1:52 Kant’s Three Critiques Theoretical, Practical, and Aesthetic Truth 7:38 Nietzsche’s Radicalization of Aesthetic Truth 9:22 Revaluation of Values is Aesthetic Affirmation Over Nihilism 12:23 Start of Examination of Birth of Tragedy 19:31 The Tragic Hero Can’t Escape Fate by Understanding It 25:55 Ever Notice that Euripides’ Characters Talk Like Lawyers? 27:56 Socrates the Theoretical Man vs. Nietzsche the Aesthetic Man 32:38 Hellenic vs. Socratic Civilizations
That's an interesting question. My own personal guess would be that Kant probably did not intend this to be the case but it might have still worked out overlapping that way due to the intermediary of Aristotle. My guess is that Kant's three critiques corresponded to Aristotle's division among theoretical, practical, and productive sciences but these might have themselves been modelled after the True, the Good, and the Beautiful as understood by someone like Plato. Whereas for Plato this did not correspond to three different sciences, for Aristotle it did, and that is perhaps where Kant got the three critiques as such from.
Thanks a lot, it's a great honour and privilege to have the chance to comment on both philosophical classics and the absurdity of modern political news and headlines. I would also recommend unfollowing left wing news sources because they were so catastrophically wrong to predict a Kamala landslide just less than one week ago. What else could they possibly be trusted to get right?
1:52 Kant’s Three Critiques Theoretical, Practical, and Aesthetic Truth
7:38 Nietzsche’s Radicalization of Aesthetic Truth
9:22 Revaluation of Values is Aesthetic Affirmation Over Nihilism
12:23 Start of Examination of Birth of Tragedy
19:31 The Tragic Hero Can’t Escape Fate by Understanding It
25:55 Ever Notice that Euripides’ Characters Talk Like Lawyers?
27:56 Socrates the Theoretical Man vs. Nietzsche the Aesthetic Man
32:38 Hellenic vs. Socratic Civilizations
Oh hell yeah
Always fun to revisit this book. A lot more Nietzsche coming soon on this channel
Does kants 3 critiques correspond to the True The Good and the Beautiful which is found in ancient philosophy? was this intentional
That's an interesting question. My own personal guess would be that Kant probably did not intend this to be the case but it might have still worked out overlapping that way due to the intermediary of Aristotle. My guess is that Kant's three critiques corresponded to Aristotle's division among theoretical, practical, and productive sciences but these might have themselves been modelled after the True, the Good, and the Beautiful as understood by someone like Plato. Whereas for Plato this did not correspond to three different sciences, for Aristotle it did, and that is perhaps where Kant got the three critiques as such from.
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another philosophy banger by the great Chad Haag. nice predictions on the election too. I unsubbed from every left wing source.
Thanks a lot, it's a great honour and privilege to have the chance to comment on both philosophical classics and the absurdity of modern political news and headlines. I would also recommend unfollowing left wing news sources because they were so catastrophically wrong to predict a Kamala landslide just less than one week ago. What else could they possibly be trusted to get right?