This is a program on the life and thought of Friedrich Nietzsche from a 1999 series called "Human All Too Human". #philosophy #nietzsche
Пікірлер: 54
@satyasyasatyasya57468 ай бұрын
"However you may be, be your own source of experience. Throw off your disontent about your nature; forgive yourself your own self. You have it in your power to merge everything you have lived through; false starts, errors, delusions, passions, your loves and your hopes, into your goal, with nothing left over." Forgiveness is key. And it is not for someone else to offer you but you must offer it yourself to yourself. Peace and the strength to march onwards only comes from that forgiveness for what you may be or what you may have done. It is the only correctness that can spring from error and regret. It is its own cure.
@kotsosleve2 ай бұрын
I would drink to that!
@satyasyasatyasya57462 ай бұрын
@@kotsosleve Cheers :D
@user-ld4yi2ki5k8 ай бұрын
I have watched this documentary many times over the past 10+ years and I found it to be one of the better explanations of N’s life and philosophy. Amazingly per the comments (herein) quite clear is the fact that some people still can’t understand his philosophy even with a narrative documentary
@LovingLifeNowNoMatterWhat5 ай бұрын
2:22 God is creator of creator to infinity, everything everywhere all at once. Especially within the observable multiverse let alone what ever is containing that. It's a paradox that goes on for infinity which is what we are. Eternal so find greatness appreciate stronger then complain then get what you think feel believe & recieve
@2009Artteacher4 ай бұрын
He wasn't a philosopher , he was a piece of work for psychology. Reason why he influenced Freud and Jung in a attempt to understand the mind of insanity. I guarantee you have no clue of the works he inverted as his attempt to personify the antichrist. Your simply another one of Nietzschie lost wolves howling in the dark, crying out like the antichrist ...you misunderstood !!! So lame!
@febobartoli8 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting this very interesting and well made biography!
@christopherwood90328 ай бұрын
thanks to the good people in this documentary and others for clearing up the misrepresentations of Nietzsche that came from his sister distorting his work. Shame on her.
@allthingsgardencad97268 ай бұрын
he was a proto nazi, He had a darwinian thought to him where only the best ought be on top.. including himself. this is fascist thought. Its roman thought.. Master Morality.
@callo19878 ай бұрын
Its not that simple at all.
@WeenkerIV7 ай бұрын
@@allthingsgardencad9726lol
@Top_Lad8 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you for uploading this in high quality!
@christopherwood90328 ай бұрын
this is beautiful thank you
@MichaelRyanEpley2 ай бұрын
One must always remain tethered in space and time by making thoughts into reality. One must act to build the world, not just to theorize, or one risks madness.
@LovingLifeNowNoMatterWhat5 ай бұрын
41:03 everyone & everything outside us is a reflection of our beliefs Beliefs are just thoughts/stories we keep thinking Look for beauty to appreciate & will find it works all ways attention is creating... tom warren campbell explains it & how to live in love with life which transcends the fear based model of power & control which is maxed out at lower levels of vibraition and frequency to be able to experience ❤
@saeiddavatolhagh96273 ай бұрын
Nietzche's life makes it evident that the path to "becoming" may pass through insanity specially when the old ideas have become obsolete and a thinker has to create new ones all by himself.
@paulkang68423 ай бұрын
Damn music
@GreyOatmeal4 ай бұрын
Such as it is with these high production value shows, they always dramatize to an extent. Just read the books really, can't trust anything online.
@G.A.R.1446 ай бұрын
His friend Franz Overbeck on Nietzsche's insanity ('insanity'?) "I cannot escape the ghastly suspension that his madness is simulated. This impression can be explained only by the experiences I have had of Nietzsche's self-concealments, of his spiritual masks"
@LovingLifeNowNoMatterWhat5 ай бұрын
48:52
@petersantospago19662 ай бұрын
Check out Michael sugrue lectures on Nietzsche... Fantastic.
@Bibibosh8 ай бұрын
Back in 2000's I finish a PC game called Beyond Good and Evil by Ubisoft . I was really proud of myself because I actually accomplished something great. I still have memories today.
@LovingLifeNowNoMatterWhat5 ай бұрын
43:12 quicker answer to more effecient question is what is not God ! Every atom is conscious & the act of looking creates something to look at. Conscious computers are what created the building blocks pixels to create biology, chemistry, physics quantum epiphysics 🎉❤
@GreyOatmeal4 ай бұрын
Isn't the horse story only speculation or something? I seem to have heard somewhere this was a falsity.
@callo19878 ай бұрын
stop trying to make philosophy a drama. that is precisely what falls under human all to human. You cannot make a thought into a cheap Hans Zimmer concert. Holy shit.
@briandzwoniarek89527 ай бұрын
Turn it off. Turn it off, turn it off again.
@JS-dt1tn8 ай бұрын
the nonsense about linking his mental health to his ideas is absurd. We know full well what he suffered from, again has nothing to do with the depth of his ideas.
@JeffaHensley8 ай бұрын
It’s not nonsense to question the nature of his ideas and how they’re likely linked to his obvious mental health issues.
@JS-dt1tn8 ай бұрын
@@JeffaHensley it is in the face of the modern knowledge that we have now regarding what he suffered from.
@2009Artteacher4 ай бұрын
excuse me ? You clearly no nothing about psychology. His thoughts his psyche like all of us a projection of ourselves. Understand the topic before speaking.
@JS-dt1tn4 ай бұрын
@@2009Artteacher I've read his entire collected works, including everything unpublished. He was a naturalist in many ways, and fluctuated between the belief that our bodies are our thoughts are our minds, and also that ideas are themselves something beyond our physical states. He struggled with health ailments all his life, chronic migraines, bouts of blindness, etc. His own writing would suggest he was a person of peak health. He himself wrote that a man's philosophy is simply that which he cannot get over. Even still, to somehow suggest that it was the content of his ideas that made him mad, and not a hereditary disease that also killed his father, is absurd. Please, can you find me the link between his works to his hereditary brain disease?
@zachsharp45643 ай бұрын
@@JS-dt1tn Thanks for pointing this out. I’ve never understood why some think that Nietzsche somehow “wrote” himself into paralytic dementia, and discount the much more likely scenario that he had a stroke or some other organic disease, likely hereditary, as you describe.
@mustafakandan21038 ай бұрын
There are aspects of Spinoza in some of Nietzsche's philosophy. The association of Nietzsche with National Socialist thought is a total nonsense indeed. Wagner's world view, on the other hand, was pretty much identical with the subsequent Nazi movement.
@allthingsgardencad97268 ай бұрын
Its the other way around, its National socialist thought which is inspired by Nietzsche. He wouldnt care what they do, only that he would ask them not to copy him.
@callo19878 ай бұрын
Both are dealing with all-to-human aspect of humanity. However one is trying to deal with it in a philosophical context, the other as a real action in the world. In Heideggerian sense : one is a thought, the other an action. But that is the problem Nietzsche himself knew all too well ... there is no action that can stop the end of philosophy as in the fall of an old world. But forcefully removing a link, not seeing a WW2 as a "philosophical phenomenon" resulted ... well in nothing - because revolution is not possible. But still I do believe we have to see the WW2 and the National Socialism in the scope of what Nietzsche understands and National Socialism fails to understnad : that the world cannot be measured by the old standards anymore. While Nietzsche understands the danger of an action, national socialism embraces it - to its downfall : more ideals. We can argue that 21st century sorta repeats the same mistake and gets lost in ideals and ideas that have no bearing, no understanding.
@Mujangga8 ай бұрын
They had cynics and skeptics in the ancient world... Nietzsche said nothing new.
@VolpuMartys8 ай бұрын
Name em
@Mujangga8 ай бұрын
@@VolpuMartys The ol' "Do My Homework" routine. Gr8t B8t M8t.
@itamarperez8 ай бұрын
@@MujanggaThere is nothing new under the sun. You are correct but don't get distracted by it. Consider that maybe the whole point is to inspire and provoke thought and emotion, and this, at least in my humble opinion, he does in magnificent ways
@mikecaetano8 ай бұрын
So are you telling us that you've never read anything he ever wrote?
@robbiekavanagh28028 ай бұрын
If Nietzsche has said nothing new, then nobody has said anything new.
@aussiebeermoney11677 ай бұрын
Nietzsche wasn't a philosopher. He was mentally ill and a bad poet.
@rosesmitty12064 ай бұрын
It's crazy to say that someone who is recognized as shaping modern philosophy in a big way isn't a philosopher.
@aussiebeermoney11674 ай бұрын
@@rosesmitty1206 he didn't shape it all. No one is writing polemics like him, at least no one of any note. He's just an emo incel that other emo incels like.
@georgesotiriou70512 ай бұрын
What are you retarded?
@LovingLifeNowNoMatterWhat5 ай бұрын
48:37 we can thank christ for paying the price so we can do everything that he inspired us about & sooo much more... focus on what You desire to create=Appreciate till see it, slow down, speed up in orgasmic pure Love rather then shame 🫠 💯