Michel Foucault Beyond Good and Evil 1993)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 472

  • @cjstevens6405
    @cjstevens6405 8 лет назад +337

    It's funny, having learnt Foucault through a French university education in philosophy, that this Anglosaxon perspective completely omits 'Les mots et les choses', translated as 'The Order of Things' - in France, this is often seen among philosophers as the work that defined Foucault's approach. Read it and you understand the method and, of course, the madness in it, that he employed in his other works. For a documentary of only 40 minutes, I'm left wondering whether it wasn't simply the lure of the gory details that drove the film makers, rather than a desire to reveal the man, of whom such details are an integral part, but only one. And also, I would be of those who think the overarching influence of Nietzsche upon his thought should also be included. But a very enjoyable watch, thanks to the uploader.

    • @mercuriafilms
      @mercuriafilms 8 лет назад +4

      +Chris Rob I agree. Also nothing much is mentioned about his work on ethics.

    • @Heideggerr1
      @Heideggerr1 8 лет назад +2

      +Chris Rob Thanks I am going to read it

    • @AnaLuizaHella
      @AnaLuizaHella 7 лет назад +4

      Exactly. One of his most beautiful and instigating works. But do you really believe that the mind of the America academia who has numerous suspicious "thinkers" idolized can understand "Les Mots er le Choses"? "Ceci n'est pas un pipe. :)

    • @neik2780
      @neik2780 6 лет назад +4

      Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals certainly influenced him

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU 6 лет назад +8

      This documentary loves to be dramatic. It's just laughable!

  • @kiritanJ
    @kiritanJ 7 лет назад +17

    I love the way this is delivered. Feels ike Old Top Gear.

    • @Johnconno
      @Johnconno 4 года назад +1

      Were you a drug-dealer?

  • @TristenDurocher
    @TristenDurocher 6 лет назад +27

    This documentary is why I love RUclips: you can find old gems.
    I knew they would have something on Foucault.

    • @KussePikken666
      @KussePikken666 3 года назад +1

      yeah, and they let users steal it all and upload it..great buisness model.Fuck youtube.

    • @sourcedirect4467
      @sourcedirect4467 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@KussePikken666 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @sourcedirect4467
      @sourcedirect4467 5 дней назад

      @@KussePikken666 cringe asf

  • @StateLaughter
    @StateLaughter 8 лет назад +41

    "The madness of desire, insane murders, the most unreasonable passions - all are wisdom since they are a part of the order of nature. Everything that morality and religion, everything that a clumsy society has stifled in man, revives in the castle of murders. There man is finally attuned to his own nature."
    --Michael Focault, 'Madness and Civilization'

    • @johnstewart7025
      @johnstewart7025 6 лет назад +2

      Good quote. I have been attracted by Taoism, for instance, which has an appeal to a natural order. The natural order would include madness of desire, insanity, murder, unreasonable passions, but they depend on circumstances. For instance, a murder would be in response to circumstances, according to the Taoist view. To commit a murder simply for the fun of it, would not be according to nature. Water and how it behaves is usually the image used to teach about the Tao or the Way. Insanity is a special case, however, but it could be compared to cancer. If both these conditions are untreatable, then there isn't much we can do. How long should the family care for the insane person? When do they turn over their responsibility to the state? This calculation what be a practical one, not simply an emotional one, for the Taoist.

    • @johnstewart7025
      @johnstewart7025 6 лет назад +4

      I like the idea that we are all equal -- the murderers, perverts, the insane etc. This is the Catholic view, although not the common practice.

    • @johnstewart7025
      @johnstewart7025 4 года назад +1

      @Carpe Mundo are you saying that the natural order does not include insanity and mental illness?

    • @owretchedman
      @owretchedman 2 года назад

      This quote could easily be attributed to Antonin Artaud

    • @clarkbowler157
      @clarkbowler157 11 месяцев назад +1

      Quoting Madness and Civilization like that can say nothing about the thought of Focault. In the book he is channeling historical views on madness. Thus. The quote could be attributed to any period and any people filtered through the mind of Focault.

  • @bigbowlowrong
    @bigbowlowrong 10 лет назад +59

    If one knew nothing of Foucault before watching this documentary, not much would have changed after watching it. This is all breadth and no depth - Foucault's legacy would have been better served if the makers of this documentary perhaps focused on his theories of sexuality, justice or class. Still, I guess this was watchable.

    • @lautjeclause2069
      @lautjeclause2069 4 года назад +1

      I would personally rather say his later inquiries about genealogy, parrhesia, the hermeneutics of the self etcetera. At least, is it is depth you're looking for.

    • @Soul-mw8pe
      @Soul-mw8pe 4 года назад +3

      If also takes into account that this doc was made in 1993 by the BBC one could enjoy it a bit more, actually, I found it fascinating in context

  • @dkm8703
    @dkm8703 7 лет назад +43

    1:44 could've sworn that Mr. Bean was interviewing Foucault

    • @omalone1169
      @omalone1169 6 лет назад +1

      Havent you seen the Jordan Peterson interview

    • @MOHAlesawi
      @MOHAlesawi 3 года назад

      Same

  • @protestantsfailurend7890
    @protestantsfailurend7890 6 лет назад +17

    Foucault was a man with an innate desire for justice and truth in that, which I can greatly identify with.

  • @koc5000
    @koc5000 7 лет назад +12

    Finally a documentary on a philosopher which looks not only at the biography, but makes a good effort to bring the ideas as well down to us commoners. Very good.

  • @sxnico
    @sxnico 2 года назад +1

    love the Gabriel Yared music throughout the documentary.

  • @nancywysemen7196
    @nancywysemen7196 6 лет назад +1

    UMMM,I'll get back to this. Well presented. Thank-you.

  • @wondernexus3d482
    @wondernexus3d482 10 лет назад +4

    A good solid introduction into Foucault's work.

  • @JeffreySykes
    @JeffreySykes 11 лет назад +4

    Good introduction to who he was as I begin to read his works. Thanks.

  • @Fugu6000
    @Fugu6000 2 года назад +2

    there's a great wolf sound at the beggining... Enjoy :)

  • @tenajyebba
    @tenajyebba 10 лет назад +7

    I have read and absorbed a lot of Foucault. A lot. And I did love this video. Just a few moments of cliche here and there, but so much value is in this please see it.

  • @debyte
    @debyte 11 лет назад +42

    Superb documentary. Thank you for posting.

  • @janllh24
    @janllh24 Год назад

    I remember watching this when it was first broadcast, they don't make them like this anymore

  • @adamstein4104
    @adamstein4104 10 лет назад +6

    I think this is the most entertaining documentary I've ever seen. Thank you so much domakesaythink00

  • @michaeldao1
    @michaeldao1 4 года назад +10

    A doc focusing on the personal life of Foucault. In Foucault's eyes: could there possibly be anything less interesting--more loathesome? He would say this is completely missing the point, an approach pandering to temporal, personal details while caring little for ideas.

  • @DerekHunterDHChaosRiddler
    @DerekHunterDHChaosRiddler 10 лет назад +3

    Thanks for uploading this great doc.

  • @DerekHunterDHChaosRiddler
    @DerekHunterDHChaosRiddler 10 лет назад +11

    Excellent documentary biography on Foucault. For anyone even slightly interested or curious about Foucault, this is a must-see.

  • @JamesBarrett23
    @JamesBarrett23 11 лет назад +27

    It is a good introductory documentary but it does focus on the more sensational aspects of Foucault's work - ignoring The Archeology of Knowledge, The Order of Things and The Birth of the Clinic. Its time for a new more balanced documentary film of Foucault, or even a film/television series looking at his life and work.

    • @tenajyebba
      @tenajyebba 10 лет назад +2

      They will come. We are just at the beginning.

    • @dominicbarnes3273
      @dominicbarnes3273 7 лет назад +1

      I agree - there is a serious lack of good audiovisual content on this philosopher. He deserves better

    • @RepublicConstitution
      @RepublicConstitution 6 лет назад

      Agreed. Also almost no one covers his late acceptance of liberal conceptions of Rights theory if for nothing else than a line of defense against wrongful attacks from power.

    • @KinoTechUSA69
      @KinoTechUSA69 4 года назад

      Yeah, its not fair to your pedophile idol to portray him as the filthy degenerate he was.

    • @moriyokiri3229
      @moriyokiri3229 3 года назад

      @@KinoTechUSA69 I found the gun loving psychopath. Go beat off to your guns and anime and leave the adults to discuss philosophy.

  • @ahnaftahmidarnab6754
    @ahnaftahmidarnab6754 4 года назад +12

    1:46 didn't know Rowan Atkinson was interested in philosophy.

  • @deeptimeawake
    @deeptimeawake 10 лет назад +15

    Foucault was a great thinker who pushed the boundaries of what is seen as mental illness...and all his experiments with drugs and eroticism etc are very fine when we look at what mental illness is and where it germinates. In fact the work of Stanislav Grof with LSD was exactly on the same lines and that is considered one of the most innovative projects in mental health. How mental health is defined as an outcome of spiritual emergences that can become spiritual emergencies, and how it can be harnessed is what Grof talked about with innumerable evidences of Shamans from the world over. And to those who do not understand about the spirit or mystical world of shamanism or the journey to the underworld, anyone who dares to push the boundaries of inquiry will only appear in-sane. I have my sympathies for those who have not reached that level of comprehension and who have utmost devotion to modern science and its verifiability, irrespective of how ethical it is or how ethically it creates mental illness out of human suffering.
    In case anyone would like to understand the archaeology of mental illness and how it came to become so, please read Foucault's Madness and Civilization and you will understand how language transforms human experience... of course most social science research thereafter, including my own, is proof of that.

    • @LionelWitchieWardrob
      @LionelWitchieWardrob 10 лет назад +3

      *****
      Shuuuuuuuuuuttttttttttttttt up

    • @edwardmaddocks8786
      @edwardmaddocks8786 10 лет назад

      ***** A* you've passed!

    • @jupitersstring2823
      @jupitersstring2823 9 лет назад +4

      ***** Do yourself a favour and write less pretentiously. Recent scientific literature indicates that florid language doesn't actually make you seem intelligent.

    • @awhodothey
      @awhodothey 6 лет назад

      I agree. Disease is a social construction. They really shouldn't have labeled him as someone who died of AIDS like that. Empiricism does not work.

  • @xander3002
    @xander3002 9 лет назад +96

    strange how the image of Buddha was shown when spoken about the discovering of true self, sort of misleading, as the Buddha actually discovered that there is no true self. Hence, end of struggle, start of liberation.

    • @dominicbarnes3273
      @dominicbarnes3273 7 лет назад

      Very interesting! Thanks for that!

    • @tangledude
      @tangledude 7 лет назад +8

      i thought it was intentional - they were talking about lack of self

    • @patrickalpha1315
      @patrickalpha1315 4 года назад

      That is not entirely true. The true self is the soul (not the mind), which is connected to the supersoul (= God), therefore it is the same as the supersoul, therefore everyone and everything is God --> liberation.

    • @hasibulislam5005
      @hasibulislam5005 4 года назад

      @@patrickalpha1315 How can one's soul be same as the supersoul's?
      Just because they are connected?

    • @patrickalpha1315
      @patrickalpha1315 4 года назад

      @@hasibulislam5005 Yes, all souls are connected and part of the supersoul, which is god.

  • @reneperez2126
    @reneperez2126 8 лет назад +1

    Insightful doc, I liked the Ship of fools issue for some reason reminds me of the world partys song Ship of fools

    • @johnbriggs1572
      @johnbriggs1572 8 лет назад +1

      +Rene Perez reminded me of the Grateful Dead song

    • @jlwaddey9579
      @jlwaddey9579 8 лет назад

      thanx john!

    • @jlwaddey9579
      @jlwaddey9579 8 лет назад

      also reminds one of the Ship of State...

  • @DxsPro
    @DxsPro 11 лет назад +2

    thanks for the upload

  • @luizvalerio.poetry
    @luizvalerio.poetry 9 лет назад

    Thanks for sharing this video.

  • @Majnun74
    @Majnun74 8 лет назад +6

    I like the idea of rejecting "ist, isms" as history shows them not to be the universal truths they were thought to be.

  • @sherryberry4577
    @sherryberry4577 3 года назад +9

    It's wild that this dude had such a huge impact on culture and society.

  • @NlHILIST
    @NlHILIST 10 лет назад +19

    curiosity killed the cat

  • @johnjepsen4243
    @johnjepsen4243 3 года назад +2

    Verbiage. Mercy. Amen

  • @MatthewHall-c9k
    @MatthewHall-c9k 3 месяца назад

    The 30 seconds of Camille Paglia sees right through him.

  • @SaturnElena
    @SaturnElena 10 лет назад +1

    greatly interesting, thank you

  • @NythamarDeOliveira
    @NythamarDeOliveira 11 лет назад +8

    Indeed there remains the challenge of bridging sober readings of Michel Foucault's critical, theoretical insights into subjectivation and social, critical neuroscience beyond facile formulae that succumb to hypes or spontaneous overreactions to a (misperceived) "bullshit documentary" --this is actually a quite interesting, helpful introduction to making sense of MF's mitigated social constructionism, which avoids both positivistic and post-modernist extremes...

  • @javierthomas7414
    @javierthomas7414 9 лет назад +3

    un genio.

  • @yp77738yp77739
    @yp77738yp77739 Год назад +3

    Emperors new clothes.
    Very impressive individual, managed to fool so many gullible idiots and did it with a smile on his face. 10/10 for style.

    • @voraciousreader3341
      @voraciousreader3341 Год назад

      And then he personified the ultimate human experience of the 20th century by dying of AIDS. So much for male über experience. Did he also enter the “castle of murder” personally?

    • @MagicFunc
      @MagicFunc Год назад

      I know bait when I see it

    • @yp77738yp77739
      @yp77738yp77739 Год назад +1

      I have no space in my head for anyone whom publicised and was proud of sexual relations with young Tunisian boys on gravestones. The most vile of creatures, to abuse defenceless young children is the lowest form of humanity and should have been euthanised for the benefit of society.

  • @adamf.9835
    @adamf.9835 2 года назад

    Well done.👍

  • @FernandoFaria
    @FernandoFaria 10 лет назад +3

    Nice film about #foucault 's life, but more of his theories would be nice.

  • @susanharrison5784
    @susanharrison5784 7 лет назад

    I keep watching you vids, nice

  • @robkirchhof133
    @robkirchhof133 5 лет назад +1

    This is exactly the king of crap Foucault would have hated, and I hate it on his behalf.

    • @robkirchhof133
      @robkirchhof133 5 лет назад +1

      That was written 10 minutes in. Of course, I kept watching

  • @chel3SEY
    @chel3SEY 10 лет назад +32

    Camille Paglia is totally correct in her criticisms of Foucault. But her criticisms apply equally to her own self-indulgent, half-baked, pseudo-intellectual theories which are designed to shock more than advance knowledge.

    • @gregtaillon4019
      @gregtaillon4019 6 лет назад +9

      chel3SEY they actually don't. She's incredibly factually incorrect about basic things, like claiming Foucault didn't read any of the foundational Greek scholars. He read *many* - he even learned Greek (and German) to be able to read original texts. There's direct Greek content in almost all of his lectures and books.

    • @kristianj.8798
      @kristianj.8798 5 лет назад +4

      Nothing Paglia has ever said, has been correct (nor properly argued for). Perhaps that the Earth isn't flat, but that's about it. On a side-note: her way of talking is absolutely repulsive; she constantly interrupts _herself_ as if she's struggling to think coherently about whatever she's mouthing on about.

  • @robkirchhof133
    @robkirchhof133 5 лет назад +7

    I never heard nobody say 'play that Camille Paglia'

  • @willcifur
    @willcifur 2 года назад +5

    All that knowledge and all those honorary titles and the best he can do is echo the intellectual territory of de Sade. He has always struck me as a huckster that would have flourished in todays world. Every time I see the moral decay of feces on the sidewalk and needles in plant beds I think … “behold, the fruit of Foucaults wisdom”

  • @dunsbroccoli2588
    @dunsbroccoli2588 4 года назад

    lol the projections on the bald head

  • @marshmelows
    @marshmelows Год назад

    17>50 That Camille Paglia was somehow suggesting Michel Foucault was the Saul Goodman of Philosophy in that time lol

  • @Cantbuyathrill
    @Cantbuyathrill 3 года назад +2

    17:49 "As a scholar, ........" How ironic!!!!

  • @JAMAICADOCK
    @JAMAICADOCK 10 лет назад +24

    Should be more shows like this, giving an overview of great thinkers. Like the arty way its done too - better than dry academics stroking their beards.

    • @Johnconno
      @Johnconno Год назад

      Their food filled beards.

  • @robertanderson3905
    @robertanderson3905 7 лет назад

    just love the gate keepers

  • @ordmantell6347
    @ordmantell6347 10 лет назад +9

    This needed more criticism. You can't call him controversial and then give all of 10 seconds to one of his critics (Paglia).

  • @matthewkopp2391
    @matthewkopp2391 6 лет назад +4

    A person need only to realize that in Foucault's era people who were diagnosed insane were routinely lobotomiesed, put in restraints, electroshock treatment. He was not the first or only person to criticize the arbitrary ideas of insanity. Laing pointed out the absurdities as well. A similar absurdity is in his other critique of sexuality, his critique of prisons.
    Paglia is really contrary because Foucault used a structuralist arguement while she relied on an a priori argument. The fact that she can't see through her own frames makes me cringe hearing her idiotic rant against Foucault.
    I use a priori arguments mostly but I do not make the conclusion Paglia makes. Foucault is actually especially useful for the highly nuanced cautious universalist because ignorant forms of universalism is a very popular sophistry.

  • @springchickena1
    @springchickena1 6 лет назад +1

    I stand on the brink of humanity. ignorance is bliss. I only wish I was stupid. I only wish I could accept death. I strain against it, grinding my teeth at the sights and sounds of the human condition. fighting it. destroying myself to understand what cannot be understood by human beings. I am god. I am the light. I am the absence of good and evil

    • @springchickena1
      @springchickena1 6 лет назад +1

      yet, all is lost while i travel back, with my message. you are still human. You cannot, you willnot perceive what I do, without your own experience

  • @LolJayl
    @LolJayl 6 лет назад

    Reader, before you watch please understand that you will understand nothing of his works from this film. This is entertainment only. You can see some people below, who could obviously not be said to be doing any real thought, but are entertaining themselves, getting wrapped up in more enjoyment after the movie has ended. Do not be enticed by them. Treat this as you would any mindless indulgence, if you believe in such things.

  • @MegaPetchi
    @MegaPetchi 11 лет назад +1

    I agree with you: it is much better to read him :-)

  • @BettinaAscaino
    @BettinaAscaino 3 года назад +1

    I see his death, paradoxically, as more “alive” and real than the soap opera scandalised characters unaware of their own madness. Tragic.

  • @dominicberry5577
    @dominicberry5577 8 лет назад +2

    We have a documentary about a philosopher which has been careful to avoid explaining anything about his actually philosophy.
    One of Foucault's points was that what we think of as unusual at one time may be completely normal in another. So its irrelevant whether he was gay or used drugs.
    Another point was that biography teaches us very little about the meaning of an author's work, so a documentary about him being a bit of a bad boy is doubly uninteresting.

  • @richardouvrier3078
    @richardouvrier3078 Год назад

    LSD in Death Valley: Huxley’s Doors of Perception; Brave New World.

  • @Donatellangelo
    @Donatellangelo 10 лет назад +3

    Long live Foucault!

  • @ricka1799
    @ricka1799 4 года назад

    The disadvantages and myriad inconvenience's of consciousness...

  • @focas777
    @focas777 11 лет назад

    Musique du film Camille Claudel, de 37,2 aussi...
    - Je ne suis pas fou
    Ma réalité est différente de la votre...
    Antonin Artaud a du leur dire mais ils ne l'ont pas cru...

  • @Greven866
    @Greven866 5 лет назад +1

    He walked the walk

  • @richardouvrier3078
    @richardouvrier3078 Год назад

    Damien’s quartering v Pentonville routines.

  • @skstan1965
    @skstan1965 9 лет назад +2

    I love how the British pronounce< meeshel Foocho.

  • @brcx3001
    @brcx3001 7 лет назад +14

    Camile Paglia gives no detailed reason for her claims.

    • @asmoncat5049
      @asmoncat5049 3 года назад +2

      She is right tho. Foucault engineered his public image and he had no essence and content

  • @BertramShord
    @BertramShord 2 года назад

    What is a man? A miserable little pile of secrets. But enough talk, have at you!

  • @ROGERWDARCY
    @ROGERWDARCY 8 лет назад +4

    I want a deceitfully peaceful quiet life/

  • @rantym35
    @rantym35 Месяц назад

    1. Introducción a Michel Foucault
    Minuto: 00:11
    Descripción: Michel Foucault es presentado como uno de los pensadores más influyentes del siglo XX, quien exploró temas como la locura, la criminalidad y la perversión, desafiando constantemente los límites del conocimiento y la experiencia.
    2. Contexto Intelectual y Relación con Otros Pensadores
    Minuto: 00:58
    Descripción: Se compara a Foucault con otros filósofos franceses de la posguerra, como Roland Barthes y Jacques Derrida, aunque su enfoque único lo distingue al centrarse en la naturaleza de la sociedad más allá del lenguaje.
    3. Exploración Filosófica: Transgresión y Desviación
    Minuto: 01:59
    Descripción: Se explora cómo Foucault no solo teorizó sobre la transgresión y la desviación, sino que también vivió sus ideas al experimentar personalmente con el erotismo y las drogas.
    4. Vida Personal y Búsqueda de Nuevas Experiencias
    Minuto: 02:43
    Descripción: Foucault no limitó sus exploraciones filosóficas a la teoría, sino que vivió intensamente experiencias más allá de lo cotidiano, como las drogas y el erotismo, para reimaginar su lugar en el mundo.
    5. El Impacto de Foucault en la Filosofía Contemporánea
    Minuto: 03:18
    Descripción: Foucault cambió el enfoque de la filosofía contemporánea, alejándose del análisis lingüístico hacia cuestiones fundamentales sobre la vida humana y las estructuras de poder.
    6. Historia de la Locura: Exploraciones Genealógicas
    Minuto: 04:02
    Descripción: La tesis de Foucault sobre la locura redefine la relación entre la sociedad y los marginados, demostrando que el trato hacia los locos empeoró a medida que las sociedades se volvieron más "racionales".
    7. Vigilar y Castigar: El Sistema Penal Moderno
    Minuto: 20:17
    Descripción: En Vigilar y Castigar, Foucault muestra la evolución del castigo, desde la brutal tortura pública hasta el sistema penitenciario moderno, donde el control se ejerce a través de la vigilancia.
    8. La Experiencia en Estados Unidos: LSD y Contracultura
    Minuto: 26:57
    Descripción: Foucault experimentó con LSD en el Valle de la Muerte, lo que marcó un punto de inflexión en su vida y lo llevó a reflexionar sobre temas como el yo y la muerte.
    9. Foucault y la Contracultura de San Francisco
    Minuto: 29:41
    Descripción: Se destaca el fascinante descubrimiento de Foucault de la libertad sexual en San Francisco, un entorno que contrastaba con su experiencia previa en Europa.
    10. El Legado de Foucault: Muerte y Controversia
    Minuto: 34:57
    Descripción: La muerte de Foucault en 1984, debido al SIDA, estuvo rodeada de controversia, y su legado sigue siendo objeto de debate y reinterpretación.

  • @StephenCRose
    @StephenCRose 6 лет назад

    Reality Ethics AESTHETICS --- seen that way things work.

  • @dominicbarnes3273
    @dominicbarnes3273 7 лет назад

    Fascinating

  • @jamesmurphy6426
    @jamesmurphy6426 10 лет назад +4

    Could someone please direct me to a link or give me a little more information on Herbert Gilbert (?), this man who filmed himself dying of aids? I can't seem to find any information on him on the internet. Thank you to whoever can point me in this direction!

    • @zabaks123
      @zabaks123 7 лет назад +2

      It's Herve Guibert. 6:29

  • @michaellavin6038
    @michaellavin6038 8 лет назад +30

    Camille Paglia is now exclusively known for not having liked Foucault

    • @RepublicConstitution
      @RepublicConstitution 6 лет назад +5

      Wow, this comment has aged poorly. Camille is today far better known than the self-abusive maniac Foucault.

    • @RepublicConstitution
      @RepublicConstitution 6 лет назад +1

      @Left Pantel Greece is a socialist in debt shithole boy.

    • @omalone1169
      @omalone1169 6 лет назад +2

      Nah I know the name as an antifeminist

    • @RichardMcLamore
      @RichardMcLamore 5 лет назад +2

      @@RepublicConstitution uh. no.

    • @RepublicConstitution
      @RepublicConstitution 5 лет назад +1

      @@RichardMcLamore uh, yeah commie bitch.

  • @felipemontero9839
    @felipemontero9839 7 лет назад +1

    Does anyone have a pdf of guibert's secrets of a man? I couldn't find it anywhere.

  • @teeniebeenie8774
    @teeniebeenie8774 8 лет назад +20

    paglia is not taken seriously
    hasnt been for decades.

    • @jlwaddey9579
      @jlwaddey9579 8 лет назад +11

      i sincerely hope thats true. she's just awful!

    • @omalone1169
      @omalone1169 6 лет назад +1

      ...and you say that on what authority

    • @bizarro20daves
      @bizarro20daves 5 лет назад +4

      I'm a fan of her thoughts. Each to their own

    • @trainerd1
      @trainerd1 5 лет назад

      Taken seriously by whom?

    • @Ravi-xf8dw
      @Ravi-xf8dw 4 года назад +1

      Wtf are you talking about? She is great

  • @MinnesotaEverything
    @MinnesotaEverything 7 лет назад

    Great mind!!!!

  • @geraldvanwilgen
    @geraldvanwilgen 2 года назад +1

    Why was Camille Anne Paglia in this? Weird.

  • @myAutoGen
    @myAutoGen 9 лет назад +1

    Anyone know the name of the music at the end?

  • @michaeljaffrey7958
    @michaeljaffrey7958 6 месяцев назад +1

    Being pissed on is not going "beyond good and evil".

  • @springchickena1
    @springchickena1 6 лет назад

    I wish to tell you the secret to life. do you wish to hear it?
    no. it is too soon. I implore you, find humanity. indulge yourself.
    No? Okay, this time Is the last chance, you wont be alive after you hear my words.
    alright, here it is:
    everything is nothing
    and nothing is everything

    • @springchickena1
      @springchickena1 6 лет назад

      you play the fool.
      fool yourself.
      you dont fool me.
      i have your future in my hand.
      I play the cards.
      the king sits on his throne.
      the sheep baa in unison.
      the child smiles.
      the child is scolded for taking the joy of the king.
      the prince slays the king, forgetting he ever loved.
      the king does not love.
      the king played you.
      i am the priest.
      you can now take off your masks.
      because I know the name of what lay inside all of you.
      Lucifer.

    • @monsieurlouche1231
      @monsieurlouche1231 2 года назад

      @@springchickena1 Lucifer, very underrated.

  • @xpseudo
    @xpseudo 9 лет назад +1

    Can we know why people dislike that video ?

    • @mauricer.lozanovaldivia8879
      @mauricer.lozanovaldivia8879 8 лет назад

      +mister x no...imagine the comments. just let it go....it is what it is.

    • @abellizandro8743
      @abellizandro8743 5 лет назад

      I would say, it’s basically an exercise of their autonomy. Autonomy is a fundamental aspect of being human. Do not be sad or frustrated about that my friend. Some things we like, some we don’t. I personally appreciate history of philosophers:)

  • @bmarq4402
    @bmarq4402 5 лет назад +1

    The title along with the use of the term "labyrinth" both being metaphors attaching him to nietzsche, although I'm not sure its accurate to compare the two men. Untimely Meditations is the work that greatly influenced Foucault, yet its not one of Nietzches mature philosophical works such as BGE, GM, T, AC, or EC. Beyond Good and Evil is an extremely ironic title being that Nietzsche absolutely despised socialist, as can be seen multiple times through the book BGE. To Nietzsche, Foucault would fall under the category of the people w/ socialistic sympathies being the fatalism of the weak willed with their inward self-contempt and resentment not compassion as their guiding psychological will.

  • @Bolocomcafe
    @Bolocomcafe 23 дня назад

    The book wich they put finger on mouth, a man is dense in his phenomenons.

  • @voraciousreader3341
    @voraciousreader3341 Год назад +1

    Well, whatever the controversy he aroused, it seems that Foucault’s personal “human experience” led rather to a personal experience of the “scourge of human existence in the 20th century.” Is it really a scholarly legitimate exercise to experience the antisocial excesses of men (especially) through personal immersion? Or is it excusing impulses to human perversion in oneself?

    • @ValleyoftheRogue
      @ValleyoftheRogue Год назад

      Exactly right. I don't know how anybody these days can defend him. I don't know how anybody ever could defend him, for he was quite open about his beliefs regarding age of consent laws.

    • @pickleraspa2458
      @pickleraspa2458 Год назад +1

      Nobody has ever defended him. The Greek philosophers are still read and respected and were also users of children. Nobody defends these men because there is no need to do such a thing. Everyone knows it is wrong but there is no group that has not done this horrible thing. If anything, Foucault may have given you important tools to undo the deep held religious ideologies- those things are still the main source of support/hiding place for people who hurt children.

  • @jondough679
    @jondough679 6 лет назад +1

    MF is a social construct

  • @Larkinchance
    @Larkinchance 2 года назад

    How is Foucault different from Genet. (A Thief's Journal)

  • @Ai-he1dp
    @Ai-he1dp 6 лет назад

    It's good to question what it is to be human, but that was all a little bazaar? Are we human because we look at the stars or do we look at the stars because we are human?

    • @ronlafferty61
      @ronlafferty61 5 лет назад

      Both. If you believe we are the children of stars. Thats a dilemma.

  • @marise-cellardoor2031
    @marise-cellardoor2031 5 лет назад +2

    And yet no mention whatsoever of Nietzsche despite the title taking the name from his work and despite his influence to Foucault's own writings?? A good documentary but given the title, that omission was a disappointment.

  • @mikesmith-pj7xz
    @mikesmith-pj7xz 6 лет назад +33

    Ironically hilarious to hear Paglia bark about someone being slick and superficial...

    • @linkqJ
      @linkqJ 4 года назад +2

      shut the fuck up

    • @mikesmith-pj7xz
      @mikesmith-pj7xz 4 года назад +1

      @Carpe Mundo Better to remain silent be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt.

    • @mikesmith-pj7xz
      @mikesmith-pj7xz 4 года назад

      @@linkqJ Thanks for sharing. You're appreciated for who you are.

    • @linkqJ
      @linkqJ 4 года назад

      @@mikesmith-pj7xz got a 150 shooters in atlanta nigga

    • @mikesmith-pj7xz
      @mikesmith-pj7xz 4 года назад +4

      @@linkqJ If they're as intelligent and sophisticated as you, make sure they have the safety off, and the mags loaded properly. And remember to wash your hands.

  • @lonelycubicle
    @lonelycubicle Год назад

    Why was Mr. Bean interviewing him at the beginning?

  • @marksmod
    @marksmod 7 лет назад

    0:00 FUCKOOOOUU!!! Cries the wolf

  • @MegaPetchi
    @MegaPetchi 11 лет назад

    I will not elaborate. I recommend not to pay attention to this document, that is all I can do here

  • @dhss333
    @dhss333 4 года назад

    So what otherway would you arrange classrooms? Much heat, little light,

    • @StefanTravis
      @StefanTravis 4 года назад

      Always try to answer your own rhetorical questions.

  • @Klorrnond
    @Klorrnond 11 лет назад +6

    I've never seen any other documentary of a philosopher. You can't expected a 40 min video to capture all his books and articles etc.

  • @RobertKwapich
    @RobertKwapich 11 лет назад +1

    Is Allain de Botton a narrator here?

  • @pippoespera8902
    @pippoespera8902 5 лет назад +2

    This is almost all biography, little philosophy, the documentary didn't go deep enough.

  • @StephenCRose
    @StephenCRose 6 лет назад +3

    Paglia is wrong. This video points toward a lot that is dead on as it were.

  • @Toxinomist
    @Toxinomist 9 лет назад +23

    Jesus Ch$%st, what the hell was that? TMZ or Access Hollywood for intellectually moralist?

  • @limoreperetzwoloshin8860
    @limoreperetzwoloshin8860 4 года назад

    Even Sartre experimented with drugs and psychology

  • @randievietti9896
    @randievietti9896 5 лет назад

    Is it possible to escape solipsism, if the theory is taken fully? Or is that just another construct?

  • @SIEBEGORMEN
    @SIEBEGORMEN Месяц назад

    What is the music ??

  • @CrimsonMaplesofAutumn
    @CrimsonMaplesofAutumn Год назад

    old rich western men in tunisia. dont even google it

  • @user-ge9ft4cu5m
    @user-ge9ft4cu5m 10 лет назад

    When the video mentions Foucault's last works as focusing on art, to which works specifically is this referring? History of Sexuality? Also, does anyone know the piano piece being played in the video?