LINKS AND CORRECTIONS: If you want to work with an experienced study coach teaching maths, philosophy, and study skills then book your session at josephfolleytutoring@gmail.com. Previous clients include students at the University of Cambridge and the LSE. Support me on Patreon here: patreon.com/UnsolicitedAdvice701?Link& Sign up to my email list for more philosophy to improve your life: forms.gle/YYfaCaiQw9r6YfkN7
@KamikazeMedias8 ай бұрын
Can you make a video on Nietzche's polonofillia
@Afsanaco8 ай бұрын
I don't know if you know this but you have very intense eyes.
@codenameace-zg6uy8 ай бұрын
Can you make a video about Eastern Philosophy?
@sophiepooks21747 ай бұрын
Next up; 'What stupid people (especially conservatives who love Trump, Tucker Carlson and De Santis) get wrong about Nietzsche' .
@KamikazeMedias7 ай бұрын
@@sophiepooks2174 You instantly assume other side is wrong and idiotic without proof. Your request should not be counted
@Idk_imagine_a_cool_name8 ай бұрын
“Be skeptical about people like me” shows a degree of intellectual honesty that is very rare today
@Delmworks8 ай бұрын
Ironically made me less skeptical of the man-I’d thought he couldn’t live up to his ideals and that he was aware of his limits to some extent is good to know
@davidrobinson76848 ай бұрын
What's rare, I think, is for somebody like him to be aware of the kind of person he is.
@TAiCkIne-TOrESIve8 ай бұрын
I would say the opposite; it's the most intellectually dishonest thing to say. Nietzsche would say, "just own your words." This reminds me of Zizek's joke in which a Rabbi and a rich man both exclaimed that they are nobody and that neither of them deserved God's attention. But they took issue when a beggar exclaimed the same thing, "who does he think he is to claim that he is a nobody?"
@Idk_imagine_a_cool_name8 ай бұрын
@@TAiCkIne-TOrESIve In my opinion it is the only way to own your words, since you take in consideration that you don’t know everything. He is not Nietzsche, he doesn’t know the ultimate intentions and meanings he had. He made us clear that his is only a possible interpretation, and since Nietzsche is notoriously very unclear in some parts of his thinkings, this interpretation may not align with what Nietzsche really thought. I think there is nothing dishonest about acknowledging our limits. I actually agree with the vision you expressed , but imo this is not applicable in this particular instance
@TAiCkIne-TOrESIve8 ай бұрын
@@Idk_imagine_a_cool_nameof course it's his interpretation/opinion. However, it is a total platitude to exclaim that unless it is for some other psychological reasons. Nietzsche would be totally against this way of talking, and I don't have to prepend the former statement with "you don't have to agree with me." I own my interpretation of Nietzsche. I own my opinions. I own my words. I don't have to be extra careful or prepare an excuse. I just say it.
@cerdic65868 ай бұрын
I think the most common misunderstanding is Nietzsche's concept of the will to power. It is not a Machiavellian desire to dominate everyone and everything. Rather, it is a source of unlockable creative energy that an individual harnesses to unify their character and project meaning unto the world. This is partly why Nietzsche so admired Goethe.
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Yes, I am perhaps a little in the middle of the two camps here. I think that Nietzsche does sometimes stray quite close to using "power" in the more straightforward way of dominating others, but that he thinks a "higher" (to use his terminology) will to power would be directed at oneself in the creative way you put here.
@cerdic65868 ай бұрын
@@unsolicitedadvice9198 Indeed, as with Zarathustra. Based on Nietzsche's personal struggles of lifelong obscurity, persistent illness and family issues, I would say that there is also an egotistical projection on Nietzsche's part. By which I mean: he overcame his own lack of power and control by idealising the Ubermensch. One can see an element of the more straightforward way of dominating in Nietzsche's admiration of Napoleon. The reasons for which I suspect may have parallels with Raskolnikov in Crime and Punishment.
@DJWESG18 ай бұрын
Some sort of jungian individuation?
@cerdic65868 ай бұрын
@@DJWESG1 Indeed, though perhaps less nuanced than Jung's analysis. I think Nietzsche was a pioneer thinker on the shadow's relationship with the persona. Many Modernist authors were influenced by his insights into human nature.
@cerdic65868 ай бұрын
@@sumdumbmick I did not mean Machiavellian in terms of realpolitik; I meant it in terms of reducing everything to an equation of power. And I would not say that Nietzsche was a solipsist.
@RICHARDGRANNON8 ай бұрын
27:18 “I encourage you to read Nietzsche yourself” - something I hear myself saying every time I get cajoled into an argument over him. Such strong views, held by so many, who have never turned a page of Nietzsche in their lives. Great video. I subscribed 👍
@samxsara5 ай бұрын
Wow Richard Grannon leaving comments on Nietzsche… it’s going to be a great day! 😊
@gladiustv1708 ай бұрын
People either do not know or have forgotten that Nietzsche was a high-quality philologist. At the age of 24, he became a professor of classical philology at the University of Basel. This became possible thanks to a letter of recommendation from the then first philologist in Germany, Friedrich Wilhelm Ritschl, who is studied as part of the history of philology. He wrote in the letter of recommendation: "Among so many young talents that have developed before my eyes over 39 years, I knew no one who at such an early age possessed such maturity as this Nietzsche. If he is destined to live long - may God grant it! - I predict that one day he will occupy a leading position in German philology. Grateful for ur work. I rarely saw someone on the KZbin who speaks the true information about Nietzsche, except for a few channels, with a few hundred subscribers.
@irrelevantcheese86238 ай бұрын
What’s philology
@gladiustv1708 ай бұрын
It is a set of sciences that study the cultures of peoples expressed in language and literature. In our case, Nietzsche was a classical philologist, which means he studied ancient Rome and ancient Greece. More precisely classical languages, Latin and Ancient Greek, as well as works written in these languages.@@irrelevantcheese8623
@marcelberes4698 ай бұрын
@@irrelevantcheese8623 The study of language. How it came to be, how it works. Another word for it is Linguistics.
@Kingcobra66992 ай бұрын
@@irrelevantcheese8623that's exactly the issue. Philology is simply not known outside academia. I remember having to look it up when I first stumbled over it. So, people might read that he was a philologist, but since they don't know the term they just forget about it. Or remember it wrongly as "philosophy" - which at a 1st glance looks a bit similar as a word....
@lukedemler44218 ай бұрын
Such concise delivery and great interpretation of philosophical works, especially at such a young age you have a bright future.
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Ah thank you! That is very kind of you!
@gravitheist54318 ай бұрын
At his age I had only heard the name Nietzsche
@ImNoBSING8 ай бұрын
Nietzche: "Be yourself" Normal people: "What??! You suggest being a monster and doing evil?"
@swagbag795128 күн бұрын
lol yes being your selfish self is evil
@zeketestorman49818 ай бұрын
It is so hard to talk about Nietzche when people are already in the camp of negativity about him. Especially when they don't want to have their minds changed.
@daanschone15488 ай бұрын
If they don't want to have their minds changed than why talk about philosophy at all with them?
@zeketestorman49818 ай бұрын
@@daanschone1548 Because they don't reveal that until you start countering their ideas and arguments.
@daanschone15488 ай бұрын
@@zeketestorman4981 ha, I'm curious what their philosophy is in that case. I often see more similarities between philosophers than differences. Maybe start the argument with that?
@zeketestorman49818 ай бұрын
@daanschone1548 Orthodox Christian with the position that the overman is an inherently destructive idea and that morality must be defined by God or we wouldn't have morality. I have tried to use an olive branch twice, but that dove just didn't take it. This guy is deep in his philosophy, too, so I don't know how to approach it anymore without giving a hard counter to his religion, which I am hesitant to do. He's a good friend of mine, and his entire life is built around his faith. Heck, he wouldn't even believe me when I told him Nietzche's work was falsified and manipulated into such a way that was antithetical to what he actually said.
@daanschone15488 ай бұрын
@@zeketestorman4981 well, as a Christian he has to agree with being free (having free will) to chose to follow Christ. So he kind of agrees that this is by his own choice. And that if he would disagree with Christian values, he wouldn't be really a Christian right? Furthermore I'd ask him what he thinks those values are and how he applies them in his regular life. Most Christians I know are far away from really following the words of Christ... If he really lives by these he kind of has to be unconventional by today's standards. Which is not unlike what Nietzsche would appreciate. A good question might be if he would live in accordance to Christian values if there turned out to be no God and afterlife? Would he become a nihilist or still value what Christ has taught about how to live well?
@matthayhow62978 ай бұрын
Dude! Finally someone talked about Kaufmann's translation! Love it
@mr.ferg01128 ай бұрын
Look up Wes Cecil
@Justjustinp5 ай бұрын
This has quickly become one of my favorite KZbin channels.
@SadieMage4 ай бұрын
Likewise !!!
@ernststravoblofeld8 ай бұрын
I have a habit of clicking on "5 things you missed..." videos, to see if I actually missed anything. And I almost never missed anything. But this may be the best intro to Neitzche video yet. I wish this existed 30 years ago. Good job!
@Mafyeux8 ай бұрын
It turns out I like Nietzsche more than I hoped I would.
@crosstolerance8 ай бұрын
Could you elaborate more on why this is so?
@user-je3sk8cj6g6 ай бұрын
Everybody that actually understands him, ends up liking him. He advocated strength of character and love for life. And that being kind is a sign of strength; only the weak are vengeful and cruel.
@samxsara5 ай бұрын
I have a twin crush on Nietzsche… we share the same bday
@sarantissporidis3918 ай бұрын
Nietzsche has given a voice to my thoughts for which l had been very skeptical about. The first time I read Thus Spoke Zarathustra I thought that someone is kidding with me. In my opinion Nietzsche was the greatest mind of the last 1000 years and if you want to be aware of the present world you need to study the man.
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
He is certainly a brilliant thinker
@ChocolateMilkCultLeader8 ай бұрын
Conspiracy theory - people that think Nietzsche is a nihilist can't read and just saw the similarities in the names
@saintsword237 ай бұрын
He is a descriptive nihilist, it's just that people extend that to mistaken him for a normative nihilist.
@RemnTheteth8 ай бұрын
This video was great. I never know what to think of Nietzsche, in that he professes a zest for life, but seemingly provides the toxin for it. He unlocks the gate of meaning, and tells us it was always up to us in the first place. The idea that we actively create meaning through our relationship with language and the outside world. Which is a part of us. A very complicated thinker, and I'm really glad I watched this today.
@lynnfisher30377 ай бұрын
Ludwig Wittgenstein did extensive study on the use and value of language, and like Nietzsche he was an enigmatic figure with a fascinating personal history. Just discovered our speaker today. To be so smart and so young💓
@RL.2008 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@exothermic85258 ай бұрын
In college his philosophy grabbed my attention because of Active Nihilism. A few years later his concept of master and slave morality pulled me back in. Now with my fascination of the human species, I’m once again pulled back because of the relation of biology to morality and values. It’s all tied together and I love it.
@-qi8dt8 ай бұрын
This videos starting break at 7:20 was well timed. Nice little time to process what was said, and avoided overwhelming me
@andreasbyczkowski34358 ай бұрын
Nietzsche went through 3-5 phases incl. “insanity” that sometimes contradict one another. This doesn’t diminish his contribution or justify later folks twisting his vibrantly deep message to suit ugly ulterior motives. Most people do morph their philosophies in their different life stages while remaining on some uniquely individual course. Nietzsche will remain as mysterious as the flow of life, thought, emotion and creativity.
@hutchnorris58588 ай бұрын
just bought my first Nietzsche book today, Beyond Good and Evil. Your videos have piqued my interest in philosophy along with some awesome mentors in my undergrad program. I will probably be pursuing a PhD after graduation now.
@dante18758 ай бұрын
Love your videos and love the way you liberate certain misunderstanding of Nietzche
@yatharthwasnik98758 ай бұрын
The way you speak is so Awesome.❤😊 Just notice the way he starts his speech 😎🙌
@Darkside-qy1gx5 ай бұрын
I love this channel ❤
@ReaverSenpai8 ай бұрын
Basing a person on their personal qualities vs immutable traits or whatever banner they fly seems to be the way to go in terms of how we should engage with others in our society. Shame it was twisted by his sister like that, i honestly did not know about her until i heard you mentioning it.
@luisabolado8 ай бұрын
love how much this channel is growing, keep up the good work!
@BBWahoo8 ай бұрын
I decided to pursue a PhD in Philosophy thanks to you. Thanks handsome ❤
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Wow! That is high praise indeed! Best of luck!
@BBWahoo8 ай бұрын
@@unsolicitedadvice9198 No problem! I appreciate the sentiments, and your content is great, gave me the push. Philosophy is theraputic for me, I consider myself highly emotional and the ability to think in third person allows my critical ability to sharpen and those volatile emotions to subside.
@crow_feather8 ай бұрын
@@BBWahoo As someone who's highly emotional myself, I'm going to to start trying to think in third person, too, and see if it helps! Thanks so much for the suggestion! It's great advice! Best of luck to you as you pursue your PhD! ❤️
@mikewalker89568 ай бұрын
Honest question. What kind of job do get with a PHD in philosophy?
@Matthew-cp2eg8 ай бұрын
and how is your youtube channel coming
@deansavage15558 ай бұрын
Love your honestly bro. Subbed. Keep on refining the self there’s an ubermensch in there!!!
@anzeleo31208 ай бұрын
alway get excited when you upload
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Thank you! That is very kind
@alineharam8 ай бұрын
A beautiful and well thought through presentation, albeit abbreviated, of misconceptions, and refutations of those incorrect views. Unsolicited Advice (UA) has outdone himself again. I will not bore the subscribers with praising UA-thank you for your well thought through presentation. From California.
@mithilbhoras59518 ай бұрын
Thank you for the enlightening video, Mr. Handsome Philosopher
@richardrothey17255 ай бұрын
Bravo!! Mesmerizing!
@J-kw8bq8 ай бұрын
Great video, my favourite channel at the moment. Really respect that you make it clear we should form our own opinions
@lynnfisher30377 ай бұрын
Thank you for your scholarship and willingness to share in such a straightforward manner. I have
@shadeaquaticbreeder29148 ай бұрын
17:41 (idk if this is exactly right but) the way I describe it is like when I played baseball when I would get mad instead of lashing out I learned to take that energy and turn it to a hyper focused state where I wouldn't miss a beat.
@Finnatese8 ай бұрын
It may be the man you referenced at the beginning, but I read a book that had a preface by an American writer. He was a Nietzsche scholar and talked about how Freddy was vilified after WW1. Apparently a committee was set up by the League of Nations to hunt down “adherents to the monster”, to which this author was summoned to defend himself. Apparently Freddy was also linked to war hysteria stories about German soldiers melting down bodies of slain soldiers to be used as soap. As part of his inhumane philosopher of using everything and valuing nothing.
@YankaSmith8 ай бұрын
Your interpretations of various philosophies have helped me greatly during the toughest last few months. Gleamed something new and very interesting from all of your videos. Thank you, young man!
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching! I am glad they are helpful!
@AmaraMomoh-fe5uw4 ай бұрын
You have expanded my knowledge. Thank you very much.
@amorfati47522 ай бұрын
Nietzsche's point about instincts was basically "Don't suppress them, tame them instead". He also called Pity his last sin in Zarathustra. He feels strong pity for others (he wrote this in an old letter by the way), he just considers this a flaw of his rather than a virtue.
@MorteWulfe8 ай бұрын
There is an irony here as there are similarities in my personality to what he talks about. I am a purist individualist and for years have recognized how much of the world's woes are based upon inclusion in a group rather than mastery of oneself. However sometimes as of late, feel like the last man by living in comfort, especially from physical pains which have limited me. Never studied philosophy as my first teacher of it in high school made me sour on the subject, but will say that the phrases of being careful when fighting monsters and staring into the abyss always struck and stuck with me. Basically all I have known about it until catching some deep dives like this on YT.
@javierismaelmartinez26538 ай бұрын
Great video. Nitstzche helped me to undestand my depression. To deal with the resentment caused by physical and emocional pain. To find power in the most basic instincts which its connection whast severed by unreasonable shame. And to find a live that is worth living.
@brianland29448 ай бұрын
I have come to appreciate your work very much.Thank you
@dunar10052 ай бұрын
13:48 pity is unkind, yes! Because if I see someone struggling and I think “ oh that poor person doesn’t get it” Then it not just implies that I am above them, but also that I don’t want to share what I have, or want to help them .
@classygentleman84638 ай бұрын
Hello sir ! I am eagerly waiting for your video on Dostoevsky's Brothers Karamazov. Your insights on Dostoevsky's works are amazing !
@Complexity-in-the-Grey8 ай бұрын
Thank you for your work
@jrfii-yt8 ай бұрын
Another great video! Thank you for your efforts, friend.
@brismith27287 ай бұрын
I enjoyed this video, thank you
@Petros_Michalakopoulos7 ай бұрын
Very well said. I often shake my head on how shallow people understand Nietzsche and the conclusions they draw from him.
@Graphanic8 ай бұрын
Loving your content!
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@TwoDudesPhilosophy8 ай бұрын
I love your video and I agree the most with what you are saying in the end. Yet sometimes to explain something complex, you have to dum it down a bit, and make it digestible for some. Nietzsche would disagree with that of course yet from a pragmatic stance ... The last mistake you mention is the one I love about Nietzsche, he contradicts himself consistently in order to make you think. A book for everyone and no one is the undertitle of thus spake zarathustra, and that's just such a beautiful way of showing what is at the core of Nietzsches thought.
@AD-zu8uc8 ай бұрын
Great comment!!
@carlosizabaruiz7 ай бұрын
BEAUTIFUL! Congratulations, young man!
@juno89228 ай бұрын
I love your work on nietzsche, as always thank you for sharing
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@juno89228 ай бұрын
@@unsolicitedadvice9198 always my pleasure
@Michael-el8 ай бұрын
Wow, this is an important piece. Well done.
@aoeuable8 ай бұрын
Good martial artists use zero anger. Videos to watch: Bruce Lee, "emotional content" (short movie excerpt) as well as Ian Sinclair, "Tai Chi vs. MMA (who is nicer?)"
@thepupil28 ай бұрын
Choice seems to be a connective thread between Diogenes and Nietzsche. Thanks for the video.
@BryanReggie8 ай бұрын
Your video on Albert Camus inspired me to buy his books - I have never studied philosophy but your videos make me want to start. This video is likewise fantastic and will give me direction to find even more to read. You have excellent delivery and are concise but also detailed so thank you for what you do.
@jeffreykeith64948 ай бұрын
Thank you for making the distinction. You plant the seeds, but I, as an intelligent, independent human being, must do my research. Think for yourself, people. While we still can. Excellent work, as usual.
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Thank you! I am glad you liked the video
@theblackneon53967 ай бұрын
This is the youtube channel I keep returning to, and have done.
@mbmurphy7778 ай бұрын
I wonder if Nietzsche’s terminal illness wasn’t a psychotic depression once he realized that there is no good answer for nihilism after the death of God, as some substitute would arise. I think he even predicted this in some of his writings, right? Thanks for another great video.
@jacobwiren81428 ай бұрын
It's also possible that his sister betrayed him and that he wasn't sick at all, just depressed from bad family...
@mbmurphy7778 ай бұрын
@@stephannaro2113 yeah, but you really can’t tell from stuff like that. I’ve looked at some of the available information and it’s pretty incomplete and often times contradictory and depression is a lot more common than brain tumors.
@Delmworks8 ай бұрын
One could lead to the other. I’m pretty sure a brain tumor would fuck with anyone’s emotions in the most direct possible fashion
@mbmurphy7778 ай бұрын
@@Delmworks depends on where it is
@sigiligus8 ай бұрын
That’s not how psychotic episodes work.
@FrancisKoczur8 ай бұрын
I think Nietzsche misunderstood religion and more specificily the Christian ethos. Meak is to use the least amount of action for kindness. To keep you sword sheeathed when it isn't required. Being kind is often not being nice. To never hold tradition above the hero. That a person in a role is subordinate to the role. That there is always a better way, and forming the new way from pieces of the old way is a more efficient and effective change, and that these are cycles of death and rebirth. He saw the corruption and mistook that for the structure. His own ideas have been corrupted, and it would be a mistake to do the same again (so please correct any mistakes I have made). A known system that lessens corruption is a competence hierarchy, but it to can be infected without heroes of strong will that rebalance the structure from falling over. He assumed they would create new values, but the process that doesn't start from scratch can be transitioned to more seamlessly and has less waste. Having values without religion has a weak foundation. The idea of have values without the understanding of why they are valued, is akin to having having facts without the understanding of why they are fact.
@scottanos99818 ай бұрын
I always interpreted meek as "self restrained", choosing not to boast even when possible to do so.
@markoslavicek8 ай бұрын
Just read the Antichrist (it's a short but coherent book), you'll find it all there.
@cbeasy18567 ай бұрын
Thank you brother
@thomasfaulkner13418 ай бұрын
Brilliant! Can’t wait to dig in to the video. While you might still be around, maybe I can ask: which of Nietzsche’s books have you read?
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Thank you! And I have read pretty much all of them at some point or another (apart from the odd essay I may have missed). I haven't read many of his letters though, sadly. I've been meaning to get round to it at some point
@thomasfaulkner13418 ай бұрын
Haha didn’t expect less of you somehow! Bravo! Thanks for taking the time to answer :) I’ve always felt people had skewed views of Nietzsche because they focused solely on one of his books - and more often than not, on the later more polemical ones. His middle period especially brings _context_ to the whole, gives us a view of the ground out of which his later works grew. Nietzsche himself considered _Dawn_ and _The Joyful Science_ as commentaries to _Zarathustra_ I believe! ( _Dawn_ is one of my personal favourites, making a subtle yet bright case for possible future ethics.) Anyhow, keep up the great work ! Salutations 👋 Thomas
@MarcosDanteGellar8 ай бұрын
man i have no time to watch your videos. but please keep them long. i put a like automatically in your videos because i know they are good. keep them long and make poeple to commit to knowledge and self awareness. be part of the movement to kill the tik tok culture. bring awareness, knowledge and the need for focused attention during a relatively long time for the internet. you are doing good. keep them doing them. the tiktok "oh i cannot read more than 3 lines of a whatsapp message" culture has by b*lls in the floor. keep fighting the good fight man. i love how passionate you talk, how you reflect in your voice the ideas and things from the authors. keep that style. it is super cool. cheers man.
@pettyaf898 ай бұрын
I mean this in the best way - You kind of look like Nietzsche in that first photo. I think it's the intensity and ratio between the eyes/eye brows. Anyway, thanks for another video for me to binge until I understand it. Cheers from MN!
@Azidoazideazide.8 ай бұрын
I literally searched for videos on this topic last night. What a coincidence!
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Ah! That is certainly fortuitous!
@kamalkumar79788 ай бұрын
Clustering algorithm.
@Rope_Adope3 ай бұрын
I liked that Nissan commercial “play dramatic music” lol
@Finnatese8 ай бұрын
So cool to see this! I read a quote by a British historian from the 50s “Freud, like Nietzsche, is more often read than understood”. I always felt he was so much more positive than what people think, especially those that read him when young to be edgy, then reject his writings later in life as simply adolescent
@andrejg30868 ай бұрын
This is the most interesting video about Nietzsche that I have seen. It provides fascinating insights into his philosophy.
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Thank you! I am really glad you enjoyed it
@dominikakowal3246 ай бұрын
These rapidly moving slides make me dizzy. It's too intense. The content is impressively rich. Thank you for your work.
@AngelMartinez-uz4gz8 ай бұрын
I've started to get intrested in history and philosophy thanks to your channel, are there any books or mediums you would recommend? (I've never read one before)
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Ah well something like Bertrand Russell's History of Western Philosophy is a great overview of lots of different philosophers if that is what you are after
@rosemadder55478 ай бұрын
Gonna be a great video!! I already know ❤
@BaherTamim8 ай бұрын
Great video 🌹
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@turbanheadless8 ай бұрын
Imo nietzsche was 99% correct. Only aspect i disagree is the same as with stoics - sadly our lives cannot be only about ourselves. We have families and we should have children and raise them well. Neither Nietzsche or Soics emphasize enough how important it is to pay attention to development of your family both moral and material. The world for my children once im gone will be filled with your children. And if we make it worse for them due to our flawed morales and actions esentially we have lived a bad life. All the great bad things we see today happening happen due to weak characters. Nietzsche disregards the fact that not everyone is a genius and not everyone can become a great person just by working on themselves by themselves. Many people need way more guidance and lessons from other people in order for our society to flourish
@ARFthegodking4 ай бұрын
Although he and other philosophers have attempted to establish some sort of mortal code that can replace organized religion, none of these solutions possess the moral authority that a religious moral code has. I believe this is the biggest problem philosophy faces today. Further, the problem becomes thornier because any such system would need to be established in an ethical way. Such features seem to have no ethical versions.
@petdoiseauR.H.8 ай бұрын
Mille mercis!!! Highly appreciated word and dedication to help reach comprehension. Priceless Bro, Really, thank you so much. A most ubiquitous and tolerant harvest of seeded confronting analysis between each thinking systems and philosophies; what a bloom.. that would feed humanity With the utmost complementary bread of oedemia, wouldn't it? Plus Sesame seeds on top ofc
@simonulrikvifeldmller-hans54888 ай бұрын
this video is very good; and very entertaining. your articulation and word choice is magnificent. please keep making content like this. (edit) just realised that ''like'' has a double meaning. i meant in the manner of which this video was conducted. nietzsche content is also terrific though :)
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Ah thank you! I am glad you enjoyed the video
@darrellprice70146 ай бұрын
Pity as unkind. Subtle points like this are part of what makes reading him so challenging. While it is intended as kind it really looks down on the other as it acts. As a person with a disability I live this reality every day I guess that's part of why I understand that point more clearly. I've read occasionally where he speaks of the exceptional value of a friend. That is more of a view that can practice giving to another person as equal not less than. I've also been told that he suffered blinding migraines that forced him off into write in the form of aphorisms which can be challenging and even easier to take out of context
@kevinbeck88365 ай бұрын
You were told correctly. His sickness was actually a huge component of his life and he attributed his philosophical insights to it. He wasn’t just some smart guy. He suffered deeply and was forced to consider the meaning of suffering because of it
@arturzathas4998 ай бұрын
i am at the 4th point in the video, and i will say that if anyone got these points wrong, they must have not read Fredi (as i like to call him). but i have come across to some, what i believe to be, misconception of the ubermensch. as i have understood it, or rather interpreted it, i see U.M as an ideal - a thing that will never be captured for it changes as you change - not the next in line to MAN. anyhow, love your enthusiasm
@Set666Abominae8 ай бұрын
The problem with this analysis (especially re: the first myth), at least from my reading of Nietzsche, is that the class implications of his politics are overlooked. In ‘Beyond Good and Evil’, Nietzsche is quite upfront that his criticism of nationalism is predicated on extracting the “best” of each nation/race, in the desire of cultivating the “Ubermensch” CLASS. To this end he argues that political power (whatever unit that may take, traditional state or not) exists for the nascent “Ubermensch” to exploit the lower classes in any way they see fit, ostensibly to the end of this ruling class cultivation, although he doesn’t exactly seem concerned with the more hedonistic implications. Any expressions of his “love of man” or whatnot, I’d argue, need to be seen in light of this classist outlook; love of man extends as far as Nietzsche believes someone is worthy of respect as a human, which seems limited to being in the ruling class. Also being a man, for that matter. Whilst Nietzsche may not be a fascist in the traditional conceptualisation of such, I don’t doubt for a second that he has a fascistic worldview framed through some of the most extreme classism put to paper. It’s not surprising in the slightest that more typical fascists simply need to supplement the unusually cosmopolitan formation of a ruling class in his works for a racially/ethnically “pure” one.
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
I agree with aspects of what you say here but I disagree that Nietzsche means “class” in the sense of the term familiar to most political theorists. I am always cognizant that his idea of “power” and “ubermensch” are bound up much more with an attitude to values than straightforwardly political power. I also think it is worth distinguishing between his descriptive treatment of “master morality” in BGE and Nietzsche’s own views, because they do diverge in pretty pertinent ways. For instance, when Nietzsche is describing his idea of the Ubermensch the notion of “force” becomes much less prominent and the idea of “Creativity” takes the fore. As I say in the video, I do think that Nietzsche is a massive elitist and it would be a stretch to turn him into some form of palatable humanistic thinker. However, I think it is important to distinguish between a political project of elitism and Nietzsche’s existential elitism, which certainly has political implications but starts from an existential/individualist position. It’s also worth noting that he definitely goes back and forth on his concern for those that are not in his “higher” category. For instance, at points in his later writings he starts to say that more powerful people should treat them with an overflowing kind of magnanimity. As usual, his full position is complex and ever-so-slightly contradictory. This is why I tend to refer to him as a “unashamedly elitist”
@voxsvoxs42618 ай бұрын
I believe you are mistaking a few things here so if I may, first both Fascism and Nationalist Socialism, were nationalist developments of socialism in reaction to the fervor of WW1. This is held in both leaders where prior to their rule they were both Marxist socialists who participated in the first world war and gained perspective on the war altering their prior held socialism, to be more nationalistic to incorperate the fervor from WW1. Hitler recontextualised the socialist class into racial ones, Mussolini claimed that the subjugation of both socialist classes into the overarching state would ameliarate the socialist problem of class. Both were ostensibly populist ideologies, that the fascist says, the people are the composite in the state and that the state has power, that it is therefore democratic (by the meaning Demos-Kratos, people-power), likewise the Nationalist Socialist says within the context of the nation, that the government is a protector of the interest of the nation and that the nation is comprised of the national people, or in other words race, (which is our contrast with Fascism: National Socialist is government for the race's sake, Fascism is the state for the state's sake). Nietzsche is fundamentally distinct, since he does not consider the wider population of importance, due to the natural disregard of the nation, whether as people or state he fundamentally cannot be inserted into either ideology without significant distortion. That the disregard of the nation is neccesary, because the primary fact is the coming 'ubermensch', that the ubermensch must be an individual and cannot be a collective as both states and national peoples are. To give perhaps greater clarity, Nietzsche thought little of biological relations (as in Ecce Homo!) and that people are most closely to be considered family by the content of their character (or more existentially an indeterminate soul which he may admit for poetic purpose).
@MisterIncog8 ай бұрын
Very interesting experience I had with this video. I’d say I disagree on some important points, yet it’s kinda hard to disagree. I’ll try to write some of my thoughts. I do think, still, that Nietzsche was a nihilist… it was just outside of his free will. You make a great point about him fighting nihilism, a lot of people either miss this part of his philosophy or just don’t know about it. But I think this doesn’t completely prevent him from being a nihilist, at least in some sense of the word… well, not that arguing over definitions is what’s important. You fittingly compare nihilism to a disease that’s the result of Nietzschean approach, and I believe he had that disease in terminal form and never found a cure. That’s really important I think, Nietzsche wasn’t an example of anyone too close to an uber, he hadn’t conquered his will completely, and lack of true answer to nihilism as consequence of death of god and all beautiful is the brightest (or rather darkest?) indicator of that. I think it’s fair to acknowledge deep connection between nihilism and Nietzschean philosophy, of course when we do it fully with all Nietzsche had to say about it. I view his philosophy as more of a framework, and nihilism as a middle step between start of discovery of superior philosophy and the end goal of getting to said superior philosophy, obtainable only by an ideal Nietzschean ubermensch that may or may not have been already found. I wouldn’t know, I don’t follow Nietzsche as closely, after all I fundamentally disagree on basic assumptions with his philosophy, but I digress. Another small point that bugged me is your seeming overprotectiveness at some times of Nietzsche, as if his honor or something like that must be protected. The only reason, for me at least, to battle these misunderstandings and specifically defend Nietzsche is to encourage people, or rather stop them from being discouraged from getting to know Nietzsche. Like “hey you probably heard these bad things about him so here’s a more detailed look he’s actually really great check him out” type of deal. Maybe it’s just me, just thought by the end you got a little bit… can’t really pick the right word, not repetitive, not circular, but something along those lines. I think there was a funny phrase from you that went “people call him incoherent, but he just contradicts himself a lot”, like yeah that what people mean when they say that :D he’s not alive, his feelings are gonna be fine, and I don’t think people who are interested at all would be discouraged by such small things. Like yeah, it’s a journey, reading Nietzsche. But you might feel otherwise, that’s completely fine. As I said, just a small little thing that felt off to me. There were other parts here and there I’d interpret slightly differently or I’d like to see mentioned more explicitly, but nothing I want to write out. If it wasn’t clear, I loved the vid. That’s what this is all about - it’s to make us think. This here isn’t a critique at all, just sharing thoughts
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Haha! I take your second point. I didn’t mean to come across as defensive of Nietzsche (I actually disagree with him on an awful lot - he’s far too elitist for my tastes). It’s rather that I get quite passionate about people not missing the parts of Nietzsche that I think they might find really valuable!
@Rope_Adope3 ай бұрын
Indifference kills. Tried it. Doesn’t work. Just builds up
@skycheung75103 ай бұрын
You are a blessing brother. There are so few people out there understand Nietzsche the way you do. A lot of lions self destruct instead of rebirthing into a child. And even Nietzsche himself… do you think his philosophy caused him to lose his mind? Because he simple could not reconcile his situation that is preventing him from becoming ubermench
@richardlong61068 ай бұрын
Do you have any critique/comments on Kaufman's Faith of a heretic as it relates to or expands on Nietzche's views on religion/culture?
@theonetruetim8 ай бұрын
100% amen
@SkepTank04048 ай бұрын
i penned a comment yesterday about someone giving someone else a compliment and flower and said they could choose to water it or not, translating the act as forcing some reaction from someone without their invitation. people seemed not to understand what i meant by forcing the compliment, and i provided an example of "replace flower with baby, and whatta ya get?" i then had an argument with my brother, who said the two things arent related, and the only point i meant to make was both are alive, and a responsibily was forced onto another person by someone, including any form of reaction to the compliment itself. to me its a very nietzsche observation..others disagree.
@wm.scottpappert98697 ай бұрын
Nietzche was arguably an early intellectual but not material capitalist ... but Nietzche as a human being in general was said to be physically frail and very sensitive to externalities, emotionally weakened by external events. And although some of his base philosophy is stoicism, he life was not modeled after stoicism.
@Rope_Adope3 ай бұрын
It’s only “harsh” to those that it affects harshly. I can’t control any of that. People see what they wanna see
@wahnfriedvonmannteufel15747 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@madnietzschean7 ай бұрын
R. J. HOLLINGDALE is a great interpreter as well...
@deadman7467 ай бұрын
The following is TLDR. I write it because, like Nietzsche, writing is the only way I have found to get rid of my thoughts, and I must! I find this explanation excellent, but that's because it clearly states the conclusions I have already come to. I also think it's impossible to explain, because those who are hostile are the very people Nietzsche criticized and explained why they cannot get it. I once reacted to a video that stated Nietzsche despised compassion. I wrote that he did not, but he despised pity and those who cannot tell the difference. I got a lot of responses. Most agreed. Those who disagreed invariably could not tell the difference and argued that there was no difference, some by idiotic means such as quoting a dictionary. As I paraphrase Nietzsche, to some you should not offer your hand but rather a fist, and it would be better to wear brass knuckles. With that caveat, I find it helpful to compare what Nietzsche wrote to current events. The _ressentiment_ mindset correspond to what is now called _learned helplessness._ Pity as Nietzsche used it corresponds to _virtue-signaling._ It is not done out of compassion, which comes from power. It is not done to help the vulnerable but rather to hurt them and use their suffering for political (in the broad sense) gain. Pity is a parasitical performance of compassion, but deep down it is the opposite. Consider what I call _wokery._ It is not woke. It is the antithesis of woke. Being woke is being mindful, _awake_ in AAVE. It's a very good thing. Wokety wokery wokesters are anti-woke, which they cover with a performance that fools a lot of idiots. Two examples, both the subject of current brouhahas on KZbin. Keffals is an M->F transition KZbinr, who did a lot of pretty slimy stuff, and the chickens are coming home to roost. Watch a few seconds of a Keffals video, and you will instantly see a remarkable similarity to Rachel from _Blade Runner_ and _Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?_ Watch the flattening of affect. There's even a little smile when talking about something terrible, which is the Cluster B personality disorder tell for "I got away with a lie! Yay me!" Yet Keffals is surrounded by acolytes and sycophants and was able to extract $100,000 from them in a money-raising campaign which was used for nefarious purposes that were not advertised. This behavior went on for years, largely because the sycophants ganged up on everyone who raised reasonable questions and called them _transphobes._ There's a lesson from Nietzsche here. The _ressentiment_ crowd think power can only be bad because when they get a little power, they themselves are only capable of doing bad things with it. Russel T. Davies came back as the showrunner and head writer of _Doctor Who_ after a disastrous Chibnall era. He immediately said he was going to turn it back into a kids' show and wanted to indoctrinate kids while their minds are still pliable. His first episode, "The Star Beast," was overtly transphobic, sexist, and hebephilic. Yet the _ressentiment_ crowd all thought it was brilliant. This included the three major M->F transition _Doctor Who_ commentators: Jay Exci, Jessie Gender, and Council of Geeks. They cannot perceive that RTD is pumping out ammunition for a trans genocide. It is not that they disagree; they simply cannot perceive the bleeding obvious, right there on the screen. This is the essence of _ressentiment._ It infects the brain in such a way that it inherently protects itself by preventing thought. The swirling cesspool of steaming emotions is so poorly controlled that, rather than being integrated with reason, it manifests as rationalism, which denies that the emotions have become dominant. As such, the emotions drive rationalization, resulting in suicidal and auto-genocidal behaviors that reason is completely unaware of, so thoroughly have they been rationalized. Well, that's enough. Not that elaborating would do any good, anyway. Time to work on some cognitive linguistics.
@sasi58418 ай бұрын
3:29 Would you say nietzsche belief align with the concept of natural aristocracy?
@mycrazylife11116 ай бұрын
If any one else's first intro to Nietzsche was through the Nietzchians of the show "Andromeda", and have been walking back misconceptions ever since, raise a hand.
@TheGreatNireace27 күн бұрын
To have intention over everything I learned to have intention for everything I do from my father I've learned to fight for intentions to site for intentions to seek for the next intention if you ever fence you come to the point of fighting for intention because if you can't come to fight for the next intention you will either be cut or speared into
@BlackMantisRed8 ай бұрын
I kind of disagree with a lot of this Nietzsche, I think Nietzsche saw cruelty as a natural part of life. He describes the free spirit as being like a lion, a animal that mercilessly kills other animals to make itself stronger. Nietzsche was also in favour of war and a cast system. So I am highly sceptical that he was so against cruelty.
@hello-q3n3 ай бұрын
Nietzsche championed the individual! Not the collective!
@mikejarrells4318 ай бұрын
Thanks & good job. Is it possible that some of the interpretations are authored by those who wish to cast him as "evil" or crazy in an attempt to limit his influence? I think he was brilliant. He was one of the greatest minds ever created by our species. His ideas threatened the current power structure. We're still trapped in a web of toxic relationships (religion & nationalism). We need to continue his work and become ubermensch (independent & authentic). Let's go!
@CultureMath8 ай бұрын
Bro you look like one youtuber 'exphub class 9 and 10 ' just his hairstyle is different Anyway your clarity and concepts regarding philosophy and passion to explain it easily makes me stay to hear it all The video of destroy anyone at argument that was really good too
@unsolicitedadvice91988 ай бұрын
Ah thank you! That's very kind!
@danny.belanger8 ай бұрын
Is Superman based off Übermensch? In 1896, Alexander Tille made the first English translation of Thus Spoke Zarathustra, rendering Übermensch as "Beyond-Man". In 1909, Thomas Common translated it as "Superman", following the terminology of George Bernard Shaw's 1903 stage play Man and Superman.
@drummersagainstitk8 ай бұрын
Everyone in history had negative views of them. Nietzsche was a tongue twister with the same conclusion.
@NuanceOverDogma7 ай бұрын
All you need is Socrates, Plato and Aristotle. Niezche believed in the will to power which was his downfall and why he couldn’t live up to his own standards.
@NuanceOverDogma7 ай бұрын
Nieztche is the “hypocrite philosopher “ who projected his insecurities. He’s overrated like most post Big 3 Greek philosophers
@Rope_Adope3 ай бұрын
Netflix. Brazil. Tower with hole where ppl move floors monthly and food comes down the hole on 1 giant table and everyone is dependent on the couple every floor above. You’ll understand the ending tho. The title escapes me
@6FootVampire8 ай бұрын
I have green eyes - you have black eyes. It looks good on you. Also, thank you for the interpreted English text - i couldnt understand what you said. Are you French?