Nietzsche - The Philosopher Who Warned the West Documentary

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The People Profiles

The People Profiles

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 365
@PeopleProfiles
@PeopleProfiles Ай бұрын
The Dawn of Mind: How matter became conscious and alive - www.amazon.com/Dawn-Mind-Matter-Became-Conscious/dp/1633889920 is available now to pre-order on Amazon as well as in all good bookstores, the release date is 3rd December 2024. Why not pre-order your copy now in time for Christmas!
@adrianabornagel7529
@adrianabornagel7529 Ай бұрын
I was looking forward for your videos missed them! Love your content! Suggestion: Kardam of Bulgaria Keep up the good work!
@sam.victor470
@sam.victor470 Ай бұрын
"Parsimonious loneliness is seldom a glad-handing companion in the night, when the demons come to pay an unwelcome call. . ." Benedict Stuart [b.1945]
@barbaraconnelly7744
@barbaraconnelly7744 Ай бұрын
It looks as though Neiche was an atheist. Also he seems to have denied conventional moral views by mankind on good & evil. Maybe he was closer to Pantheism & Bhudism?
@sam.victor470
@sam.victor470 Ай бұрын
@@PeopleProfiles A Spanish person of unknown worth, (and no, it wasn't Don Quixote), gave birth to : "Con un bocado de pan Y un trago de vino Se puede andar por el camino. Pero si bebe para olvidar, No se olvide pagar!" With a morsel of bread And a tot of wine You can hit the high road. However, if you drink to forget, Don't forget to pay! Wonder what was meant by all that . . .
@kalervolatoniittu2011
@kalervolatoniittu2011 5 күн бұрын
@@barbaraconnelly7744 i'd say he was pro "think for your self"
@dailyorangepill3338
@dailyorangepill3338 Ай бұрын
"All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident." -Friedrich Nietzsche
@janewatson8108
@janewatson8108 Ай бұрын
I’d suggest that he was rather his ‘wisdom’ would follow this trajectory…
@pablolejarraga
@pablolejarraga Ай бұрын
I think this quote is from Schopenhauer, not Nietzsche.
@ivannovotny4552
@ivannovotny4552 Ай бұрын
@@pablolejarraga - I'll consult with an "Uncle Google" on this one.
@DANTHETUBEMAN
@DANTHETUBEMAN Ай бұрын
weather weapons on North Carolina , JOE BIDEN DEMILE, but we used them in Vietnam war so they exist, used them on Iraq got a 1000 year storm that flooded the city, so soon comes " yes we have them" but would never use them on political citizens, then, we are gt to investigate to get to the bottom of this,,, and that's the cover up. 😮
@kalervolatoniittu2011
@kalervolatoniittu2011 20 күн бұрын
Like global warming 😂
@leonsheppard322
@leonsheppard322 26 күн бұрын
He dared to ask very uncomfortable questions about the nature and structure of human society. A truly original thinker for any age of history.
@Johnconno
@Johnconno 3 сағат бұрын
Questions such as 'Where's the best Swiss health spa and knocking shop?'
@JaelaOrdo
@JaelaOrdo Ай бұрын
“To live is to suffer, to survive is to find some meaning in the suffering.” - Friedrich Nietzsche
@mygodisyahweh8634
@mygodisyahweh8634 Ай бұрын
LoL No shit. 👏 👏 Brilliant
@fewothers533
@fewothers533 Ай бұрын
​@St3ph3n31 I believe, personality plays a roll too.
@fewothers533
@fewothers533 Ай бұрын
@St3ph3n31 True! Someone's character can of course be decisive. Therefore the difference in coping styles.
@zacharyperez2427
@zacharyperez2427 Ай бұрын
You suffer in life if you allow life to cause suffering
@theflyingkaramazovbrothers6
@theflyingkaramazovbrothers6 Ай бұрын
Misattributed quote. The way it appears in this famous quote is from Gordon Allport (originator of the likely flawed contact theory). The way Nietzsche describes it: "Man, the bravest animal and most prone to suffer, does not deny suffering as such: he wills it, he even seeks it out, provided he is shown a meaning for it, a purpose of suffering.”
@binyon7
@binyon7 Ай бұрын
Socrates: "to be is to do. Sartre: "to do is to be". Sinatra: "do be do be do"
@James-ll3jb
@James-ll3jb Ай бұрын
Yea, I invented that in 1971 lol😅
@binyon7
@binyon7 Ай бұрын
​@@James-ll3jb... No it was me... 1968
@James-ll3jb
@James-ll3jb Ай бұрын
@@kaoskronostyche9939 wellz that's tellin em lol
@YvonneKennedy-lu2uc
@YvonneKennedy-lu2uc Ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@James-ll3jb
@James-ll3jb Ай бұрын
@@YvonneKennedy-lu2uc It was funnier when I coined the gag in 1971 at 19, when people knew who all 3 men were.
@RupturedGrid
@RupturedGrid Ай бұрын
The french postmodern philosphers in the second half of the 20th century resurrected Nietzsche after he was blamed for Nazism due to poor German scholarship in the interwar years. They created some amazing books and Nietzscheanism is very much alive in academic philosophy today because of it. Some legendary books I'd recommend: "Nietzsche and Philosphy"- Gilles Deleuze, "Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle" - Pierre Klossowki, and "On Nietzsche" - Georges Bataille You have no idea what kind of treasure I just hooked you up with. Life changing shit
@michaelsmyth3935
@michaelsmyth3935 Ай бұрын
Steppenwolf and Siddhartha by Herman Hesse. Beyond being just brilliant. These two books pulled the double barrel out. Unlike your recommended books, which are brilliant, though studies, not stories. Hesse makes the ideas come alive.
@noname-by3qz
@noname-by3qz 27 күн бұрын
Thank you. I tried to read Beyond Good and Evil ages ago. I only remember him saying Kant could not be taken seriously because Kant believed in God. Here I am almost 70, and I totally agree just from the last couple of years of thinking about it.
@RupturedGrid
@RupturedGrid 27 күн бұрын
@@noname-by3qz Deleuze also wrote a book on Kant (as well as the amazing Nietzsche book i mentioned above) and Deleuzes philosophy is imo the best of the 20th century. Def check it out he has plenty to say about Kant and Nietzsche and Kant's "God". Def worth checking out because it could expand on the thoughts you are having about Nietzsche/Kant
@kevindesmet7217
@kevindesmet7217 27 күн бұрын
Thank you, I'm just restarting my life after years of depression because of autism. I hope that I'll find some meaning in the books / suffering of life..
@jenford7078
@jenford7078 Ай бұрын
The thing philosophers do is to encourage others to question what others call "the norm:.
@claudioabado3317
@claudioabado3317 Ай бұрын
Nietzsche encourages us to question ourselves
@EagleWolf2
@EagleWolf2 Ай бұрын
​@@claudioabado3317Sadly, It is in short supply, within Society.-----
@adrianryan5654
@adrianryan5654 29 күн бұрын
Ok but they also philosophise to promote their ideology so how can you separate the true pursuit of enlightenment and the ideological chains seeking to capture? To paraphrase, “man is born free but is everywhere in chains”, which ushered in the post modernist scourge, which we are Co fronted with today big time! Philosophy is both liberating and enslaving in equal measure, like most things, which is just human nature… Alas less than 30% can spot the liars and snake oil salesmen, which is why Professor Matthias Desmet found that only 30% can resist mass formation, as recently proved during Covid 19 and again with climate alarmism…
@kalervolatoniittu2011
@kalervolatoniittu2011 20 күн бұрын
So it's all vanity ?
@Video2Webb
@Video2Webb Ай бұрын
Thank you to Ruben Crow for his narration. I love his voice and he was absolutely central to this film presenting the life and work of Friedrich Nietsche. Thank you also to all others who worked to create this wonderful introduction to, and overview of, Nietsche. What I notice most about this thinker is his indomitable spirit of creative work. He just never stopped! Talk about the energy of the universe having been fulfilled in that man's lifetime!
@Rooobert-l2h3w
@Rooobert-l2h3w 3 күн бұрын
Ruben Crows pronunciation of names and places is terrible.
@burtonsankeralli5445
@burtonsankeralli5445 Ай бұрын
One of the five greatest Western philosophers.
@F4R4D4Y
@F4R4D4Y Ай бұрын
His interpretation of Kant was a revelation.
@Josh_e_Perry
@Josh_e_Perry Ай бұрын
Haven’t listened yet, but the caption makes me think how great it would be for Daniel Day Lewis to portray Zarathustra as Nietzsche
@stuarthastie6374
@stuarthastie6374 12 күн бұрын
Daniel Day Lewis is is known to be a method actor who totally immerses himself in the character. I would not wish this upon anyone.
@Josh_e_Perry
@Josh_e_Perry 11 күн бұрын
@ hey may state too long into the abyss
@heidisexton5928
@heidisexton5928 Ай бұрын
European history is fascinating.
@voornaam3191
@voornaam3191 Ай бұрын
Yes, until you discover that all that nonsense took a hundred thousand years. And that all those fools really did nothing worthwhile, besides the bull shit they are famous for. The worst thing is, all those aggressive lunatics got millions of people supporting the madness. Get real, the misery never stopped! It is not fascinating at all, half the time it was fascist and nothing else.
@karenandrews4224
@karenandrews4224 25 күн бұрын
Yes but also just battles punctuated with great art.
@100-micky
@100-micky Ай бұрын
"No shepherd and one heard everybody is the same, everybody wants same, whoever feels different goes voluntary into the mad house" Fedrick Nitziche
@AlbertKundrat
@AlbertKundrat Ай бұрын
This is Nietzsche's most INSANE Quote! He has made Philosophy the Realm of pure undiluted INSANITY as this strange Philosophic NIETZSCHIAN WINE, of His own super Ingenius Recipe, to be always sipped in a Madhouse while in the Dream State!
@johnmarken3945
@johnmarken3945 Ай бұрын
This was great. I've only known snippets or time-shots of this work. Now I realize there was quite the evolution of his writings and views which are much deeper and complex than I had been taught. I recognize that there is a fair bit of Nietzsche in myself.
@lauracarusato3517
@lauracarusato3517 Ай бұрын
After reading I am Dynamite!, I was definitely interested to find out more about Nietzsche, such a good documentary. 🙌🏻
@56rarity
@56rarity Ай бұрын
Nietsche`s life is a tragedy,but his intellectual heritage, Ideologically mistakingly branded as "Nazi ideology", is overwhelming and is still waiting for a profound objective critical evaluation! Thank you for the fascinating summary (documentary)
@ministerofdarkness
@ministerofdarkness Ай бұрын
Never knew he was a musician. Fascinating.
@Dragonfruits_
@Dragonfruits_ Ай бұрын
Sometimes we need to learn to fail in order to grow. An inflexible ego can be a very bad thing can lead to stagnation.
@wenthulk8439
@wenthulk8439 4 күн бұрын
True statement
@historyjunkie3144
@historyjunkie3144 Ай бұрын
This video and summation of Nietzscals' philosophical journey is absolutely enthralling 😍 I will be devouring everything, Nietzschal. I can find! Ty!
@Seekersofwisdom-dq9wc
@Seekersofwisdom-dq9wc 28 күн бұрын
I'm so glad you enjoyed it! Nietzsche's philosophical journey is truly fascinating, and there's so much depth to explore. Wishing you an insightful and rewarding dive into his work! Thank you for the kind words! 🙏
@kalervolatoniittu2011
@kalervolatoniittu2011 20 күн бұрын
You want to go really deep into Nietzhean philosophy ? Try dude called "essentialsalt"
@Seekersofwisdom-dq9wc
@Seekersofwisdom-dq9wc 14 күн бұрын
@@kalervolatoniittu2011 Thanks for the recommendation! I'll definitely look into 'essentialsalt' and see what he has to say on Nietzschean philosophy. Always interested in new perspectives and deep dives into Nietzsche’s ideas-sounds like this could be a great resource!
@kalervolatoniittu2011
@kalervolatoniittu2011 12 күн бұрын
@@Seekersofwisdom-dq9wc good isn't he ?
@dorothybailey1789
@dorothybailey1789 Ай бұрын
Thank you. I really enjoyed this as I'm fascinated by Nietzche's thinking. I thought that he had taken his own life due to his fragile mental state and had not died of a heart attack as is stated here.
@petergorshenin
@petergorshenin Ай бұрын
he was beyond profound, a beacon of logic in our confused social condition, i heard of the name, now closeser to the mind
@herbertvonsauerkrautunterh2513
@herbertvonsauerkrautunterh2513 Ай бұрын
Mmmm. Naumburg is where some of my ancestors are from and relatives are still there. Nice place.
@danielsantiagourtado3430
@danielsantiagourtado3430 Ай бұрын
Thanks For this Guys! Love your content ❤❤❤❤
@charles1606
@charles1606 Ай бұрын
The only thing about thinking and ideas, is that if they are not put into action, they are impotent. And, that action usually means violence and much of it to achieve the success of the thinking/idea; or the alleviation of the tyranny that's preventing it.
@nigehall7661
@nigehall7661 Ай бұрын
Life and death IS violent for 90% of the planet. It's a reality the west hides from or hides it's populations from.
@TheCringingCurmudgeon
@TheCringingCurmudgeon Ай бұрын
​@@nigehall7661Agree 💯👍 We are such a weak and soft generation!
@votetheodore2048
@votetheodore2048 17 күн бұрын
​@@TheCringingCurmudgeon weak and soft who did you hear that from the old they They created the problems that we suffer from today
@ivannovotny4552
@ivannovotny4552 Ай бұрын
Brilliant person.
@MidKnightblue0013
@MidKnightblue0013 Ай бұрын
I don't generally agree with Nietzche's views, but so aspects I partly agree with, and, I respect his mind. His books are enjoyable to read and think on. Thinking about views that you don't agree with is a good challenge imo.
@wenthulk8439
@wenthulk8439 4 күн бұрын
Indeed, while I don’t like stories that make me think. They can be good for the mind.
@dougg1075
@dougg1075 Ай бұрын
He should have leaned on “ trust not in your own understanding, but in all things faith”
@shaiaheyes2c41
@shaiaheyes2c41 Ай бұрын
Indeed.
@TheCringingCurmudgeon
@TheCringingCurmudgeon Ай бұрын
He had some of the most terrifyingly severe and darkly tortured eyes I've ever seen. It's frightening to look at his eyes! 😮 He was a dark soul, not one doubt in my mind.
@Marwin555
@Marwin555 25 күн бұрын
Why Is that? pls elaborate a bit
@Brunoburningbright
@Brunoburningbright 19 күн бұрын
Some minds find no nutrients in "faith". They can't swallow it.
@1985TIMEMACHINE
@1985TIMEMACHINE Ай бұрын
People’s Profiles You asked what do I think of Frederick Nietzsche? Well I think the reason Nietzsche was an atheist is because he may have had a lot of problems growing up. Because it would be very hard I’m sure to be the son of a Lutheran priest. All I’m trying to say is I don’t think Nietzsche was a bad guy. I just think he was very misunderstood.
@user-dc2ed2dm8d
@user-dc2ed2dm8d Ай бұрын
Love the deep dive into his life and thoughts.
@johnogilmorejr6691
@johnogilmorejr6691 Ай бұрын
Edgar Cayce said that the soul of Jeshua had been the father and teacher of Zoroaster in another incarnation. IMHO Nietzsche was guilty of many of the same problems he accused others of having. Playing God is a losing game.
@JasonWindsor88
@JasonWindsor88 Ай бұрын
By God, I hope you mean “God” in the metaphorical sense… if not, then what in the Goddamn Christ are you talking about?
@johnogilmorejr6691
@johnogilmorejr6691 Ай бұрын
@@JasonWindsor88 If you don't know then it's obviously none of your business!
@timglasser2766
@timglasser2766 Ай бұрын
"Playing God is a losing game" Worked OK for Jesus
@michaelsmyth3935
@michaelsmyth3935 Ай бұрын
We should always remember that most of what is considered his best was produced during a time when he was completely supported by others. Any working man should think that through hard. What could anyone do if they had no 40-60 hours a week to slog through. Look around, trust fund babies living a parasitic life. Always look at how the man who is telling you how to live your life, lives theirs.
@JeffMelland
@JeffMelland Ай бұрын
Michelangelo had patrons. Do we have to disregard his sculptures now?
@Joseph-mm4zu
@Joseph-mm4zu Ай бұрын
​@@JeffMellandDisregard the 40-60 hour week I believe
@tonycucca4499
@tonycucca4499 Ай бұрын
​@JeffMelland you either didn't understand his point or you're just purposely being a dick by being obtuse. Enjoying a painting and being weary of someone's advice aren't even in the same ballpark.
@ddz1375
@ddz1375 Ай бұрын
Karl Marx was a freeloader too.
@ddz1375
@ddz1375 Ай бұрын
Karl Marx was a freeloader too.
@leekasten3921
@leekasten3921 Ай бұрын
Syphilis and morphine... Now that's guaranteed to drive any genius mad...
@claudioabado3317
@claudioabado3317 Ай бұрын
Nietzsche never used any substances or alcohol
@Eris123451
@Eris123451 Ай бұрын
@@claudioabado3317 As far as we know; also the syphilis whist credible is also speculation since he seems to have been almost celibate for most of his life.
@stuarthastie6374
@stuarthastie6374 12 күн бұрын
​@@claudioabado3317so he never used any medicine for his headaches?
@nohandle257
@nohandle257 Ай бұрын
This was quite good. Thank you. I've always been curious about Nietzsche but not enough to actually read him. I've heard how the nazis misused and twisted his philosophy and I've heard that he was an intellectual monster. After your biography here I think he was a brilliant egotist anti-christian. A hateful man really. Perhaps even a psychopath. I'm glad I never wasted my time trying to read his works.
@TheCringingCurmudgeon
@TheCringingCurmudgeon Ай бұрын
Hatred, rage, and darkness just ooze out of Nietzsche's eyes. What a cold, frightening man he must have been in reality and yet modern internet man glorifies him as some kind of spiritual guru. Only a shallow, nihilistic society kisses the boots of such a bourgeois psychopath!
@Butternut-sasquatch
@Butternut-sasquatch Ай бұрын
ugh I love these videos so much.
@stebo-pv2hq
@stebo-pv2hq Ай бұрын
'all spiritual battles of the west will be fought on German soil first'
@robandrews4815
@robandrews4815 Ай бұрын
" World's most famous miserable person".-Mark Twain
@claudioabado3317
@claudioabado3317 Ай бұрын
Mark TwaIn must have read Nietzsche
@timglasser2766
@timglasser2766 Ай бұрын
What a stupid statement
@YvonneKennedy-lu2uc
@YvonneKennedy-lu2uc Ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@kalervolatoniittu2011
@kalervolatoniittu2011 20 күн бұрын
😂
@hafezmousavi9043
@hafezmousavi9043 8 күн бұрын
“The World’s most important miserable.” If i may partially change.
@rtt1961
@rtt1961 Ай бұрын
Thank you so much.
@trikyy7238
@trikyy7238 Ай бұрын
The lives and biographies of thinkers are much more intetesting than those of kings and conquerers.
@SisyphusOfSodom
@SisyphusOfSodom Ай бұрын
I find the lives and biographies of thinkers to be much more intetesting than those of kings and conquerers. There, I fixed your stupidity, though you are still left with a shallow mind.
@charles1606
@charles1606 Ай бұрын
'Kings and Conquerors' are usually implanted morons by blood, or paid-for by behind the scenes controllers. Usually incapable of critical thinking.
@loyertamara
@loyertamara Ай бұрын
many of the thinkers were gifted suppostories of accumulated knowledge. dont be a snob.
@trikyy7238
@trikyy7238 Ай бұрын
Well good for you, brainiac. And yet, you repeated my typo without blinking. Genius.
@magnussigurdsson9045
@magnussigurdsson9045 Ай бұрын
A brilliant mind! 🥰 Excellent video. Thank you!
@alphaoscillator
@alphaoscillator Ай бұрын
I live 20 min away from röcken yo, its fucking depressing here
@gregme5601
@gregme5601 Ай бұрын
Why?
@lupemerrit
@lupemerrit Ай бұрын
No normal person ever became an Einstein, Nietzsche etc etc. Genius are born… not made.
@koala6016
@koala6016 Ай бұрын
Yes, but they need a decent environment and opportunities to thrive.
@ADude-f3z
@ADude-f3z 14 күн бұрын
Simultaneously, far to many who are capable, get left by the wayside. Argue for your limitations, and sure enough, they’re yours. Richard Bach
@trj1442
@trj1442 Ай бұрын
Another brilliant episode. Thankyou for your always awesome content.
@michaellawcobb2693
@michaellawcobb2693 Ай бұрын
Impressive overview. Well done.
@bronwynelko6783
@bronwynelko6783 Ай бұрын
Excellent! Thank you for sharing.
@BlergleslinkVettermoo
@BlergleslinkVettermoo Ай бұрын
Excellent biography. Very well done.
@jasonc0065
@jasonc0065 Ай бұрын
Is it any accident thar Russia's mercenary group is named after Wagner?
@moosemaster96
@moosemaster96 Ай бұрын
Love that you did this one! Would you consider Aleister Crowley if you will indulge philosophers and libertines such as de sade?
@markcarey67
@markcarey67 Ай бұрын
I'd never heard the book "Daybreak" referred to as "Morning Glow" before.
@alanaadams7440
@alanaadams7440 29 күн бұрын
My great grandfather came from Prussia his name was Ludwig Laisch
@thinker9115
@thinker9115 Ай бұрын
Thank you very much.
@CynthiaSchoenbauer
@CynthiaSchoenbauer Ай бұрын
He was extraordinary. He thinks a lot like me! Thank you for this documentary. I plan to use ideas like his to change education's approach to learning.
@DonnellOkafor-r2d
@DonnellOkafor-r2d Ай бұрын
@@CynthiaSchoenbauer oh please
@DonnellOkafor-r2d
@DonnellOkafor-r2d Ай бұрын
@@CynthiaSchoenbauer don't flatter yourself
@jeandellaquila8199
@jeandellaquila8199 Ай бұрын
Is art for the sake of art science for the sake of science knowledge for the sake of knowledge so that civilization declined..or were belle lettres the height of laws making Knowledge phi beta kappa for the sake of TRUTH. TAU WROUGHT..EPIC leveling of the plied aggressor..bolshevik Viking32 Lief leaf..did ibn ma3mun really say in the TALMUD that Allah does not see the falling of the leaf. SCROLL3IONIC IONOSPHERE104
@jeandellaquila8199
@jeandellaquila8199 Ай бұрын
Judaism is a science replacing religion. ..when you undermine science math what was there but unbridled pasha passions..the destruction of all that was good by emirs sheiks imamahs willful whimsical breaking every law laws until the only encased law was FEAR AWN pharaoh his communist muslim army.11111111117: israel763
@AttractaFahy1
@AttractaFahy1 19 күн бұрын
Sorry to see that his last book written while he was incarcerated, is not mentioned. His sister disowned it as his, because it was about his relationship with her. He gave it to a friend who visited him, otherwise we’d never have heard of it. I read it years ago - My Sister and I Excellent book.
@shahidhassan8799
@shahidhassan8799 12 күн бұрын
A wonderful and profound human with super intellect my favourite philosopher God bless him
@katherinecollins4685
@katherinecollins4685 Ай бұрын
Well presented and researched
@JBarG22
@JBarG22 Ай бұрын
Carl Jung next!!
@janewatson8108
@janewatson8108 Ай бұрын
I kept think about Richard Dawkins. I tend to think that people who become obsessed with attacking religion have a Messiah complex. Which seems to have been the case for Nietzsche? Also, he seems to have been one of those autistic types who can absorb vast amounts of information but struggle to see the wood for the trees. He seemed to vacillate all over the place and contradict himself endlessly. But I’m no philosopher, and found it a bit grandiose and self indulgent in my brief study of it. I’d describe myself as an evolutionary psychologist, which approach makes a lot more sense to me.
@TheCringingCurmudgeon
@TheCringingCurmudgeon Ай бұрын
He was obsessed and possessed by darkness. There was no light in him, and therefore no truth.
@MikeFuller-d4d
@MikeFuller-d4d 20 күн бұрын
I have read the first 6 pages of the first chapter of 'Beyond Good and Evil' by Friedrich Nietzsche. I found it hard going.
@ge0rgeharris218
@ge0rgeharris218 Ай бұрын
He had a one tracked mind. He enjoyed torturing himself and to what end? 😢 😢 😢
@timglasser2766
@timglasser2766 Ай бұрын
In what part of this documentary does it state that "he enjoyed torturing himself"?
@bas.diawara
@bas.diawara 24 күн бұрын
His name echoes in eternity.
@go2yourself
@go2yourself Ай бұрын
Great content, thank you❤
@stephen7774
@stephen7774 Ай бұрын
He didn't understand the importance of a proper diet and vitamins which caused him constant illness and an early death.
@AnnoyedHangingGondola-tn6yq
@AnnoyedHangingGondola-tn6yq Ай бұрын
Wao. Great video. Best summary of Nietzsche's life i have seen.
@TH-jl4gm
@TH-jl4gm 10 күн бұрын
Forgive me, as a horseman, it's spelled whoa. I love you.
@ppappnene8123
@ppappnene8123 Ай бұрын
How about doing a bio of mehmed the conqueror, would love to see!
@lancehaysom47
@lancehaysom47 Ай бұрын
When you gaze long into the abyss, the abyss also looks into you
@ryan.1990
@ryan.1990 Ай бұрын
Will you ever do a biography of Oswald Spengler???
@NeoCynic1
@NeoCynic1 16 күн бұрын
Spengler was a big fan of Nietzsche AND Goethe.
@alokdi1
@alokdi1 5 күн бұрын
I think he understood the true Christianity and it’s abused applications and thus ran from it. He was not the contemporary Christian and did not think to spread his version of it. He was smart to see through the hypocrisy.
@wenthulk8439
@wenthulk8439 4 күн бұрын
Hypocrisy is common in modern religion
@tesfamicaelyohannes
@tesfamicaelyohannes 13 күн бұрын
I read the book Beyond good and evil two times. Unfortunately, I have zero understanding of the content. I blame the language used in English for that book. Because it is written with bad grammar and long sentences. I hope other publications will come out with good grammar and short sentences that explain the content of the book. Best regards
@THEScottCampbell
@THEScottCampbell Ай бұрын
GREAT biography!
@effingsix3825
@effingsix3825 7 күн бұрын
A concise summary of Nietzsche can be arrived at by recognizing that life is lived in defence of the persona. And we might not recognize our own railway-era parochialism in the substance of endeavours.
@almightyyt2101
@almightyyt2101 Ай бұрын
The look on Darwins face is that of a man who has seen something
@timglasser2766
@timglasser2766 Ай бұрын
Darwin worked on his ideas 60 hours a week , 7 days a week for 40 years!
@SisyphusOfSodom
@SisyphusOfSodom Ай бұрын
Why am I half-expecting to see Jordan Peterson drop a comment here? 😆
@VivekGhimire
@VivekGhimire Ай бұрын
underrated comment in the entire platform.🎉🎉
@bluemamba5317
@bluemamba5317 Ай бұрын
@@VivekGhimire Followed by 💩
@mainstreet3023
@mainstreet3023 Ай бұрын
Or Robert Greene or Elon Musk
@AlisonCooper-l8p
@AlisonCooper-l8p Ай бұрын
Thus Spake Zarathustra is a great poetical work in my opinion.
@HGNADMIN
@HGNADMIN Ай бұрын
There was nothing deteriorating in him, he got it right from the gecko
@bluemamba5317
@bluemamba5317 Ай бұрын
🦎🦎
@Brunoburningbright
@Brunoburningbright 19 күн бұрын
The talking lizard that sells insurance?
@SeiroosFardipour-sy3sh
@SeiroosFardipour-sy3sh Ай бұрын
The paradoxal thing about thinkers is that it would better it kept silent because anything they analysis will either be exploited wrongly or partially but never sincerely.
@thaairal-khairulla3299
@thaairal-khairulla3299 24 күн бұрын
Nitzsche is a believer of god less so religion , he was a realist and therefore overwhelmingly in reality not the truth . Friedrich you are a true being and friend
@stephanebelizaire5063
@stephanebelizaire5063 Ай бұрын
No doubt about it, Great Philosopher !
@4fuzzybear
@4fuzzybear 18 күн бұрын
Hitler thought the same thing.
@Fenómeno-v5s
@Fenómeno-v5s Ай бұрын
Very good video, learned a lot)
@sam.victor470
@sam.victor470 Ай бұрын
Often unjustly labelled 'the father of Nazism', by some who did not share the similarly cultural philosophic bent of: Frederich Nietzsche, (15th of October1844 -25th August of1900); Who, is accredited with the quote: "And those who were seen dancing, were thought to be insane, by those who could not hear the music!"
@Piya-n2b
@Piya-n2b 14 күн бұрын
Nietsche teaches me how to​read​ well​.. Kierkegaard​ teaches​ how​ to​ love.... Both of​ them know.​the​ truth....
@vanveakrin276
@vanveakrin276 Ай бұрын
Nietzsche did contribute to the idea of an All powerful all All mighty is Dead as Budha was Dead
@jn1mrgn
@jn1mrgn Ай бұрын
"His parental grandmother" I think you mean paternal?
@nietzschespupil2784
@nietzschespupil2784 Ай бұрын
Master Nietzsche
@hugopereirinha1003
@hugopereirinha1003 21 күн бұрын
My own philosopher on which I still now and then revisit to base my point of views and I totally stand tall to those that picture him as mad man with anti-semitic ideas or fascists thoughts on the world itself ... those who claim it are pure ignorant people who do not deserve a single attention on any debate.
@PravdaSeed
@PravdaSeed Ай бұрын
💙 Thanks 💙
@themangomanjuice
@themangomanjuice Ай бұрын
Very interesting stuff🫶🏿!
@vanveakrin276
@vanveakrin276 Ай бұрын
Nietzsche was a followers of his time ..not a Genius..but a reformer
@Piya-n2b
@Piya-n2b 13 күн бұрын
There​ are​ two​ great​ philosopher.... Neitzsche​ .​and​ Kierkegaard... Their​ writing.​are.very difficult... Please.tell me.​what.they say​
@sisterseeth
@sisterseeth Ай бұрын
When I see suffering on the horizon, I comb my hair, put on new underwear, and greet it where it stands with an attitude of romance. I know the person I'll be after the tryst, won't even recognize the person I was before. To avoid suffering is to embrace atrophy, to continue seeking external solutions for internal conflict, to further evaporate the potential of your awareness, and if there is some structure that continues after the physical life, to betray the very reason you left it to come here. We find ourselves sat inside a meat sack filled with nerve endings, steered by a brain which is only capable of processing reality from a dualistic platform. Clearly, we are not here to have a good time. The gurus and priests who preach "Oneness" rob their adherents of living as anything beyond followers, and are inherently anti-human utopians. Because, to lead, love, and/or value clarity above comfort, is to accept a life of enthusiastic suffering.
@LesserlordMonke
@LesserlordMonke 11 күн бұрын
Agoogoogaga -baby nietzsche
@36cmbr
@36cmbr Ай бұрын
Nietzsche is a critic and no philosopher at all.
@nypdbob
@nypdbob Ай бұрын
He loved and admired jews
@richardc861
@richardc861 Ай бұрын
Good for him 👍
@stuarthastie6374
@stuarthastie6374 12 күн бұрын
Imaginary Zartosh with megalomania.
@Prometheus21stCentury
@Prometheus21stCentury 18 күн бұрын
You know the book when Nietzsche cried, the sequel will be When Nietzsche farting 💨😶‍🌫️
@nabilsyaffiqabdulrahman
@nabilsyaffiqabdulrahman Ай бұрын
12:15 interesting
@MikeFuller-d4d
@MikeFuller-d4d 20 күн бұрын
I would like to learn about German romanticism, Goethe's 'Theory of Colours' and the work of Hegel, Nietzsche and Zizek.
@Brunoburningbright
@Brunoburningbright 19 күн бұрын
That's what Libraries are for. Free access to millions of books.
@MikeFuller-d4d
@MikeFuller-d4d 19 күн бұрын
@@Brunoburningbright Thank You! Agreed! But I am a poor reader.
@environmentaltechnologybus6199
@environmentaltechnologybus6199 Ай бұрын
I didn't know that Nietsche was so close to Wagner.
@4fuzzybear
@4fuzzybear 18 күн бұрын
He spent his entire life never able to divide Religion from Relationship. Perhaps a victim of his time ,(as we all are in some ways) By the time he had reached his mid 30s, his insight to discovery of what Jesus told Nicodemus, “ You must be born again” and “No man comes to the Father, but by Me”, Was unattainable and forever purged from the truth. His hysterical rambling of the rest of his life was surly due to his drug use and his own pride. His talent wasted, and the fruits of his work were immense in the minds of the man who picked up his words after his death, only to go on and influence the horrors of socialism and communism that continue to this day to the demise of over a billion lives subjugated by the ramblings of a drug addict. Just like all of those that never find salvation through Jesus and everlasting life with him,it is sad . Academia need not blind, the minds of the greatest scholar, Learn from the generations before all of us,gain wisdom, lose your pride and leave this world in a better way than which you entered.
@Jambazisugu
@Jambazisugu Ай бұрын
Misery seeks company
@davidknox5929
@davidknox5929 Ай бұрын
V comprehensive
@solgato5186
@solgato5186 Ай бұрын
nasty bourgeois existential panic. philosophy already had a less cluttered nihilism not limited to liberating a small class at the expense of the majority class.
@kristijensen7457
@kristijensen7457 Ай бұрын
27:10 that sounds a lot like Multiple Sclerosis so it was probably neurological in nature. Lyme disease is very similar, too.
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