Great talk. I loved Lea’s comment on Imperialism and Colonialism.
@nicosge674210 ай бұрын
great talk!
@眞野ミオン4 ай бұрын
She really illustrated the dialects of modernity.
@juandalmaso339810 ай бұрын
Muy buena conferencia!!
@carolspencer691510 ай бұрын
Super interesting. 💜
@real_pattern9 ай бұрын
don't the legalists simultaneously reason that their perceived ends justify the means of their status-quo?
@mistercohaagen9 ай бұрын
Realistically, we're all guilty here. Those that want to uphold the status quo, deep down know that the violence is happening somewhere else, outside of their sight. They just don't want it near them. The revolutionaries who are angry enough to do violence, are usually only this angry out of ignorance and inability to make sense of the world, so they lash out like children. Progress is only possible through civil conversation among scientifically literate people that understand what it takes to produce and caretake civilization. Society is a technical and technological endeavor, especially now that this involves feeding 8 Billion human beings and counting.
@pedantfellow10 ай бұрын
@OP: Are these ever uploaded to podcast apps to just be able to listen to the talk? I like...never find myself sitting down to watch an hour of video, but I'm walking the dog for an hour every day.
@cphilbinable10 ай бұрын
So funny, I just started this and thought I will have to turn it into an mp3 instead so I can listen to it on a run.
@dubosekapeluck83257 ай бұрын
Pay for a KZbin subscription (I think $11 a month) and you can listen to it on your phone and it won’t turn off when your phone screen times out. You also get KZbin music streaming with that package too. And NO commercials on KZbin videos.
@anatollnatoll29146 ай бұрын
With the brave browser you can listen to the soundfile without watching the video
@martaeight52285 ай бұрын
Now I need to interrupt my reading of your book cause I really want to listen to this lecture 😅😬
@doniphandiatribes10 ай бұрын
Great. Kants need for a public universal morality is the biblical golden rule.
@geninji61179 ай бұрын
The bibble promotes terrorism and is not worth the paper it's been printed upon.
@celestialteapot30910 ай бұрын
Philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways, had we changed it we might not be facing species extinction now.
@musiqtee10 ай бұрын
Well, democracy as we have it has never been kind to “actually selfless” people trying to become electable. It’s been a known struggle to expand who can vote (strata, women, people without property etc.). There’s too little talk about how the path towards electability is a dark parallel here. When the aristocracy saw their loss, the party system took over. As a politically active person through many years, you are NOT vetted by the public, but indeed by the members of the party you joined - actually delegates of the publicly open part of party conference. The ‘honest’ political wannabe (indeed an honest thinker) is a threat both to incumbent local leaders, but also for support by the corporate sector. Also, “bad news” (critique) is not good for getting votes on a national level, sadly. Media and the “need to be positive” to win, are just two factors. Today, this goes for all large parties, as even left leaning parties need corporate support. Money decides more than we’d like to admit, even though voters know this. Read up on this, it’s a hurdle we need to overcome. Ypi also has good insights on this matter.
@cornellencar5 ай бұрын
How far in the past are we looking when we talk about rights of the "state" and the rights of peoples? Ultimately, private property of land was an act of violence against the commons, just think at the Enclosure Laws in England.
@aseprohmandar681210 ай бұрын
good ideas
@rice93658 ай бұрын
who came here after the Spectator article ? :)
@notfroginthewell7 ай бұрын
haha ME. i guess i might have to thank him for introducing me to this amazing lecture
@JAGFG425 ай бұрын
What if a government is actually unilaterally and not universally.. I think that’s probably why Kant agreed with the French Revolution.
@alexugur9 ай бұрын
Anyone can walk away and be free. It doesn't require justification. So what happens when a sizeable proportion of society decides to walk away, but the establishment refuses to allow it? Being truly free is irreconcilable with the concept of liberty. A free agent doesn't care whether liberty is granted or not. A truly free person doesn't understand the concept of rights and finds it incomprehensible that they can be granted by some higher authority or somehow be insisted upon as something natural or god given. To a free person, free will is simply something that is acted on or not. A truly free person will not be coerced or controlled in any way.
@firstal37999 ай бұрын
Truly free person isn't a detached idiot.
@alexugur9 ай бұрын
@@firstal3799a truly free person isn't limited by their prejudice.
@iskander210246 ай бұрын
Is history justified?
@SystemsMedicine9 ай бұрын
There is a bizarre set of assumptions in this talk, through which the speaker simply fails to acknowledge, or perhaps does not even recognize, that revolutions just as in wars are often simple attempts by individuals or small groups to seize power and wealth. This is why successful revolutions are so often the precursors to dictatorial or even totalitarian governments. The notion that revolutions generally represent progress seems, not naive, but historically uninformed in the extreme. [What are the results of educated people becoming so very detached from the severe empirical realities of history?]
@firstal37999 ай бұрын
American revolution was not. So wasn't French revolution. Even Russian revolution of 1917 was a progress from Czar autocracy. It was not a democracy but rather a rule of an intellectual bureaucracy.
@SystemsMedicine9 ай бұрын
@@firstal3799 Greetings FirstAI. There are at least thousands of ‘revolutions’ to choose from… most of them failed. Finding some that are not just simple power grabs is not the point. The point is how naive it is to assume that revolutions are aimed at improving things. As for the specific revolutions you sited I would opine: 1) I agree with you on the American revolution, an obvious progressive step. 2) The French Revolution is somewhat more problematic. There is a case to be made here that The Terror indicates a murderous power-grab, using populism and democracy as a smoke screen… it’s complicated. 3) As for the 1917 Communist Revolution in Russia, I assert you are simply wrong. A murderous totalitarian regime, the murderous efficiency of which put Hitler’s efforts to shame, is in no sense “progress” over the deplorable Czarist regime it replaced. Populism and communism were smoke screens for a simple power grab, which succeeded so well that idealists still argue it was a good thing, ignoring all the butchery and oppression. The Russian empire was expanded under their revolutionary zeal, and they had preliminary plans to overthrow continental Western Europe. Russia devastated countries under its control, post WWII. There is another huge problem the speaker had in the video: she assumed that what she views as ‘good’ and ‘progress’ are somehow absolutely true, instead of a weakly supported, wide variety of personal opinions, for which serious and cogent disagreement exists. Well informed people disagree strongly about what constitutes desirable progress, but in modern times there is much monotonic thinking among outspoken academics, with concomitant (mild?) suppression of divergent opinions. The speaker does not seem to understand this very basic idea, either. I would identify this as juvenile and/or narcissistic thinking. [FirstAI, I know this sounds like I am simply insulting the speaker, but this is not so; I am attempting to analyze why she takes such historically and philosophically untenable positions. Well, I didn’t intend to write so much. Thanks for the stimulating response. Cheers.]
@notfroginthewell7 ай бұрын
@@SystemsMedicine Hi. The speaker has very carefully selected the word 'progress' and 'contribution to history' precisely because regardless of whether it is good or bad it still counts as progress.
@SystemsMedicine7 ай бұрын
@@notfroginthewell Hi Not Frog. The speaker explicitly states in her prepended introduction that she will be examining the “ethics” and “moral progress” in revolutions. [Someone forgot to bring their listening skills with them today. Personally, I think the application of your categories ‘good’ and ‘bad’ are also naive, but don’t take it as an insult, I’m just applying another category.] ps On re-listening, I think the speaker is so naive as to be goofy. Before, I was merely pointing out the false dichotomy presented by the speaker, I now assert that the analysis is just incorrect, due to this false dichotomy.
@magnuskarlsson86557 ай бұрын
Revolutions, as a rule, are not caused by "simple attempts by individuals or small groups" nor motivated by "power and wealth". They are caused by a larger number of people in the form of an immanent critique in practice whereby the people are forcing the ruling class to live up to its own principles, thus achieving progress by questioning and transforming the status quo. This is how society has always progressed. The activity you describe as "simple attempts by individuals and small groups to seize power and wealth" does not fit the model of revolution but rather a variation of the model of "reform", i.e. a violent exchange of power: they want to "reform" the system such that they are the ones in power instead if the current people in power, but they don't want to overthrow the system - the ruling power structure - as such. Ypi does not "fail to acknowledge" this. Rather, she takes some things for granted in order to get to the heart of the issue, otherwise the lecture would be significantly longer than one hour.
@wilfergamboa49907 ай бұрын
Arend & luxemburgo & kuhn = Robespiere
@Giantcrabz7 ай бұрын
well they're certainly making peaceful dissent impossible, so...
@jasongray45177 ай бұрын
Really? You think peaceful dissent is tolerated to a greater extent in Tehran than UCLA? Grow up.
@wilfergamboa49907 ай бұрын
Acto de creacion
@MrJaimeaquerol9 ай бұрын
I should haver a degree. She just spoke obvious things.