The mayor of Chicago once made a rule saying "NO more ugly buildings" since then Chicago has seen many remarkable a beautiful new buildings.
@Subaruiz14 жыл бұрын
A building is ugly by definition
@mariettawilson92564 жыл бұрын
Hmm. just In the eyes of the beholder.
@d.b.levitt4 жыл бұрын
@@mariettawilson9256 *builds literal garbage* "ALl iN tHe Eye oF thE BEhOldEr"
@jeffreykalb97523 жыл бұрын
Chicago is a cesspool, architecturally and morally.
@joshuagraham9673 жыл бұрын
@@Subaruiz1 no, no its not
@Publiopf9 жыл бұрын
I've been watching all the videos and taking notes. I'm totally in love with this channel and I felt an immediate connection with John Ruskin. I live in the suburbs of Rio and I sometimes feel depressed with the appaling general appearance of the city as a whole and specially the suburbs and outskirts. I many times thought I was being too shallow for giving so much value to aesthetics. Now I have Ruskin to back me up. (Oh, and I was also awestruck with Venice as was he).
@peroz10009 жыл бұрын
I agree with you completely.I too live in a suburb of Rio and it seems to me that the city as a whole is getting uglier and dirtier almost on a day to day basis, and the quality of life is going steadly downhill.Depending on where one lives, there's a great chance that it looks and smells more than Birmingham or Manchester in Ruskin's day than Venice, or even worse!
@matheusmelo60227 жыл бұрын
Looking at this comment now I feel like its author would probably want to go back 2 years and live the ugly life of Rio instead of getting robbed on a daily basis. Oh well.
@marcoswillianl4 жыл бұрын
I live in Porto Velho and i feel the same way about here, it gets me to the point of hating the city, but i think It should not be this way.
@mikemurdoch98823 жыл бұрын
yes fellow Journeymn Publio, so true, almost a true and working utopia
@OGDailylama2 жыл бұрын
He was ignorant of the real mechanisms that cause architectural ugliness. Government regulations cause ugliness just as the do with beauty within the architectural segment. He doest account for the people at 5he bottom paying for his “Centrally Planned” projects. Both him and Morris were just looking for excuses for their subpar business performance. They refused to say it was their fault. It was the consumers fault. 🤦♂️
@samdean779 жыл бұрын
This channel really likes the push for external beauty for the massess...never thought much of it, didn't think it was possible to be a different way. I love this channel
@jacob_massengale8 жыл бұрын
lol that trump tower rising in the background at 0:40
@musicstewart97446 жыл бұрын
jacob massengale especially then hearing "make it uglier"
@yrobtsvt5 жыл бұрын
Weird thing is that this video is from April 2015, before Trump officially became political
@damaristighe32275 жыл бұрын
A Jacob Massengale - There's the mandatory dig at Trump Tower but where are the looming satanic mills of social media giants? Sad!
@filipinophantomАй бұрын
Came here to post this! And it was 9 years ago.
@frankwalker78238 жыл бұрын
I couldn't agree more with Ruskin. I live in gold coast Australia and I find it beautiful. I am faced with a problem that I probably need to move away to get a career but for me it's like I would rather be dead than live in a barren ugly place! The purpose of earning more money is to have a better life but it's not better!
@andya26652 жыл бұрын
That "barren ugly" place is a beautiful desert . There is nowhere else I would rather live than in the barren desert. What Ruskin forgets is that beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
@siciliano19846 жыл бұрын
The analysis of John Ruskin was always in my mind, because if we look closely at our environment here in germany, we can see that everything is aligned and designed to be efficient to business and not for beauty or for pleasure!
@martynastreigys2794 жыл бұрын
This also ties to part of Heidegger's philosophy of how technology distorts our view of nature and things.
@rodjin94042 жыл бұрын
!!!!!
@favrawr2 жыл бұрын
Even the beautiful sights and buildings in Venice appeal to tourists bringing in money
@CoreyAnton9 жыл бұрын
Many thanks.
@TomRedman869 жыл бұрын
4:59. 'There are too many shoddy things in the world', he uses my home city of Sheffield as the example the cheeky bastard hahaha.
@sf58237 жыл бұрын
😀 spoken like a true Sheffielder! 👍
@OdditiesandRarities6 жыл бұрын
Orwell said that Sheffield has to be the ugliest city IN THE WORLD. haha
@vijay-bn4ve4 жыл бұрын
Ruskin had the most profound influence on Gandhi. He read Unto this last on a train journey and resolved to model his life around it's message. He even translated it into his mother tongue Gujarati as Sarvodaya.
@magicknight132 жыл бұрын
Oh, thank you! I never knew that
@SimplyMayaB19949 жыл бұрын
This channel... ♥ Last semester I took political philosophy and this semester I'm taking aesthetics (among other things, philosophy and humanities are awesome majors) - So this video is kind of a match made in philosophical heaven.
@OdditiesandRarities6 жыл бұрын
I always think about the beauty of a place it is the first thing I think of. I find it surprising that people are not bothered about it. Then again I am an art student.
@b.terenceharwick32228 жыл бұрын
Beauty as a core dimension of life for rethinking a sustainable political economy...perhaps we're only JUST beginning to understand John Ruskin a couple of centuries later...
@ildipali80759 жыл бұрын
Such an extraordinary man
@stvp684 жыл бұрын
Numbing mass media is still a big problem
@keltic079 жыл бұрын
What would Ruskin say about gentrification, where often times places become more beautiful, but the poor are effectively kicked out of where they live?
@keltic079 жыл бұрын
***** I'm still concerned that the argument you propose in this video can be used to justify gentrification. Regardless, thank you for allowing me to think about where I live in a more profound way! Cheers
@wolfgaenger9 жыл бұрын
Beautiful, thank you yet again!
@SleepBeforeYouThink4 жыл бұрын
Did Ruskin consider the fact that on average there are many more sunny days in Italy than there are in England each year. In general England has terrible grey weather. We can’t change the weather, so no matter how hard architects work on the city it will still stay grey and depressing in certain areas of the world.
@Tomartyr7 жыл бұрын
4:36 So I guess Ruskin would be happy that most students later work in the service industry?
@danki2000daniel9 жыл бұрын
Can you do a video on Frederick Douglass, or some black history greats? I love your videos. You do a great job. Thanks
@danki2000daniel9 жыл бұрын
Thank you sir
@nickshel9 жыл бұрын
daniel harvey iv Just looked this guy up, thanks!
@gnuPirate8 жыл бұрын
+Daniel harvey The chocolate kyle kulinski You might be able to do a good job of it yourself . Give it a go. Do one on Granville Woods, too.
@muanamuluba66848 жыл бұрын
And Fanon Frantz, he was a great philosophy.
@celesteyoung15057 жыл бұрын
Muana Muluba .
@thebotanicalmind9 жыл бұрын
I love these guys and get so fed up that we are unable to change the world. Why is it that the group or herd mentality is slow to learn from individuals in the tribe?
@TheGamingnerd214 жыл бұрын
His collection in Sheffield is beautiful and worth a visit.
@desaishreevallabh65786 жыл бұрын
Thanks for elaboratedexploitation’s and images.
@cindychen7835 жыл бұрын
I love your video so much!
@Seediya9 жыл бұрын
At 4:43, why is it "the duty of creative privileged people..."? And does connect with your other film about the rich are not seeking more money, but rather recognition?
@rabeehibrahim22897 жыл бұрын
You can also add people like frantz Omer Fanon and Malcolm X and Edward Said bio too. And also people like Deluez , and present writers also
@Eric-Marsh9 жыл бұрын
I like it. We've made a number of trips lately to Europe and China and when I return to America I alway notice that we lack the numbers of statues, parks and other esthetic elements that are common elsewhere.
@naftalibendavid9 жыл бұрын
This one is particularly outstanding, though I've enjoyed every single one of your videos. I often wonder what books you would recommend on each topic. Is there a Ruskin biography we might find compelling? A long documentary you'd recommend? I don't mean to put you all on the spot; I just want to know where to find more relevant information.
@DuskAndHerEmbrace133 жыл бұрын
Search “John Ruskin Peter Fuller” on KZbin. He’s an art critic and he did a documentary about him and William Morris
@aydenbran60588 жыл бұрын
5:01 Lol, an amiga running Xp. Nice video though, I appreciate the attention to detail and all of the content on your channel
@garygrasmoen52584 ай бұрын
Ruskin is idealized as a progenitor of social justice, conservation, and a renewed crafts movement. However, politically, in Nazi Germany, Ruskin was seen as an early British National Socialist. William Montgomery McGovern's From Luther to Hitler (1941) identified Ruskin as a thinker who made Nazism possible, and one 1930s German headmaster told his students that "Carlyle and Ruskin were the first National Socialists." More recently, Ruskin's works have also influenced Phillip Blond and the Red Tory movement.
@rbj57673 жыл бұрын
I've found my new Inspiration ❣️❣️❣️ THANK YOU!!👍🌎🙏🧔⚡🌴🐦😻🎉🎉
@leoarenque94697 жыл бұрын
can you make a video about Thomas Carlyle? I save some of your videos and watch it again, thanks for making videos like this.
@giestas9 жыл бұрын
Fascinating. Would like to know more about him / his ideas. Any suggestions on where to begin? Like a book where he might have expressed these ideas, or someone else might have written about him?
@giestas8 жыл бұрын
Reading it, loving it!
@melorafaelas5 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for posting this video. Great work!
@craigenputtock Жыл бұрын
The late author of "The Polity of Beasts" was a big Ruskin fan. It shows in that novel, as well as others of his.
@jasonsmith902 Жыл бұрын
Town planners didn't listen to him then
@nickc20119 жыл бұрын
If anyone's interested I'm fairly certain that the centre sketch at 1:22 is San Marco Cathedral with the Doge's Palace behind - though I may be wrong since I'm only basing that on three wonderful days visiting Venice and three years playing Assassin's Creed. I'm assuming that that's one of his sketches, anyone know for sure?
@SersonPerson8 жыл бұрын
I can't wait until this channel hits the one million subscriber milestone.
@finn60489 жыл бұрын
If everything and everywhere is beautiful, than beauty ceases to exist. It becomes normal, no longer special. Without the ugly or the monotonous, beauty is no longer special, no longer appreciable. Does that mean the ugly needs to be so bad as to be disparaging and soul crushing? No! But not everything should be "beautiful," so we don't diminish how special beauty truly is
@ThePeaceableKingdom9 жыл бұрын
Beauty (which mustn't be mentioned now) was then a living presence or an aching absence day and night... George Santayana (as quoted by Arthur Danto)
@jeiryasuth9 жыл бұрын
Love these videos!! keep them coming please!!
@braydenanderson25208 жыл бұрын
Could you do a video on Henry George?
@dearistocratia3288 жыл бұрын
AUTHORS: This is an exceptionally good series because you bring into focus the shared challenge throughout each generation: their ongoing attempt to solve the problem of modernity: morality at our new industrial scale, (just as the great transformation in the 5th century bc was created by the scale of our cities and the markets they created between them. Most of these men are demonized by one politically evangelical side or the other despite their various attempts to solve the same problem. It's especially helpful that you touch on the ... exaggerated focus of each of these thinkers, as 'the one way' to solve the problem. "If we just got everyone to believe this..." is a pretty obvious attempt to replace christianity with a new value system equally homogenous. What isn't obvious is that each proposes (like monotheistic religion before them) a MONOPOLY solution to the problem rather than tailoring the social order to the abilities of each class - given that the challenge of modernity is the increasing value provided by our ability to learn, rather than our ability to labor or escape labor. I think this is the question that we beg but are collectively afraid to answer because it will eliminate the necessary democratic illusion of equality, that replaced the necessary monopoly illusion of monotheism. The one persona I feel you are missing is perhaps Thorstein Veblen. Your addition of Ruskin's aesthetics is ... delightful - I wouldn't have thought to add him. You've elegantly illustrated that these are all collectively moral men attempting to preserve monotheistic cultural homogeneity in new institutional form. But now that you illustrated the similarities in ambition, it might be just as informative and helpful to illustrate the dissimilarities advocated by the outliers: Marx/Keynes/Rawls(lower/left classes) on one end, Locke/Smith/Hayek(middle/libertarian class) in the center, and Nietzche/Darwin/Spencer on the other(upper/right classes). It might be interesting to compare the moral approach you've taken, with the three competing class propositions that would illustrate the conflict between classes more clearly. My position is that we are always just choosing between dysgenic, compromise, and eugenic reproduction. And that the rest of our pontification regardless of position is all justification of those priors. Anyway. I'm just offering thoughts as a way of appreciating your work. Thank you. Curt Doolittle The Propertarian Institute
@eldromedario33157 жыл бұрын
De Aristocratia I'd love to have an option to save ur comment so that i could come back later. Too lazy to screenshot erthing. On phone it'd take a while.
@puzzlefactory17593 жыл бұрын
Mark Corrigan loves this guy
@RobSmith20169 жыл бұрын
Ruskin reminds sort of Robert Owen the 19th century Social reformer.
@jonaslundholm9 жыл бұрын
I thought Ruskin was an art critic. I remember him from series about the pre-Raphaelites from a few years ago. :)
@Hiphop101ize9 жыл бұрын
is Alain de Botton the voice of this channel?
@455fardeen4 жыл бұрын
Yes!
@yinoveryang42463 жыл бұрын
Animation is hilarious. Especially at 1:40. A 1970’s Terry Gilliam would be proud of that one
@LordProteus5 жыл бұрын
Why are the languages for the subtitles on these videos randomized? :s It appears that the default for this video is Portuguese.
@plartoo9 жыл бұрын
Ruskin must be rich to take a yearly trip to Venice and take time drawing stuff that he likes about the town...
@plartoo9 жыл бұрын
***** Thank you for the added info. I also realized my question was redundant because you mentioned in the video that he inherited a lot of wealth when his father passed away.
@metnoc108 жыл бұрын
Cool perspective :)
@tryingmybest2069 жыл бұрын
Wow. U guys actually reply to comments.
@Rikodou998 жыл бұрын
The Trump Tower rising at 0:44 is the cherry on the cake.
@pointlesstalk69245 жыл бұрын
That not so subtle diss at Oscar Wilde at 4:10
@Blackwingsss3 жыл бұрын
Why do people always need to blame capitalism for fuck's sake. Is it that hard to think a little deeper?
@jhngrg8132 Жыл бұрын
You don't think deeper
@sidheshpatil71204 жыл бұрын
I believe appropriation of land is a great way to develop a sense of belonging to your environment. Whilst farmers enjoy such a wonderful opportunity, many in densely populated suburbia are presented with little to no pathways of enjoying the therapeutic benefits of working with soil. For example: The suburban life of Mumbai. I remember my days toiling under the sun, gardening, landscaping, brick laying, concreting, working with a dingo (i.e forklift),.....but that was in Australia.
@user-zd8hh2sd5w8 жыл бұрын
I go to ruskin college in Oxford and it rocks! Check the Wiki..
@MrManUnicorn9 жыл бұрын
If they show one more painting of a guy in a coat standing on a rock imma pop off
@transvestosaurus8784 жыл бұрын
Mike Lee did him dirty in Mr Turner!
@Comical_LLama9 жыл бұрын
Please make a video on the philosophy of Gandhi
@DavidByrne859 жыл бұрын
This channel is fantastic, thank you.
@davidlost15276 жыл бұрын
I just read his book art and life, and I picked it up thinking it looked cool and that at 98 pages it would be an easy one day read but fuck me I was wrong thing took me nearly two weeks since I had to reread almost every page and could only get though ten to twenty pages a day before I start zoning in and out. But that book blew my mind in the terms of the artist and his art and I was hoping to find a video breaking down the book as a whole since it is a small just with big ideas. But this video help me a little bit..
@GhostScientist9 жыл бұрын
I wonder how ugly our built environment has to get before another Ruskin appears?
@bolivar17899 жыл бұрын
TalesOfTheLyke Hi there! I think Alain and the people who work in TSOL have a lot in common with Ruskin, in terms of being fully engaged in trying to change the world into a more beautiful place. Check this: alaindebotton.com/living-architecture/ Well yes, some of those buildings look a bit strange:-) But I often think that it is my eyes that grew numb to certain type of beauty, because I am not that familiar with it. We can always learn to enjoy and appreciate though, if we are open and curious enough.
@GhostScientist9 жыл бұрын
***** Interesting buildings. I like the variety of designs. Layman that I am, I think architecture may be like music in that something new may initially startle us but later on can become a favourite.
@davidbernal88819 жыл бұрын
Loving these! Please do Kierkegaard :)
@davidbernal88819 жыл бұрын
***** Thanks :)
@pachho8083 жыл бұрын
Ruskin was alive before and after the entire life of Johann Strauss II
@aars5652 жыл бұрын
I really dont thing that helping rich men decorating the society in order to look more appeal to the eye is the real solution. The workers and citizens need to take power.
@sf58237 жыл бұрын
Although incredibly trivial, I must say that Ruskin's stone & crystal collection is sooo lovely, I'm very envious of it haha...I love Ruskin's ideology...who doesn't want to live in a beautiful well crafted world? I certainly deem it rather important and what is more beautiful and perfect than mother nature herself? Humans are creating ugliness by default in the pursuit of practicality however much of the early craftsmanship is being lost for the pursuit of mass production, it's a very sad affair indeed since much that is produced today is absolutely tat and often tacky.
@noticias61119 жыл бұрын
Interesting how an aesthetic appeal can be relevant to politics
@CarlosSanchez-ev3bn9 жыл бұрын
can someone (else) please comment on the fact that most...if not all of the videos i have seen from The School of Life contain people who were from wealthy families? Not complaining at all. I was just wondering if someone had a comment on this.
@mashudakarbary14707 жыл бұрын
CHAPO 13 omg i noticed this as well!! i have no idea why
@wachiramrm39258 жыл бұрын
I keep spotting more and more subtle references to the Trump menace in your videos, years before many started taking him seriously.
@Kuudere-Kun2 жыл бұрын
Did he ever speak against Racism or address Gender issues?
@lebenstraum6666 жыл бұрын
This presentation ignores his extreme British chauvinism. His 'prettification' of the world based on his experience of Venice deals only with the superficial since Venice, as everywhere else in civilization, has its own poorly-paid cleanup crews and lowly occupations, often outside the Venetian island itself i.e. that Venice itself is an island of privilege and Ruskin wished this illusion for Britain too - ignoring those who actually do the work for miserable pay. And their pay will be all the more miserable the more the employers follow the principles of Ruskin's 'Unto This Last'.
@craffte8 жыл бұрын
James Fox? yeah, I recognize his voice.
9 жыл бұрын
Hello, I deeply and sincerely admire your work although I have just discover it. However I am quite keen to find the full text of videos. How can I find the full texts of videos ?
@fastsavannah76844 жыл бұрын
Ok, so he basically read the Renaissance patronage/meritocratic milieu of the Italian city-states through 19th century English aesthetic pragmatism. That'll get you at least a couple of cultural centres named after you for sure!
@marcin1706979 жыл бұрын
John Ruskin had some good ideas that he later developed into the actual projects. I admire his way of thinking about beauty and that is quite disappointing to see some parts of the world, being unkempt, and I agree that we still should follow his philosophy. He wanted the change in the world; I believe that we should follow this philosophy, because we can make the world a better place, because the world ain't perfect.
@SinerAthin9 жыл бұрын
+Marcin Iwankiewicz I wonder what John Ruskin he would think of contemporary Singapore.
@marcin1706979 жыл бұрын
+SinerAthin I actually dont know much about current situation in Singapore. Can you explain further your point? :)
@SinerAthin9 жыл бұрын
Marcin Iwankiewicz Singapore has been widely described as one of the cleanest cities on the planet, and in terms of architecture may look like a modern version of Venice. There are plenty of images available on Google of the city, and they're pretty impressive. Granted, Singapore is very strict and autocratic. Their strict rules might explain how they managed to keep their city clean :P
@marcin1706979 жыл бұрын
SinerAthin Thank you for reply. And I shall check some pictures of Singapore. In meantime, I have question: do you think strict government is good in order to ensure cleanness of a city, as in case of Singapore? I'm just curious? :p
@SinerAthin9 жыл бұрын
Marcin Iwankiewicz It's definitely a factor, but the most important thing is that you have a strict government who provides *incentives* to people. You need to introduce obligations for the citizens in your city to keep their property clean. Like fining people who allow their property to fall into decay and ruin the city landscape. The fines in turn can be used to maintain & improve the city landscape. Giving the government the final say in regards to city architecture is also critical for the possibility of large scale projects. If you let people do whatever they wish with their property, people will usually build rather haphazardly without any grand vision in their mind. That is why you need to centralize city planning among a small group tasked with a certain vision, like sectioning the city, building grand roads to solve infrastructure problems. You also have the issue of the few vs the many. Take India and China. If you in China wants to build a giant hydro dam that will benefit the vast majority but lead to the displacement of a few families, the government has the power to undergo such a project. It's quite different in India, which suffers from a weak government and strong family ties, making it difficult for the government to undergo massive infrastructure projects for the benefit of the country as they get bogged down in legal, family and religious disputes. To keep a city clean, especially a large one, it requires incentives for the citizens owning property, large-scale architectural organization and city planning, and a strong government with a utilitarian vision willing to coerce a few for the betterment of the many.
@VictorHarwell Жыл бұрын
Lords article Artistic Vendetta Mudeo Starting collective ax Paris reservation on The pVT Commonwealth Marathon
@metaphysicswithariyana2794 Жыл бұрын
Thank you, sir. I live in Ruskin 😊
@sparkcrushervcm9 жыл бұрын
Fascinating.
@billwalton45712 ай бұрын
Beauty is evidence of God. We should be doing our best to increase it. Its one of the only things that makes life enjoyable.
@khms10004 жыл бұрын
Not everyone has luxury to work towards these thoughts.
@wisdommorepreciousthanrubi83215 жыл бұрын
He was a paedophile freemason occultist. In a letter to his physician John Simon on 15 May 1886, Ruskin writes that “I like my girls from ten to sixteen I’ve got some darlings of 8-12-14-just now.
@akiraaidenpadilla35982 жыл бұрын
Link for proof?
@vinm3002 жыл бұрын
Well scripted and well narrated. And just the right length - to consume with one's lunch.
@almightyjaden21313 жыл бұрын
My real name is ruskin....
@gavranarh9 жыл бұрын
Most Ruskin's Seven lamps or seven laws really have no place in any serious contemporary conversation about architecture. Even at the time, they were a regress into the safety of the quaint because of Ruskin's inability or ineptitude to deal with the galloping modernity as, for example, Otto Wagner did. We find ourselves more than ever in similar and even more strenuous circumstances, so a recoil form the present and peddling nostalgia is understandable, if not exactly palatable. Sacrifice, obedience, God, even "beauty" (what/whose beauty? the 19th century cows-in-the-meadow beauty?), all terms pivotal to his approach to architecture, pose an insurmountable obstacle towards any meaningful conversation or applicable theory because of their utter ambiguity. Only a layman would delude himself that those have any real power and meaning in practicing architecture today. Ruskin's relevance is, at best, as an socialist offshoot into art theory, which is perfectly ok, but let's call a spade by it's true name.
@ThePeaceableKingdom9 жыл бұрын
gavranarh "Only a layman would delude himself that [beauty has] any real power and meaning in practicing architecture today." Probably true. (to the eternal shame of the last half-century's architects!...)
@galwww9 жыл бұрын
gavranarh not sure i fully understand what you said, but if i did then here's my answer: his beliefs at least from the video dont seem like ambiguity, they speak to the nature of the human mind( symmetry, faces,nature water etc..) things a machine care not for, but a fragile human needs and draws for comfort and inspiration. our houses have windows for the purpose of hanging laundry and examine the weather, but also balconies to step outside our cement prison. a more practical approach would remove the balcony for more inner space, but most will still rather have the balconies for their beauty. then receive more room for storage. cows-in the meadow are beautiful, as they show our control over our sustenance but also our equilibrium with nature. to take that equilibrium and throw it aside for more sustenance is survival over flourishing!
@carracci76659 жыл бұрын
gavranarh You could also ask the average non-elite person on the street what they prefer - architecture being built for people - a utilitarian aesthetic made of concrete and glass, or a building made with real craftsmanship where the smallest ornament mirrors the overall structure of the building and vice versa. Here's to second guessing what they would choose! Then again modern 'architecture' is made for utility first not people or communities. The 'layman' - and one might assume the environmentalist - would choose Ruskin over Modernism. A Cathedral over a McDonalds drive thru. Quinlan Terry has a list of the sustainability of using traditional materials vs modern on his firms website. In terms of energy, durability and sustainability its all a win, win. So whose really being contemporary, relevant and modern here? The discourse of Modern architecture and industry is causing global warming, John Ruskin and William Morris NEVER did.
@dapperchap5729 жыл бұрын
***** As long as you wern't married to him ;-)
@SydneyApplebaum7 жыл бұрын
Your opinion of what is Architecture seems too stringent. You are standing a gatekeeper and worse belittling views different from your own subjective (although widely accepted) view as that of "laymen". Large abstract frameworks allow for varied interpretation. Who's beauty? Your beauty.
@BedboundME2 жыл бұрын
He also wrote he was a proper Tory who believed in inequality
@Squalidarity9 жыл бұрын
Tl;dr: Quit whining about stuff on Facebook and actually do something. :P
@klingefjord9 жыл бұрын
+MLG _PwN Ts;dw --- too slow, didn't watch, seems more appropiate
@Cantbuyathrill2 жыл бұрын
Listening to this voice is like being ensconced in velvet. Yes, that's right: I said "ensconced".........What of it!!!
@megadan662 жыл бұрын
If Ruskin would have traveled more of Italy, he most likely would have found some Italian slums and places that are poor and run down. Also, compare England to Italy at that time. England richer country, and more Industrial. And more populated. Also, I think he should have toured some amazing castles and churches and art museums, etc. Guy was born rich and never worked a day in his life. He's just another rich idealist......And then he became an industrialist, philanthropist Good for him........Was beginning to believe he was a Marxist...
@Formitius5 жыл бұрын
The old rich guy socialist it never gets old they want to attack capitalism even though capitalism was the very reason they were born rich Ultimately though nothing wrong with wanting things to look nicer and be more aesthetically pleasing
@MrGanack8 жыл бұрын
HAHAHA ! The merchant republic of Venice was built on an early form of capitalism ! It was prosperous and beautiful precisely because it was capitalistic and allowed competent commonmen to thrive thanks to their work !
@mirkosaric85868 жыл бұрын
You've missed the point.
@brennodelucca14468 жыл бұрын
So was the U.S., but I don't see much architectural brilliance at all being born out of there.
@gothicfan519 жыл бұрын
I know that TSoL reads the comments and I appreciate that you do, so I have a question, it is rather socially acceptable nowadays to cover either great capitalists or great 'left wingers.' However will school of life ever consider covering those that are nowadays considered very taboo* , namely Benito Mussolini(Fascism), Adolf Hitler(Nazism) and other theorists of this type. The reason I ask is that the economic ideas of these systems are very fascinating and were buried under the crimes against the humanity committed by the two leaders. *I disagree with them too but isn't it the role of philosophers to ask questions and explore possibilities, regardless if such ideas are not supported by the society.
@gothicfan519 жыл бұрын
***** How about Chomsky ,Bakunin or Jacque Fresco then?
@john-juanmartinez93983 жыл бұрын
-No polotics to exerce in the future.
@punditpounder51534 жыл бұрын
at 0:38, "In a world that's now a days not only growing more polluted and unequal..." as a Trump tower pops up over a 55 gal drum in a creek. Statements like this cause me to question the efficacy of the everything else you might say. At what point in human history was the world more equal? When 80% of the population were poor peasants? Or maybe you mean 19th Century Europe that so vexed Karl Marx; you know, the same Europe that Ruskin lived in. Or maybe you mean 1970's South Africa. Please, tell me when the world was more "equal". I suppose 10,000 years ago when all 300,000 people on the planet where hunter gatherers. The question isn't whether there is a 1%, but how many gradations there are among the remaining 99%. If the 1% are nobles, and the next 1% merchants, and the remaining 98% are peasants crapping in the dirt, it's hardly more equal than the US today. Even Cuba has a 1%. As for pollution, you clearly have no knowledge of what if was like in the US in the 1960's. Plastic in the ocean's is NOTHING compared to the Cuyahoga River catching fire, or Lake Michigan devoid of fish, or the Los Angeles basin so filled with smog you could not see the mountains from 1/4 of a mile away. Puhlease. What a ridiculous claim that we live in a world growing more polluted and unequal. You've never once stopped to investigate what it would take to replace all the plastic we use with other substances, and how much mining and energy would be required to produce those substitutes.
@pauldarling3303 жыл бұрын
trustifarian who has never worked a day in his life has all the answers. Heard this one before. If we wish to have a discussion on beauty, Socrates (Plato) did it with far more insight and depth.
@jhngrg8132 Жыл бұрын
He worked at his guild of st George
@JohnChampagne8 жыл бұрын
What if we took a survey and asked people whether there were too many advertising billboards? We could charge a fee to those who erect the billboards, if surveys show that most people want to see less of that form of visual blight. Raise the fee incrementally until most people polled say it is not a problem. "Some people believe that the prevalence of outdoor advertising signs and billboards is too high to allow for an aesthetically pleasing visual landscape. Is the prevalence of outdoor lighting so great that our ability to see the stars has become too severely diminished? We may want to adopt a few "lights out" nights, to remind ourselves that there are stars out there. If enough people want this to happen, then this vision will be borne out in reality. " - from: Minimum Wage vs. Minimum Income: gaiabrain.blogspot.com/2012/09/equal-ownership-of-natural-resource.html
@kellyfrost10523 жыл бұрын
Ruskin and Morris were so right!
@mbarritt93349 жыл бұрын
I like this guy...
@hadders70406 жыл бұрын
...
@vlad86068 жыл бұрын
Definitely an introvert.
@cayr35278 жыл бұрын
he was terrible as a person but highly intellectual.