embraced the term 'resignation' which recognizes this problem but doesn't succumb to it - it invites the individual to seek authenticity in his/hers everyday life rather than to objectify himself/herself while waiting to be defined by some political or social Third party.
Debating whether or not Existentialism is even relevant is the ultimate existential expression.
But what if (and that if is undoubtedly true) our existential causes came from a robust profit making industry that infiltrated its interests into every function of our society?
@@toyotaprius79hat? No seriously, what are you trying to say?
@MrGamelover23 Probably some conspiracy theory bullshit.
@@toyotaprius79 But what if (and that if us undoubtedly true) our existential causes are varied and can't be reduced to a single pleasing enemy?
@@toyotaprius79What was the pure existence before this capitalist takeover then? Feudalism..?
I like it when Michael tells us to commit crimes
I'm frustrated that I ca't seem to find it.
If someone has a orking link to download the book, I'd be eternally grateful.
This would be a tort, not a crime.
@@skatchina I've heard libgen has a lot of books
While the existing power structures often feel overwhelmingly powerful and unchangeable, nihilism and existentialism have a key blessing to share: these systems were built by humans and can, therefore, be unbuilt by them.
Fate, luck, astrology, and divine watchmakers didn't make systemic racism, housing inequity, or wealth disparities. Our ancestors left us with that bag. If we organize ourselves with the intention to unpack it and make it better, we can.
That’s definitely something I needed to hear at this time. I’m genuinely afraid of where the world, especially the US, is going.
@@Reed5016Same
Maybe your grand children's children will be the ones to get it right.
💖🌏🌎🌍💖
Burn it all, return to monke
I hope the world explodes
Hi Michael. Your comments made me realize something. I think we, as fans of the channel, would be really interested in how YOU changed your mind over the years. We watch this channel for its content, but we trust it because we trust you. If I could watch 10 or 20 minutes about where you started, how you evolved, which views you had that changed, where you realized you were young dumb and ... I would really be enthrawled. Maybe post it on another channel, but to actually better understand the mind (as well as your team's) that's feeding offering me all these great ideas, I'd be even more captivated than I already am. Thanks for the great work. Good luck in the future.
Cool idea for sure - I've done this a bit on the philosophy videos I've made on our patreon, but would be good to have something like this for everyone.
I'll aim to do it on an upcoming stream for sure.
@@WisecrackEDU MY take on all this: One definitely needs precisely 11 lines of Adderal to get s*** done in this day and age!
I am close to finishing Ethics of Ambiguity and I feel like de Beauvoir does an excellent job of grounding Sartre's Existentialism and giving the philosophy a solid ethical framework. As mentioned in this video, she brings social and political dimensions that feel so real even (especially?) now. It's also not as dense as other existential works that draw heavily from the phenomenology tradition, making it a must-read!
Good review!
Marginal disagreement here. I’ll start by saying that also love this work but I think it’s worth mentioning that it’s somewhat of an answer or a correction to In Search of a Method wherein Sartre was trying to do the same thing: 1) marry existentialism to Marxism and 2) come up with an ethics.
@MCSorry holy shit you are right. This is the second time I’m being corrected on this point. I did a video on the first chapter, introducing it as a work released in the 80s and my friend had to remind me that it came out 40 years before. I think it’s the brilliance of the work that keeps throwing me off. Same with the complete translation of second sex. Genius and way ahead of its time.
I'm impressed with your restraint, Wisecrack. A whole video on existentialism and not a single Rick and Morty reference.
Rewatch the opening.
Did you even watch the video? it's in the first minute.
Found the dude that’s listening and not watching 😂
shhh don't tell! They were impressed! We need this!
@@WisecrackEDUWhoops, sorry. Sorry that this community is full of narcs!
What are we doing? Brings to mind Daniel Johnston’s line “we know what we’re doing, we’re marching to hell.” There’s hope in that realization, I suppose.
I want the shirt though
This is one of your best videos. So great to see more context and show how philosophers have amended their thinking over time.
Chef’s kiss.
appreciate it!
Simone de Beauvoir says she is living in a material world and she is a material girl
Good luck and congratulations with the baby Michael! I’m sad I missed the last stream yesterday ❤
I love deep dives like this. breaks it down so I can incorporate it into my own thoughts.
Thank you for this. It's been almost 20 years of my life searching for something to concisely describe existentialism as effectively as my philosophy course in uni. This really did it.
I would love to hear more about Camus and absurdism. I struggle to imagine Sisyphus happy and would like to know how one embraces and simultaneously revolts against absurdity?
Read his books
@@samuelcharles7642 after 3 rereadings I'm looking for another perspective on it.
Thank you for making this video! Anyone watching likely has access to online versions of all of these fantastic philosophers. I recently finished Black Skin, White Masks. As far as personal actions, getting organized in a minority rights/libreration movement, mutual aid network or socialist org is the most effecting thing a person can do.
Happy to see Fanon get some attention in the conversation of existentialism!
Thanks!
I am unwritten
Can't read my mind
I'm undefined
I'm just beginning
The pen's in my hand
Ending unplanned
Staring at the blank page before you
Open up the dirty window
Let the sun illuminate the words that you could not find
Reaching for something in the distance
So close you can almost taste it
Release your inhibitions
Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
The rest is still unwritten
Oh, oh, oh
I break tradition
Sometimes my tries are outside the lines
We've been conditioned to not make mistakes
But I can't live that way
Staring at the blank page before you
Open up the dirty window
Let the sun illuminate the words that you could not find
Reaching for something in the distance
So close you can almost taste it
Release your inhibitions
Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
The rest is still unwritten
Staring at the blank page before you
Open up the dirty window
Let the sun illuminate the words that you could not find
Reaching for something in the distance
So close you can almost taste it
Release your inhibitions
Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
The rest is still unwritten
The rest is still unwritten
The rest is still unwritten
Oh, yeah, yeah
Finally!!! I am sure that Michale has been excited about this one since he's fascinated with Kierkegaard. Sometimes Sartre seems to be almost consciously ignored... Super happy for the video!!!
Another phenomenal (one might even say... phenomenological) video! Thank you, Wisecrack team, for your awesome work.
Some topics to explore for the channel:
- Object Oriented Ontology (see: Graham Harman and Timothy Morton)
- Family Abolitionism (see: Sophie Lewis)
- Peter Turuchin's cliodynamics
- the phenomenological Animism of David Abram
- the Analytic-Continental Divide
- a deep dive into the philosophical foundations of conservatism (a truly wild ride)
- Syl & Af Ko's anti-colonial veganism
- utopianism as an aspect of political ideology and strategy
- democratic socialism vs wokeist progressivism
dope comment - thanks for the ideas!
I'd love to see you break down James Baldwin and W. E. B. Du Bois concept of "double consciousness".
This would be fascinating to hear some thoughts on. I believe double consciousness extends to all people who try to square citizenship with the existential reality of being a human in a social environment
Message sent to you publicist. Good luck! Terrific video xx
Holy freaking moly. What ever my RUclips algorithm is it keeps taking me to better and better places. This is the best place yet and I’ve been at it almost a year. W wow do you do terrific stuff! I’ll spend actual money, which I don’t really have to listen to more of this
I hope you get your publishing money you are owed
But I would hate to be the intern working at ROman and Littlefield Internation Publishing on monday, receiving 99 new emails with the subject 'WHERE IS BURNS' MONEY"
True - hopefully only 3-5 people actually do that.
As much as I like philosophy, it's really easy to get depressed and miss the better meaning.
Very, very true.
As someone who has/had bad teeth it's comforting that some great thinkers also forgot to brush their teeth.
I genuinely enjoy all of the information and viewpoints this channel delivers and expresses. Although I am not qualified to comment articulately on several of the philosopher’s exclamations covered, I thoroughly enjoy learning and absorbing the information everyone brings. I will always have a deep appreciation and admiration for the time and execution this team delivers with every submission this team uploads for the masses. From the bottom of a naive, more than casual viewer, Thank you very much.
I suppose existentialism is like sex, pumping away trying to get something out of it, and if you eventually do get somewhere you are left deflated and with a feeling of dismal emptiness.
Sometimes I feel like I just watch Wisecrack for the vibes. I got lost somewhere in the first half of this video, but you know.. it's nice over here..
I dig this channel. I loved Donald Palmer's Sarte 4 Beginners. I have had the park made unavailable to me. I have made the park unavailable to others.
I have felt the absence of Paul. Paul was a waiter but the Cafe is gone. Great Channel.
Wisecrack really helped inspire my first book.
Even skimming over it now, I see the themes this channel brought up and codifed for me.
Cosmic existentialism. Wabi-sabi.
Much love from a fellow thinker!
I would get the "Wisecrack: What are we doing here?" shirt 🤷♂️
Same. I would also buy a 1000 Raw Dome hat.
we'd have to make sure the hat maker didn't accidentally leave the top of the hat open.
I second this
After I converted to Catholicism, I went to college intending to become a philosopher. After a while they cut off my financial aid and I had to drop out. And in a few years I realized Catholicism was a mistaken detour for me. But that experience has left me with a lot of questions about the philosophers I just got a taste of when I was in school. That philosophy department had a thing for early Husserl - I even dipped my toe into Logical Investigations - and Max Scheler. I think they saw them as providing adequate answers to what were otherwise dead ends in some major trends in late 19th & early 20th century philosophy. A few of them had a thing for Gadamer and Ricoeur.
I'm saying all this, of course, because I think it would be cool for Wisecrack to do videos on these guys.
Oh, and Eric Voegelin too. And maybe a video on the use of "gnosticism" in the 20th century, whether as an epithet much loved by conservative Catholics, or as a serious system of thought. That would be interesting.
Tanks for making another great video!
Since Zizek is an avowed Hegelist, I think there need to be more Hegel videos. And then maybe something somehow that might explain the general mindset of those in Slavic or Balkan countries. (Yugopnik)
Another great upload video guys!
So nobody's gon talk about how Micheal's publisher isn't giving his due share
In fairness academic publishing pays ALMOST nothing . . . but they did just kinda ghost me.
I feel the absurdism video coming and I'm so here for it.
You should do a video about Camus' absurdist philosophy, which is similar but also kinda different from mainline existentialism. Also thanks for shouting out Sartre's later works, I'll def check those out soon.
your videos are great guys. thank you so much for the knowledge. wish i had the means to support yall more
you are supporting us by watching the videos! we appreciate it.
I like the shirt idea.
Please add a confused smile face to it.
There are moments when i find it pointless going to work or wake up at all because yesterday was tough.
Sounds like burn out
Did not know about Satre’s later work. That’s awesome to hear about.
Thank you so much.
Great video! Would love an in depth video on Albert Camus and Absurdism and how it specifically challenges Existentialism.
4:44 you better double check that...
In an interview in Les Nouvelles Littéraires, 15 November, 1945, Camus said point-blank: “I am not an existentialist.” He went on to say, “Sartre and I are always surprised to see our names linked. We have even thought of publishing a short statement in which the undersigned declare that they have nothing in common with each other and refuse to be held responsible for the debts they might respectively incur. It’s a joke actually. Sartre and I published our books without exception before we had ever met. When we did get to know each other, it was to realize how much we differed. Sartre is an existentialist, and the only book of ideas that I have published, The Myth of Sisyphus, was directed against the so-called existentialist philosophers.”
Man just loved this video I've gotta come back to take some notes.
The part about how little sense it makes to stick to the same ideas is something I wish more analysis of philosophers would include. I've heard it mentioned that Wittgenstein was very different between his younger and older writings, but not much any other great philosophers. While he didn't live long, I wouldn't be surprised if changing his mind is part of why no one is good at interpreting Nietzche.
Really 💙 your philosophy videos! Would you ever consider doing a video on the utility and limits of Stoicism. Particularly the tension between its classical notions of 'deterministic pantheism' and practical applications of the dichotomy of control.. 👍🏼
Michael, I would be thrilled if you did a video about Absurdism, comparing the differences and similarities between Camus and Nagel.
That T-shirt idea sounds good. (Ace vid btw, not often existentialism is put in the dock.)
Thanks! And hopefully we can make the shirt.
I liked the "4th wall break"-like elements in this video... it makes it more personal, and they were placed when I was about to loose interest and braught me back in... with a good balance of this... it gives the video a pretty good structure
By "free" he didn't mean physically, he meant freedom in our intentions.
My two favourite topics, Marx and Existentialism in the same video? This made my day ❤
It'd be great if you guys did a video (or videos) of modern day philosophers (IE still alive) and how different philosophical concepts may (or may not) have changed with some of these philosophers.
"WHAT ARE WE DOING?" has been my go-to caption when sharing political items/anything related to climate change.
I disagree. Philosophy is TOO sexy for most folks, esp. the logic-chopping stuff LOL.
I think that there is one aspect of the dialectic between freedom and constraint that deserves more attention. Freedom and constraint are paradoxically linked, and so cannot easily be divided into a good/bad binary.
To explain what I mean, consider what is required to master a skill, drawing, for example from a state of absolute ignorance. The first stage of learning is the first discovery of a potential capacity- that a pencil makes graphic marks, and that graphic marks can be used to produce an image. The second stage is the stage of creative play- the exploration of the relationship between your actions, the the results,they produce, and the way those reults feel- scribbling and doodling. After some time, one may find that the absolute freedom to make any mark is also a constraint, because they can't direct the outcome in any meaningful way. The third stage, deliberate practice, is the deliberate imposition of constraint in the form of disciple, which narrows ones options from a potentially infinite of actions to a very narrow set of those that yield the results you want, in drawing, these are the skills of form, composition, perspective, value, etc. After that is another round of creative play, exploring the full potential of the skills won through deliberate practice. This cycle repeats back and forth, occasionally punctuated the the unexpected discovery of new degrees of freedom and constrained more broadly by wider context of need (ie, you can't just sit around and draw all day forever, you have to make a living for yourself more comprehensively).
Given the liberatory direction of philosophy as a project, it is understandable why freedom is usually held in higher regard than constant- philosophy is intended to free the thinker from the restraints of convention after all- but I think this is a misreading of the situation. After all, the billionaire tycoon is an extraordinary free individual, largely unconstrained by physical or social resistance, and billionaires also fucking such and make things harder for everyone else to support that freedom. Rather than attempt to assign absolute moral value freedom and constraint (freedom=good, constraint=bad), we should recognize them as moral qualities insofar as the dynamic relationship of freedom and constraint within a material system yields ethically charged outcomes, good or bad. We humans, as autonomous beings within the system, have the freedom to choose how to respond to our circumstances and shape the world, and we humans are also social animals living within a material ecosystem, constrained by the laws of physics and our biological needs and the conventions of the communities on which we depend. It's a far more complex relationship with freedom and constraint than simple moral absolutes, but it's also more grounded and useful approach to the matter
Here before the thumbnail change ✊😔
I just signed up for patreon, I'm in for the beer helmet prop jokes. . .but more for what that says about us philosophically.
Glad I watched to the end. Daddy doesn't disappoint!
Loved this, also nice to finally get a clear explanation on wtf a dialectic really is, nice touch!
(Isn't it pronounced 'Camus' though?')
Mike, I gotta be real with you. You're not my real Jared, and you never will be. But that's on me. It's not fair of me to expect you to be someone you're not. You are OK. Actually, you're kinda really rad. So let me say, from the heart, for reals, that you may not be my real Jared, but hey. You have grown on me.
And that means that yes. You are. My real. Mike.
Appreciate it! It's hard to fill such big shoes but thanks for giving me the space to find my groove and for giving me a chance.
@@WisecrackEDU One love, bro
Stock footage goes from slow motion front flip, to what appears to be a woman having a mental health crisis.
What a great video! I really enjoyed this one! Thanks guys
This is very well done. I love existentialism and simone de beuvoir. She is the bedrock of existential therapy.
10/10 would buy a "What are we doing" T-shirt from you guys. Reflects my political views very accurately
This video finally unlocked an understanding of the relationship between Existentialism, platonism, and rationalism. I've been reading a lot of Giordano Bruno and this helped me figure out some of the underlying philosophy I was grappling with. Honestly, another problem with existentialism I have is the belief in an unknowable universe as science has been shown to provide methods for predicting the universe, with particular regard to physics and chemistry which can get really precise about the natural laws of the universe. Perhaps there are things science will never be able to predict fully, but the reality is clearly ordered in a predictable way for much of the known universe, and as far as I can tell there's no reason to believe that it can't all be predicted.
Excellent video on Existentialism.
Are you able to do one on Gabriel Marcel's idea of hope & despair (in his Homo Viator: Introduction to a Metaphysic of Hope)
Hi Michael, can you please do a fireside chat with Alain de Botton for about an hour or 1.5 hours?
I love the ideas you both present, and would love to see the discussion ❤
I mean, I don't know him, but would be happy to chat.
I'd love to learn more about the Situationist International and Guy Debord. I feel like that would be a good way to build off this video.
I've been reading a lot of Stirner lately and I feel like he has the most correct assessment of the interaction of the "freedom" of the individual but also the limits placed on them by spectres
Yes to shirts! "What are we doing"
Such a dense video but it succinctly caotures a lot of amazing topics around one theme. Very wekl written guys!
Youre channel is gold for our minds.
This was a really good one!!
I get the objective/social angle, but the important over-arching bit is that the universe has no inherent meaning. As Sam Harris put it, It cares as much for us as it did the Dinosaurs and an asteroid could wipe us out sooner than we would like to think about.
It's human to wonder and ask about why there is something rather than nothing, but asking "why the universe" is just as silly a question as "why mount Everest".
A lot of the time "why" is not a relevant or useful question. Humans project agency onto too many things that we shouldn't. This is exactly how religions are created and upheld.
Existentialism is not just a useful and more accurate life philosphy, but a tool against irrational, unreasonable, and/or unrealistic dogma and discourse.
The "burden" of making your own life as meaningful as you want, and understanding there is no after-life, means you cherish this life and your very limited time on this pale blue dot.
"hot dog party" is one of those phrases that seem very dangerous to google
8:29, yes to the t-shirt, but the question is more important. Really, what are we doing? What are we focusing on? If we know that there is a decline in population and a climate crisis, what are we doing? What should we be focusing on?
No discussion on Husserl and phenomenology? Feels important when looking at existentialism and especially early existentialism. Maybe a separate video on Husserl?
Totally - honestly cut some of the historical context from this one as we only had so much time.
Please do absurdism next! This was great!
Hey guys, great video. I actuality read the Ethics of Ambiguity and the Second Sex from de Beauvoir, and my opinion is that Existentialism is still relevant today (more than ever now I'd argue). America especially seems to have narrowed their social discussion around justice (for good reasons), but I think people certainly need to be reminded to take responsibility for the greater good (the definition of what that is can be argued).
I'd like to see what your take is on the philosophy of minimalism. I recently came across a Netflix documentary uploaded to RUclips.
Topic is closed your hemispheres are locked through natural law, it's a process after taking all these continental courses in advanced philosophy of the mind and psychology.
Love the video. Would also love to hear you talk about Serial Experiments Lain.
Yep. Life can be great if you put in the effort!😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤
Or is it life can be great when you are born to economic prosperity?
hamster wheel mentality
Amazing work wisecrack =)
Please make a vid on the basic necessary psychological conditions of a hypothetical dialogue which would enable absolute/global societal consensus.
Excellent review. Thank you
Please make a video on the philosophy of The Little Prince (the book, not the movie). It's one of my favorites.
Who are these people that film all the stock footage? It's really weird, when you think about it.
"Today I filmed a single take of a man with a tablet in front of a fancy car, then after lunch, we brought in the fake third world orphan girl and had her look sad on a doorstep. Emmy nomination is as good as mine this time!"
I like to joke that Existentialism ruined me. I learned about Existentialism in high school, and the teacher explained it in this way (or maybe I didn't understand her correctly): that I didn't need to do homework if I didn't want to. My parents, or school, can't force me to do homework, and I should decide for myself if that's something I want to do. So consequently, I realized that I put a lot of effort in school because that's what my parents expected of me, it wasn't something that I personally had a lot of interest in. So I stopped doing a lot of my homework, and my academic grades took a bit of a nosedive. So in hindsight, I would say that you should be careful about teaching Existentialism to teens.
That's like free choice without the responsibility. I was there once too, yet when I read Sartre, I overthougt my bad live choises and realised, that I was the one making them. Still took me a while to get a grip. But that insight was helpfull.
This debate about freedom really reminds of a quote from The black prism by Brent Weeks: "Maybe when you were born on the top of the mountain you could pretend the mountain didn't matter, but those who climbed it and those born at its base who could never climb at all knew differently."
Signing up for Patreon now to get Michael that beer helmet.
I've been waiting for this video for a long time you guys.
I think early existentialism is popular for the same reason that CBT, Stoicism, yoga and manifesting are popular right now, because you can do it all by yourself. And I'm not so sure that's politically radical. Declaring yourself or other people to be a priori free might be a good pep talk but that just seems like another form of idealism, just another essence to cling to. I think that Frank Herbert did it better. We are born unfree as animals, but we must train ourselves to be free in the only the ways that humans can. You are born unfree, but you have to fight for your mental freedom. This is a much more gradual process than Sartre just declaring that you are free.
The capacity to resist, and the choice to resist, are the key common threads of both Existentialism and Absurdism. It is in that choice, to accept things as they are or to resist and attempt to change how things are, where we find radical free will.
Also as far as if I can do it all from my living room via thinking. It’s the difference between prediction (thinking) and experimentation (action). Experimentation is a more organic method if you think about it
I have to disagree with the conclusion. It's not that existentialists weren't aware of the constraints that limit the individual's expression, they just didn't emphasize it. Kierkegaard's point is that while these 'quantitive determinations' change the demands on finding one's authenticity remains practically the same in all epochs. I fear that not focusing on the individual but on society creates this implicit notion that 'I know how I could find my authenticity but I am being suppressed' - this sort of Camusian idea that Sisyphus is happy through his hatred of the injustice of the world (Camus criticized existentialism btw). Alongside freedom, Kierkegaard also embraced the term 'resignation' which recognizes this problem but doesn't succumb to it - it invites the individual to seek authenticity in his/hers everyday life rather than to objectify himself/herself while waiting to be defined by some political or social Third party.
So glad Michael is at Wisecrack. That opening line 😂
I gotta quit playin myself so I can get Mike in that beer helmet.😂😂😂
He's thirsty.
@@WisecrackEDU 🤣🤣🤣🤣
3:52 How about if I buy a used copy of your book from ThriftBooks? Does that pass the vibe check (or whatever the kids say)?
VIBE CHECK PASSED
One of your best comments ever! „Wisecrack: What are we doing?“
Make a video on Decoloniality! I'd love to see your take on that!!