This is a lovely,lovely conversation. Not only was Adler the philosopher but the interviewer was unasummingly and pleasantly philosophical as well.❤❤❤❤
@JohnBullard9 ай бұрын
Adler changed my life, when I found his HOW TO READ A BOOK. It led me to read the great books in historical order. I especially recommend his THE GREAT IDEAS.
@SenjiaMurtic9 ай бұрын
Can you please list them?
@JohnBullard9 ай бұрын
@@SenjiaMurtic It's a long list. Google THE GREAT BOOKS, ADLER
@peterbrennan10858 ай бұрын
@@SenjiaMurticlook up britannica Great Books of the Western World. I believe the latest iteration has 60 books. Adler was the editor
@RamMohammadJosephKaur10 ай бұрын
Not just adler was great, but what fantastic set of intriguing questions from the interviewer as well! Great discussion!
@trevorcrowley574810 ай бұрын
Smartest guy in the room and Moyers is no slouch
@poboysix49 ай бұрын
I highly recommend the Moyers / Campbell interview
@christopherwood903210 ай бұрын
So many gems packed into this great conversation
@AI-Hallucination10 ай бұрын
We express our gratitude for sharing this content.
@stoyanfurdzhev10 ай бұрын
The halfwits
@UniteAgainstEvil9 ай бұрын
Yeah I'm sure "we" do, Mr. Hallucination.
@fadinglightsarefading8 ай бұрын
Yes we absolutely do
@AI-Hallucination8 ай бұрын
@@UniteAgainstEvil “WE”
@PhilipPedro211210 ай бұрын
Haven't seen this since it aired on PBS in the early 80s. Thanks for posting.
@allaboutbooksummaries602310 ай бұрын
I never thought I'd see new Mortimer J. Adler content. Thank you!
@Miguel_El_Chileno10 ай бұрын
Bill Moyers was a great interviewer
@JayTX.10 ай бұрын
Agreed
@josephwinnard666610 ай бұрын
Moyers' "The Power of Myth" show with Joseph Campbell is incredible if you haven't seen it!!
@Crytoma10 ай бұрын
Simple yet substantial and worth remembering
@antoniovittorio468610 ай бұрын
After having watched this excellent video, I think that Adler is he who has understood best Aristotle's ethics. I will certainly watch again this video because it is really instructive and also because of Adler's personality, a personality characterized by the virtues of humility, simplicity and clarity. These virtues are very rare and highly valuable, especially in our excessively mediatised era.
@TerapiaCarrillo7 ай бұрын
i cant belive we can have this. incredible.
@bg-se7rq10 ай бұрын
Ty for posting this. Excellent watch
@thelondoners-lifeisart9 күн бұрын
How very inspiring. Passion to pursue life to reach a point where peace can be enjoyed at rest. We should strive not only to achieve that for ourselves but that in doing so we can reach that same place with each-other. That is motivation enough. #lifeisart ⚡️❤️💜💙⚡️
@marymelnyk367810 ай бұрын
Thanks to bringing this to us very much needed and appreciated at this time …. It reminds us of how Far we have moved away from our true destiny 🙏
@kristogirma83199 ай бұрын
At what point in time do you think we were close to our true destiny? If you asked me, I would say, The fulfilment of human destiny was achieved 2000 years ago in the person of Christ Jesus. I have reasons to think that but your question sparked my curiosity as to when you think in history human beings have been closer to their true destiny
@EricGray-zr2es9 ай бұрын
Philosophy is a way to get ready to die with dignity, peace, and fearlessness. To face mortality and accept reality.
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
That also
@Lopfff10 ай бұрын
I remember reading Aristotle For Everybody when I was like 11 years old. Early 80s. Thank you for this video.
@BloatedBearucraticNightmare10 ай бұрын
A man must first seek out that which he is passionate about, then pursue that passion in order he can be successful both subjectively, and objectively.
@Lobishomem10 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting!
@Heyfawad10 ай бұрын
6:18 "Anything a machine can do, human beings should not do". Would've loved hearing his thoughts on the exponential rise of AI and a world dominated by it. There are very few things that machines can't do today.
@Hermetic_9 ай бұрын
Agree. This guy is an idealistic fool or useful idiot.
@kristogirma83199 ай бұрын
Funny enough in his book “how to listen and how to talk” he discusses what you mentioned if you care to know his thoughts on it
@Heyfawad9 ай бұрын
@@kristogirma8319 Thanks! I'd definitely give it a read.
@serky_10292 ай бұрын
Dont know how i stumbled across this but this might just be the best philosophical dialogue ive ever witnessed
@voltaire300110 ай бұрын
This series changed my life.
@bryanutility960910 ай бұрын
Listening on repeat ❤
@DaboooogA10 ай бұрын
Thanks for the upload - I recent saw Adler on William Buckley's Firing Line and was very impressed.
@K.Babarossa9 ай бұрын
Interesting Personallity, and a good one.
@Modus079 ай бұрын
Adler was brilliant, I only wish he had more cultivated the virtue of patience and active listening.
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
06:40 - The problem of affordably providing to each person the 6 external elements which together comprise a DECENT LIVELIHOOD was knowledge that MJA, unfortunately, missed learning in 1996.
@VenusLover1710 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤ thanks for this beauty!!😊
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
4. Opportunities for access to the pleasures of sense as well as the pleasures of play & the aesthetic pleasures
@JayTX.10 ай бұрын
From what I've observed not all minds are capable of a greater path or social ascension....some are just meant to dig ditches...and that's ok , will to power
@hussienmohammed291410 ай бұрын
Those were the lowest rank in the slaves class, as supposed in the republic (Plato never contradicts Aristotle).
@anhumblemessengerofthelawo38589 ай бұрын
32:59
@Ekam-Sat9 ай бұрын
Philosophers are disturbers of peace. I assume because the direct truth can be threatening to the ego. But when the ego is transcended, then there is peace.
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
10 points
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
It is also up to all voters to know that if you DO NOT have a right to everything you NEED to pursue Happiness, then you DO NOT have a right to pursue Happiness. And in the 21ST century we humans have an inalienable RIGHT to everything we need to pursue HAPPINESS.
@SH-cu9rc10 ай бұрын
Why it is not possible to save this great video to Watch Later list?
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
1. A decent supply of the means of subsistence
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
For us, there is Good Fortune to know that MJA's correct desire that there must be Political & Economic HAVES without Political & Economic HAVE-NOTS can be affordably done in the 21ST century.
@casteretpollux10 ай бұрын
That interview with distant view of the two protagonists down by a loudly rushing river ... the mind can't enlighten itself: it's how we cope as part of our environment. Aristotle was an encyclopedia. 12 different names for different types of happiness, 23 kinds of goodness. In some ways our thinking is diminishing with the development of technology.
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
01:04 - ARISTOTLE FOR EVERYBODY: Difficult Writing (not thought) Made Easy
@yohanessaputra927410 ай бұрын
24:24 is that Milan Kundera attending Adler's class :O
@practice2025x10 ай бұрын
2:20 that's a remarkable statement on science considering it has given us the profound insight to the myth of free will...if that ain't wisdom I don't know what is. Would Adler have changed his mind?
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
It is up to all voters in a self-governing polity to know best how to govern themselves & to know the ways & means to provide & maintain a polity (also a world) without HAVE-NOTS
@Camorin-y6d10 ай бұрын
Legend
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
Here are the 6 external elements which, together, comprise the needed Decent Livelihood without which no one may pursue Happiness & which a Good Self-Governing People Provides & Maintains for all its members to its best ability:
@opposingshore932210 ай бұрын
Those 3 goods of the mind were in exodus 35:31 , finalized in the 5th century BC, long before Aristotle was alive! Also covered in the 3 types of paññā in the texts of Abhidarma, early 3rd century BC. Fascinating thread of human self awareness.
@Modus079 ай бұрын
“The Indians and Chinese laugh at Western parochialism.”
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
6. Enough free time from subsistence work both in youth & adult life to take advantage of these opportunities
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
5. Opportunities for access to the goods of the mind through educational facilities in youth & adult life
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
06:30 - Be not afraid that robots & AI & machines may do work once done by humans alone for now humans may think & make & do work which only humans may do.
@konstantinosstavropoulos36059 ай бұрын
good
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
2. Living & working conditions conducive to health 3. Medical care
@kurts48679 күн бұрын
Bill Mores is rocking aLEISURE SUIT!!?!?
@vonroretz33079 ай бұрын
Aquinas brought him back to prominence. Theology is the Queen of the sciences, and philosophy followed, like a child followers its Mother.
@Mizzie196610 ай бұрын
Philosophy for the everyman and yet and yet, when introducing folks at this meeting, I am watching they’re all educated men not the plumber or the electrician or the mechanic or college educated men. And I say how interesting.
@patrickanthonylynch33993 күн бұрын
Enjoyable. But strange that not once did I hear the word 'meaning' or 'meaningfulness'....
@marianaescudero66399 ай бұрын
😅😅😅😅 51:06 😊
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
17:00 -
@alisonarmstrong84219 ай бұрын
but the weaving done by Queen Helen of Sparta and Queen Penelope of Ithaca (originallly from Sparta) and women from the beginning of tiime til today around the world are artists of the loom! they invent as they weave. It is the meditative state of the artist while making...
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
18:48 -
@BloatedBearucraticNightmare10 ай бұрын
Seems to this old Cat "The End" should be considered a new beginning during our lives, as many times as necessary.
@jimhim5859 ай бұрын
The interviewer sounds exactly like Charlie Rose
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
09:01 -
@TerapiaCarrillo7 ай бұрын
im not sure that every human being has the same nature
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
09:58 -
@samlazar105310 ай бұрын
There is a lot of Philosophy nowadays but way to little true philosophers. The last 2 that truly made an impact are Nietzsche and Dostoyevsky and that's about it
@PhilHardgrave9 ай бұрын
Yes, but N and D demolished classical and analytic philosophy. Some impact!
@devoradamaris9 ай бұрын
🕊🌎🕊🕊sharing🫂thankYOU 👑
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
10:32 -
@Shevock7 ай бұрын
He didn't live to see the adjunctification of the university, where most who have the IQ and work ethic to do such creative and thinking work can't make a living doing so.
@EquateNorex3 ай бұрын
I am not sure. Can you give an examples? Surely you don't mean shitty universities, where majority of people go? Or if you do, then it is obvious why they can't find something. Their university was bad, they probably shouldn't have gone there. I don't really think that people from top universities that have good IQ have any problems with making a living, if we don't look at some exceptions, that always should be.
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
15:56 =
@strongfp10 ай бұрын
If you ever wanted an introduction to Marxism this is a good set of interviews talks. Marx was a student of Aristotle (distant) and understood him quite well. Aristotle was a utopian tho...
@lionelinx710 ай бұрын
Back when people had spirit.
@Laotzu.Goldbug10 ай бұрын
0:06 ironic that Nietzsche thoroughly demonstrated exactly how you can. The Quest for Knowledge, or perhaps the Will to Truth, is in its disembodied and separate form not some self-evident good.
@Laotzu.Goldbug10 ай бұрын
@@hermannretzlaff1070 Nietzsche demonstrated it formally, but he was hardly the first nor the last to understand it in a basic sense. Anyone with even average intelligence and a little honesty can conceive of multiple examples where certain types of knowledge can be harmful to a person's effectiveness, motivation, goals and physical health. Freddy was merely able to distill it to the pithy aphorism that one's strength of soul is directly related to the quantity of undiluted truth that they can handle without ill effect, but being human we all need to have it diluted to a substantial degree nonetheless.
@hermannretzlaff107010 ай бұрын
@@Laotzu.Goldbug Personally the mere concept of knowledge is so broad, specificity would be required for your point on “examples of harmful types of knowledge” to make sense as part of a wider argument against the constant pursuit of knowledge. Seeing as, for me, it simply demonstrates an opportunity for further distillation of said knowledge in order to further influence the motivation to acquire even more knowledge that can be ultimately “good” as it stands as a response to, and a combative, towards the ‘harmful knowledge’ that you speak of. And in turn would then strengthen and further authenticate one’s personal “goals” or “effectiveness”. For example coming to a realisation through certain said “harmful knowledge” that can reveal an ugly truth that relates to one’s “goals” as you say. Would that not push one to further strive for knowledge that can combat these threats to what one finds dearest? That being their individual “effectiveness, physical health, motivation” etc? Or would one rather dilute the truth in order to live in a lie that conforms to what they think to be their intellectual threshold, or ‘comfort zone’ per se. That further pervasion and desire to further distill knowledge in order to get to one’s truest self, or just simply the truest one can get in one lifetime of course, is what yourself or of course Nietzsche frowns upon and chalks up as the undignified “will to truth”, but is essentially that which I think is the most dignified thing a man can do. Plus it’s satisfying - a type of satisfaction that I’d say hits different when in comparison to that type of comfortable, inauthentic, ephemeral pleasure that comes with that dash of subconscious discomfort to the ‘harmful knowledge’ one wouldn’t want to admit they’ve conformed to. Then again I haven’t read the entirety of Nietzsches work, and have simply just gone off my current understanding of his concepts, and your comments. So yeah maybe I’m tripping in some respects lmao
@hermannretzlaff107010 ай бұрын
@@Laotzu.Goldbug Personally the mere concept of knowledge is so broad, specificity would be required for your point on “harmful types of knowledge” to make sense as part of a wider argument against the constant pursuit of knowledge. Seeing as, for me, it simply demonstrates an opportunity for further distillation of said knowledge in order to further influence the motivation to acquire even more knowledge that can be ultimately “good” as it stands as a response to, and a combative, towards the ‘harmful knowledge’ that you speak of. And in turn would I think strengthen and further authenticate one’s personal “goals” or “effectiveness”. For example coming to a realisation through certain said “harmful knowledge” that can reveal an ugly truth that relates to one’s “goals” as you say. Would that not push one to further strive for more knowledge that can combat these threats to what one finds dearest? That being their individual “effectiveness, physical health, motivation” etc? Or would one rather dilute the truth in order to live in a lie that conforms to what they think is their intellectual threshold, and ‘comfort zone’ per se. That further pervasion and desire to further distill knowledge in order to get to one’s truest self, or just simply the truest one can get in one lifetime of course, is what yourself, or of course Nietzsche frowns upon and chalks up as the undignified “will to truth”, but is essentially that which I think is the most dignified thing a man can do. Plus it’s satisfying - a type of satisfaction that I’d say hits different when in comparison to that type of comfortable, inauthentic, ephemeral pleasure that comes with that dash of subconscious discomfort due to the ‘harmful knowledge’ one wouldn’t want to admit they’ve conformed to by way of ignorance and “dilution” Then again I still haven’t read the entirety of Nietzsches work, and have simply just gone off my current understanding of his concepts, and your comments. So maybe I’m tripping in some respects lmao
@hermannretzlaff107010 ай бұрын
@@Laotzu.Goldbug Personally the mere concept of knowledge is so broad, specificity would be required for your point on “harmful types of knowledge” to make sense as part of a wider argument against the constant pursuit of knowledge. Seeing as, for me, it simply demonstrates an opportunity for further distillation of said knowledge in order to further influence the motivation to acquire even more knowledge that can be ultimately “good” as it stands as a response to, and a combative, towards the ‘harmful knowledge’ that you speak of. And in turn I think would strengthen and further authenticate one’s personal “goals” or “effectiveness”. For example coming to a realisation through certain said “harmful knowledge” that can reveal an ugly truth that relates to one’s “goals” as you say. Would that not push one to further strive for more knowledge that can combat these threats to what one finds dearest? That being their individual “effectiveness, physical health, motivation” etc? Or would one rather dilute the truth in order to live in a lie that conforms to what they think is their intellectual threshold, and ‘comfort zone’ per se. That further pervasion and desire to further distill knowledge in order to get to one’s truest self, or just simply the truest one can get in one lifetime of course, is what yourself, or of course Nietzsche frowns upon and chalks up as the undignified “will to truth”, but is essentially that which I think is the most dignified thing a man can do. Plus it’s satisfying - a type of satisfaction that I’d say hits different when in comparison to that type of comfortable, inauthentic, ephemeral pleasure that comes with that dash of subconscious discomfort due to the ‘harmful knowledge’ one wouldn’t want to admit they’ve conformed to by way of ignorance or “dilution”. Then again I still haven’t read the entirety of Nietzsches work, and have simply just gone off my current understanding of his concepts, and your comments. So maybe I’m tripping in some respects lmao
@hermannretzlaff107010 ай бұрын
@@Laotzu.Goldbug Personally the mere concept of knowledge is so broad, specificity would be required for your point on “harmful types of knowledge” to make sense as part of a wider argument against the constant pursuit of knowledge. Seeing as, for me, it simply demonstrates an opportunity for further distillation of said knowledge in order to further influence the motivation to acquire even more knowledge that can be ultimately “good” as it stands as a response to, and a combative, towards the ‘harmful knowledge’ that you speak of. And in turn I think would strengthen and further authenticate one’s personal “goals” or “effectiveness”. For example coming to a realisation through certain said “harmful knowledge” that can reveal an ugly truth that relates to one’s “goals” as you say. Would that not push one to further strive for more knowledge that can combat these threats to what one finds dearest? That being their individual “effectiveness, physical health, motivation” etc? Or would one rather dilute the truth in order to live in a lie that conforms to what they think is their intellectual threshold, and ‘comfort zone’ per se. That further pervasion and desire to further distill knowledge in order to get to one’s truest self, or just simply the truest one can get in one lifetime of course, is what “Freddy” frowns upon, and chalks up as the undignified “will to truth”, but is essentially that which I think is the most dignified thing a man can do. Plus it entails a type of satisfaction that I’d say hits different when in comparison to that type of comfortable, inauthentic, ephemeral pleasure that comes with that dash of subconscious discomfort due to the ‘harmful knowledge’ one wouldn’t want to admit they’ve conformed to by way of ignorance or “dilution”. Then again I still haven’t read the entirety of Nietzsches work, and have simply just gone off my current understanding of his concepts, and your comments. So maybe I’m tripping in some respects lmao
@jamestregler15849 ай бұрын
Unfortunately ; today we only have opinions !
@lilsand.2 ай бұрын
It's not your task to give a flying fk tho
@ginomazzei10769 ай бұрын
Plato for all you mystics
@2009Artteacher8 ай бұрын
Aristotle's law on non-contradiction, would not agree with " uncommon common sense"
@skeptic11249 ай бұрын
Cant have too much knowledge? I disagree. Right now i am practicing mental hygiene, that is why i am watching this video. Too much knowledge about politics and war was causing me problems and suffering.
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
You will seek knowledge in other topics. Or you will seek understanding in some area. Or seek wisdom. Your mind will know what to do.
@ElusiveCube10 ай бұрын
in 7 min. lapse I do not agree with the definition of hard labor, manual labor is irreplaceable in many cases and was definitely even more in need in the 4th. cen. BC. Not everyone can be taught high skills, not everyone can be a GENERAL or an engineer. Even a bee hive is made of workers and not only queens, nations have one King and many peasants.
@stevenkarras349010 ай бұрын
Adler's cool son went to HS with me.
@pawa771410 ай бұрын
can't imagine Adler as having been anything too controversial, but alright, what do I know or care
@_eddiecole10 ай бұрын
"You can't have too much information " that was said before this tik tok and short video Era. I think information is like money. U can't have too much. But too much money without training, skill, and mindfulness practice may drive one crazy or lead to imbalances elsewhere. If you watch junk videos all day it can harm the brain and lead to a dullness, and less ability to focus and handle/do certain things.
@stephendaisley864510 ай бұрын
What sort of pants does Bill have on?
@scoon21179 ай бұрын
This dude lived 99 yearz
@alohm9 ай бұрын
Philosophy does build bridges: in the mind, and philosophy bakes ideas rather than cakes ;)
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
lol
@dnejejeje10 ай бұрын
He has no respect for hard workers and looks down on them because he only respects brain and not muscles. Very bad attitute. Someone who is willing to work in a coal mine is to be respected the most
@opposingshore932210 ай бұрын
The fatal flaw of ivory tower intellectuals. Physical intelligence is very real and very valuable .
@Neohedra9 ай бұрын
@@opposingshore9322 Well, most of the great athletes were thinkers as well, I think one can posses both, a hybrid in some sense.
@oliverjamito990210 ай бұрын
Students how can ye know? Nor why to even to know? Nor what is needed for just needed to know? To know what? Even "WHAT" Can't exist in front! Give Gratitude and Honor unto my Heirs commanded to provide space, from here grows, and came with TIME! Why from whom, nor what it took to even given TIME "REASON COME FORTH"! Is like...from without form and void leading towards nothingness extinction! Beloved what is extinction nor nothingness in front of the little child "i" AM? Nevertheless unto all the wise of this world will say DIFFER! Where increase belongs? Keep watch!
@zardoz790010 ай бұрын
We are powerless regarding our collective fate and it will unfold by means of its own will and we're just going to have to roll with the punches. Any super ego virtue signaling is silly, to say the least.
@horsymandias-ur10 ай бұрын
How would you feel about the idea that there might be something akin to a science of history, or that at which sociology/psychology/political science aims? I think I am in agreement with Adler when he claims that the end of science is production. Francis Bacon would claim that “what is true in knowledge is efficient in operation” (that is to say, ultimately, that knowledge is power). If the “collective fate” is liable to be an object of knowledge I would believe it to be liable towards technological limitation, as well (which for me is cause for optimism but I could see why that might cause despair in others)
@horsymandias-ur10 ай бұрын
P.S. where can I read more about what you’ve shared, if you’ve learned or written about it elsewhere
@skiphoffenflaven80049 ай бұрын
Soooo, modern Americans then. Yep, this is what I see today.
@Modus079 ай бұрын
33:25 The notion of the unconscious certainly appears in non-Western culture long before the 19th century.
@pinecone90459 ай бұрын
Alder should just lecture on his Judaism it's all he's talking about.
@simpinainteasy68010 ай бұрын
So studying is Courageous Hard Work but manual labor is looked down upon. And I see where deindustrilization has led our so called Culture.
@benf253210 ай бұрын
tldr:?
@TreeintheQuad10 ай бұрын
Live life in accordance with reason.
@TreeintheQuad10 ай бұрын
I’m suspicious of that myself, and I’m certainly no Aristotle scholar. But such is the risk of skipping the video lol
@horsymandias-ur10 ай бұрын
tldr: no happiness ever came from a tl;dr
@opposingshore932210 ай бұрын
TLDR: there are no shortcuts to knowledge, wisdom, or understanding. we must work and sacrifice
@ginomazzei10769 ай бұрын
“Compared to Jung psychologists like Adler and Freud were monomaniacal” -Aldous Huxley
@ishaansingh98999 ай бұрын
Different Adler
@mykrahmaan340810 ай бұрын
NEED must be quantized GEOPHYSICALLY and clearly specified as the "same number of elementary particles of each person" existing in GEOLETS corresponding to each person inside the earth. Thus the feeling of needs (hunger, fear, pain) indicate the necessity for each person to access own GEOLET and collect all relevant particles from it, after which LIFE FUNCTION (= satisfaction of needs) would become eternal. This implies every being can be immortal and there are only finite number of beings possible to be manufactured by this earth, hence all immersed ones (= dead ones) retrace and resurrectable by us, once we derive the mathematical model of this manufacturing process of the earth. This earth is the only bodies manufacturing vessel in the entire known universe and deserves to be analyzed as such, the absurd Copernican mediocrity assumption and consequent justification of LAWS OF NATURE with all its evil, conditioned by a power (now called NATURE instead of GOD), IRRESPECTIVE OF WHAT WE OURSELVE DO IN IT, notwithstanding. Once we derive that mathematical model we would be able to rectify the errors in that process that cause all evil (disasters, predation, diseases ~ which includes all violence ~ and death), so that we can sustain evil free life function eternally, instead of PREDICTING them (evil) the way current science sets as its ultimate purpose. PREVENTION of evil is not found even in the vocabulary of the FATALISTICALLY SLAVISH experimental and observational science. PREVENTION OF ALL EVIL must be the sole purpose cum criterion of proof of all search for knowledge.
@meilstone9 ай бұрын
The glory of man is love, not intellect. Intellect is man's demise!
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
Tell me what you know of love?
@meilstone8 ай бұрын
@@thomasd2444 I know there isn't enough of it in this World...
@EquateNorex3 ай бұрын
No, the glory of a man is reason, and to smaller extent love. But love itself will not get one anywhere. One needs reasons to do it right. And it is the reason that the world is lacking. If we had only love and not so much reason, some day the world may end, or maybe become some kind of shittystan. Without reason everyone would fight with everyone, there will be no progress, no defense against illnesses and nature. What are you even talking about?
@meilstone3 ай бұрын
@@EquateNorex What would you say is more likely to cause a war: love or reason?
@EquateNorex3 ай бұрын
@@meilstone (1/2). Sure, thanks for an interesting question. Let's assume causing unjust war. Setting aside the trivial case, that sometimes appeasement and not starting a war is morally horrible. Wars can make sense and be extremely good, moral and just. E.g. if people stopped Hitler much earlier, instead of appeasing him and making 'peace', there wouldn't be such enormous atrocities >50-80 million dead, and millions people burned alive in the camps on holocaust. So let's focus solely on unjust wars. First, let's take love. Yes, of course it can cause with good likelihood. Fictional classical example is the Troy war. One may say love was only the formal reason. But if Paris didn't take Helen, there would have been no cause to start this war for Greeks, that only recently ended it. Not all wanted this war. Troy wouldn't be slaughtered and destroyed, if there was not love. Though it is somewhat fictional, it is not far-fetched, when things like that I guess lead to actual wars. Various love and hate stories between Monarchs. There is very famous French saying: Cherchez la femme - 'look for the woman'. It is a cliche in detective fiction, used to suggest that (at least in some cases) often cause for some things, including bad ones, is some romantic thing. Or when parents are stupid (lack reason), but 'love' their children in a wrong way and spoil them, the world may get horrible bloody killers and criminals. I will not spend time on bla bla bla that love and hate go close to each other. As well as with other strong feelings, potentially extreme passions, that then may result in conflicts. Let me jump to actual hard truth/fact about such feeling as love: lots of love indeed increase likelihood of enmity toward other social groups, which are considered "they" and "not your tribe". And the reason is: oxytocin which very very closely correlated with love (including to a partner, mother, friend). Sorry, but we are socio-biological creatures. Biology has its own laws. Here short summary, Scientific American (t.ly/uSlzB). I think this fact just potently refutes all this ideas of love somewhat helping. I know saying that love will save the world is very beautiful words. But it is really good to follow actual truth, wisdom, and facts about the world - rather than just beautiful words, poetry and dogmas (they have nothing to do with reality).
@insaneserb77869 ай бұрын
A 52 minute long infomercial to sell this grifter's book... Muricans, please, never change 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@Lesboi3 ай бұрын
Bruh
@ForSoxialBoy9 ай бұрын
All virtue or no virtue, woah
@thomasd24448 ай бұрын
Correct. Do you desire correctly or do you desire incorrectly ?
@allen54557 ай бұрын
Moyer's is such a left-winger, a pre-WOKE dandy.
@progyandas965010 ай бұрын
His interpretation of Aristotle's automation theory and unskilled work is too far stretched and appalling.
@JamilaJibril-e8h9 ай бұрын
Is seeking wealth turned by time to overweight 😔
@kihondosa410 ай бұрын
Very opinionated yet popular. One shouldn't say what another person is thinking. It's just nonsense
@dreznik10 ай бұрын
decent america before the woke disaster
@mariolongtin82719 ай бұрын
Is this Ryan Holiday's dad? Haha they did similar works. This Adler guy apparently didn't know about Stoicism 😅
@706easy10 ай бұрын
Real ninjas know Plato body Aristotle any day
@meatisburg3r10 ай бұрын
Facts
@tangerinesarebetterthanora706010 ай бұрын
Plato was a impish momma's boy.
@categories506610 ай бұрын
Aristotle bodied Plato in his book the Metaphysics