History of Philosophy in 16 Questions Three: How Should People Live?

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  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 28

  • @alessandroneri6806
    @alessandroneri6806 5 лет назад +8

    And this great series continues.Can't wait to get back home from work and listen. Wes Cecil rules.

  • @Wingedmagician
    @Wingedmagician 5 лет назад +10

    This is so incredible, what a privilege to be able to listen to these lectures.

  • @ka-bapraxis5887
    @ka-bapraxis5887 5 лет назад +8

    Yes! It's a new lecture and I'm pumped.

  • @a.randomjack6661
    @a.randomjack6661 2 года назад

    This lectures explains so much, like on how politics breaks up societies. The endless dividion.

  • @badbaboye
    @badbaboye 2 года назад

    Maybe, one fine day I could meet you Wes. It's incredible you sharing your thoughts with us.

  • @deprogramr
    @deprogramr 5 лет назад +1

    Hey Wes Cecil! Just wanted to say thanks for making these cool vids... Thanks! I just found your channel, I'm excited to get into it.

  • @FuzelSayed
    @FuzelSayed 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you professor

  • @asdfasdfasdf111666
    @asdfasdfasdf111666 5 лет назад +7

    When you talk about average ages around 3:00, that includes child mortality, which was very high. Most people throughout human history, if they lived to adulthood, lived to at least around 50 or so years old. The hard part was getting to adulthood, mostly due to disease.

    • @AncientOrange
      @AncientOrange 5 лет назад +1

      I think he was talking about average life expectancy of women; at that time in history it was not that uncommon for pregnancy to risk the life of a mother. I think that is the main reason that number is so low. Many women lived past that age.

    • @platosplatoon6873
      @platosplatoon6873 5 лет назад +1

      Hal he’s talking about both - it’s still inaccurate. I love Wes Cecil’s lectures, but he does make little mini mistakes in details. I think this comes part in parcel with ‘grand thinkers’.... people like Spengler or Gibbons for instance who see the bigger picture

  • @bebeezra
    @bebeezra 5 лет назад +4

    Wes couldn't be more spot on. Ethics, the question that asks, *_"How should I live or what the hell should I do?"_* is paradoxically flawed because its answer can only be given *after* you select a possibility.
    For example, If you're a child who has never experienced ice cream before and you go to an ice cream parlor with unlimited flavors - which of the possibilities _should you select?_
    Barring any influence of others, the only possible answer is that you must sample a taste of several of them before you can arrive at any selection - and even then you'll never know if you made the best possible selection.

  • @pinosantilli8297
    @pinosantilli8297 5 лет назад +1

    Philosophy's job is to show all the options because no two humans are exactly the same and no one solution is good for all...

  • @Ignirium
    @Ignirium 5 лет назад +3

    "Know thy self" - I'd say is a very useful question, and one that continues through your whole life, and keeps giving :)

  • @samsturdi
    @samsturdi 5 лет назад

    Just fucking great man.

  • @pinosantilli8297
    @pinosantilli8297 5 лет назад +1

    People mostly take the easy route...let's not think...

    • @a.randomjack6661
      @a.randomjack6661 3 года назад

      Have you listened to his "Introduction to thinking" lecture. One of my favourites.

  • @jasminejeanine2239
    @jasminejeanine2239 5 лет назад +1

    Everyone possible in India had a TV even if they had no electricity. Unfortunately they associated Christianity with western soaps thus they thought Christians were immoral. Funny enough i grew up without TV myself or even radio.

  • @llysHomeCooking
    @llysHomeCooking 5 лет назад +1

    Wes confused the Cynics with the Skeptics...

    • @blondequijote
      @blondequijote Месяц назад

      Did he? I doubt the cynics give a shit.

  • @patrickwebb8151
    @patrickwebb8151 5 лет назад +2

    I’m a wee bit disappointed with the opening premise which rehashes an old narrative regarding “primitive” society, a Hobbsian generalisation that life was nasty, brutal and short. In contrast because of our freedom (of limited) choice we’re as free as it gets materially and intellectually. Yet modern man can’t provide the basics of life for himself, he is the most passive and dependent upon systems of any generation. His wide ranging and academic knowledge, his literacy? Most men neither know or care to know anything of those few miles surrounding him; what grows and when for starters. What he’s achieved in literacy and a very restrictive numeracy he’s lost tenfold in efficacy. If the systems surrounding him fail, he dies.

    • @chemquests
      @chemquests 5 лет назад +2

      Patrick Webb Well stated & I gleefully accept the trade off. The pleasure of intellectual pursuits while outsourcing the generation of sustenance comes at a price I’m willing to pay, particularly if I don’t have to do any farming (did it through my childhood and it sucks).

  • @HxH2011DRA
    @HxH2011DRA 5 лет назад

    Become no longer human
    Abandon Humanity

  • @tonym6566
    @tonym6566 5 лет назад

    So in the end you’re agreeing with the whole idea behind people changing faiths or religion every few years?

  • @JML689
    @JML689 5 лет назад

    Not your best talks. Just went through a list of what other people or group-thinks have done in western history. Meh talk.

  • @philgwellington6036
    @philgwellington6036 5 лет назад

    I am a sheep, thumbs down.