What I Realised from Reading Nietzsche for 457 Consecutive days (and what I shall be reading next).

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Grandfather Nebulous

Grandfather Nebulous

Күн бұрын

Books I have written (Physical copies) - www.lulu.com/s...
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Thank you.

Пікірлер: 61
@Amberlynn_Reid
@Amberlynn_Reid 6 ай бұрын
certified algorithm moment
@felang-9363
@felang-9363 6 ай бұрын
everything you see on your front page is algorithmic.
@Amberlynn_Reid
@Amberlynn_Reid 6 ай бұрын
not if i dont have any eyes @@felang-9363
@77yblacky14
@77yblacky14 6 ай бұрын
@@felang-9363 not really u can see a video with 2 views new account rarely.
@felang-9363
@felang-9363 6 ай бұрын
@@77yblacky14 only if it seems compatible by it's title and description
@rms____-gl7lt
@rms____-gl7lt Ай бұрын
man! his casual speech sounds like properly written essay
@somerandomkidonyoutube1812
@somerandomkidonyoutube1812 9 күн бұрын
this is like a hidden gem channel
@matthewdown5378
@matthewdown5378 8 күн бұрын
My personal issue with Nietzsche is that he trains human minds towards megalomania and grandiosity - the insidious and dangerous characteristics of empty human beings that tear the fabric of human society. Still, he did invent Pringles, a delicious snack by all accounts.
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 8 күн бұрын
@@matthewdown5378 Fair point, however I think if one aligns their objectives with moral justice, then the meglomanic and grandiose aspects can be beneficial not only to oneself but also to the community, and ultimately the society at large. As with all great philosophers (even if one doesn't agree with their work) they have aspects of thought that are beneficial for self-perspective. For me this is why philosophy is far more beneficial than religion. For religion is the word of God (supposedly unalterable) and philosophy is the word of man (constant flux). Therefore cherry picking religion is logically wrong, cherry picking philosophy is logically right, and not only logically right but also morally right to improve oneself. Cheers 👍🍻
@Twtgod
@Twtgod 5 ай бұрын
The algorithm has picked this video.
@ilyapopkov2473
@ilyapopkov2473 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the Nietzsche "journey" and good luck for the next one!
@tgr138
@tgr138 19 күн бұрын
Gentlemen, this is democracy manifest!
@collectiveunconscious222
@collectiveunconscious222 6 ай бұрын
this guy is a time traveler i love it
@aniccadance13
@aniccadance13 3 ай бұрын
Btw your voice is amazing..
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 3 ай бұрын
Thank you. I narrate a living story each week if you want to hear more. A Human - Our Story can be found on my playlists. Cheers. 👍
@StanHowse
@StanHowse 6 ай бұрын
"While enjoying a Succulent Chinese Meal!?!" My good Sir, I cannot understate how you sound and even flow EXACTLY like the man in that Video.. His name is "Charles Dozsa" Just type that in and you'll see the Vid... I don't hate it, in fact I absolutely LOVE the way You and Charles speak, it's like.. The King's English, x10 I'd commission Audiobooks if I could.
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 6 ай бұрын
Yes, that man is a legend. I can only hope to aspire to such lofty heights! Cheers! 👍🍻
@SouthPark333Gaming
@SouthPark333Gaming 6 ай бұрын
I love your voice. Honestly, I wish everyone could speak like you. That would make the world much more tolerable. I love Schopenhauer, so I've been meaning to read Nietzsche for a while.
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 6 ай бұрын
Thank you, for me Schopenhauer hits the nail on the head, but Nietzsche drives it home and then he realises he did so and begins to ask why? Regardless, they are two very clever Germans. 👍
@pablose6986
@pablose6986 6 ай бұрын
Your voice reminds me of professor lupin from the harry potter movies
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 6 ай бұрын
Thank you, I've never watched them but a quick KZbin search has made the comparison clear. Cheers. 👍🍻
@cultofhercules
@cultofhercules 6 ай бұрын
excellent presentation skills ser.
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 6 ай бұрын
Thank you. 👍
@felang-9363
@felang-9363 6 ай бұрын
Would be a great day the streak ended. I passed certainly too many months, and only fresh air has begun to smell sweet since i abandoned his hate at the joyful, preference for war and violence, domination, and preferred (as he did) the enjoyment of the Art's (his "heaving bosom" at the little theatres in Turin), the creative, and continuing the world survey without contradictions like "Don't Read!" of course, the man who has read a great thousand books can say that with more ease. Many a exaggeration are said while under the maximum strain of stress, over-worked, and stratifying yourself from all experience.
@addammadd
@addammadd 6 ай бұрын
POV: Laszlo Cravensworth went through a Nietzsche phase.
@vuuud29
@vuuud29 6 ай бұрын
thanks
@Royinszki
@Royinszki 6 ай бұрын
i have been chosen by the algorithm to be here
@FlaviousMaximus
@FlaviousMaximus 6 ай бұрын
interesting mr internet wisdom
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 6 ай бұрын
Cheers. 🍻👍
@whowantstorunforpresident5531
@whowantstorunforpresident5531 6 ай бұрын
Is your project's goal to talk like an American tourist in mid 19th century Vienna? If so, congrats.
@crosstolerance
@crosstolerance 6 ай бұрын
😂😂
@DarknessEmpireLeader626
@DarknessEmpireLeader626 6 ай бұрын
Here for comments.
@MothlingLXIX
@MothlingLXIX 6 ай бұрын
Hell yeah brother
@gianlucag100g
@gianlucag100g 6 ай бұрын
respect+ xd
@joeruf6526
@joeruf6526 6 ай бұрын
Lol! Epic Larping
@peaceformula5830
@peaceformula5830 6 ай бұрын
Read Bhagavad Gita As It Is by AC Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada 1972 version
@John-nb6ep
@John-nb6ep 6 ай бұрын
You're starting to look and sound like him. (If he spoke English)
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 6 ай бұрын
Must be the subconscious effect. Hopefully I won't end up like him! Cheers. 👍🍻
@John-nb6ep
@John-nb6ep 6 ай бұрын
@@grandfathernebulousYou spend so much time with someone, sooner or later you start to take on their characteristics.
@heroicjourney2508
@heroicjourney2508 6 ай бұрын
The gay science 😂 Apologies
@Jukau
@Jukau 6 ай бұрын
i show yourself out
@heroicjourney2508
@heroicjourney2508 6 ай бұрын
@@Jukau shown
@bobrze
@bobrze 6 ай бұрын
thank you mr wizard
@arihantyeah
@arihantyeah 16 күн бұрын
I like this man so much love the accent as well....u sound like a philosopher indeed.
@elk40pound
@elk40pound 5 ай бұрын
Thank you Dumbledore
@willieluncheonette5843
@willieluncheonette5843 5 ай бұрын
"Friedrich Nietzsche is one of the philosophers with the most potential in the whole world, not only in the West, not only in Germany. His insights are significant for everybody. But he was misunderstood by all his contemporaries. That's the usual fate of every genius. It is almost routine, not an exception but a rule, that the genius is bound to be misunderstood by his contemporaries, for the simple reason that he is far ahead of his time. So there is always a revival after the death of a genius. It may take one hundred years, two hundred years, but a genius always has a revival. It is unfortunate that by the time people start understanding him, he is no more. And he suffers the misunderstandings all around him his whole life. He lives almost alone, with no communication with his contemporaries; and by the time he is being understood, he is no more. He never comes to know the people who will understand him. So it was absolutely certain that Friedrich Nietzsche would have a great revival, and his words and his insights would be echoed all over the world - not only in the world of philosophy, but in the world of religion, morality, aesthetics. Whatever he touched, he always brought something absolutely new to it. And that's the trouble - because for thousands of years people have understood a thing in a certain way. When a person like Nietzsche turns all the tables - which centuries have founded - and alone, single-handedly, fights against the whole past, it is a very difficult situation - and more so for a Western philosopher who has no understanding of meditation. He naturally gets very frustrated. It is bound to bring him insanity - the misunderstanding of the people. Everybody misunderstands him. In the world full of millions of people, there is not a single person with whom he can have a heart-to-heart contact, communion. He is in a desert - it drives him mad. That's what happened with Nietzsche. He lived a life of immense frustration, because he was giving great insights to the world; and in return - only condemnation. He was bringing new light - and not a single friendly response.... Even his friends were not friendly about his philosophical approaches. That finally drove Nietzsche to madness; he died a madman. His death in madness is a condemnation of the whole Western approach. In the East people have been misunderstood, but because there was an underlying meditative silence and peace and contentment, and a deep understanding that this is just how things are - they are bound to be misunderstood - there was a natural acceptance of it. They were not frustrated, they were not angry; they were not going insane or committing suicide. But in the West it has been almost always the situation with every great philosopher - the misunderstanding from all corners, from all dimensions, and the deep expectation of the person of being understood. He is not a meditator; he cannot accept the situation of misunderstanding, that it is natural, that he cannot do anything about it, that he will be understood when the time is ripe."
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 5 ай бұрын
Yes, all very true in so far as I understand the man. I would also like to suggest that whilst the attitude of Western society ultimately lead to his demise; it was also because of this societal situation that he was pushed to his utter limits. He probably lived in a state of torment where his only option was further and deeper into his thought in his search for the truth. In the end he payed the ultimate price of his mind in sacrifice. If he had been accepted and understood in his time, that acceptance may have lessened his determination to produce such astute works as he did. Or it may have amplified it, sadly we will never know. We only have the tragic fate. One thing I think anyone who has read his work seriously will come to know, is that, as you quite rightly pointed out, he was a genius far ahead of his time.
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei 6 ай бұрын
Nietzsche is dead. Haha!
@buddy.boyo88
@buddy.boyo88 6 ай бұрын
astro-turfed view count
@DONTGOFODOE
@DONTGOFODOE 6 ай бұрын
Beautiful. And thank you. I agree with you that, as I've aged, philosophy is best used as a tool to for encountering and gathering questions to ask oneself. Exegesis is vital to the growth of one's soil. So again, thank you!
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for the kind words. Had to double check Exegesis in the old dictionary, 'tis a fine word! Cheers. 🍻👍
@billyfudd818
@billyfudd818 6 ай бұрын
Exegesis is vital to the growth of one's soil since exegetic standards conscript dramaturgic choice eh!
@pedroba76
@pedroba76 2 ай бұрын
What is this "exegesis" that you are reffering to? (I'm not a native english speaker, btw)
@craigjovanovich6450
@craigjovanovich6450 6 ай бұрын
I don't know how (I'm guessing the algorithm saw I looked up Nietzsche in the past) but you appeared on the timeline yesterday. Interesting take. I shall endeavor to listen to more. Thank you, sir.
@frilanstranslator
@frilanstranslator 6 ай бұрын
Enjoying this video. I wish I had some fish and chips to watch it. A warm hi from Gran Canaria to all the brits!
@CeresOutpost
@CeresOutpost 2 ай бұрын
Algorithm is lookin out. This man is a true bard. I'm in.
@oscara1471
@oscara1471 6 ай бұрын
Wow, here before 100,000 subs
@grandfathernebulous
@grandfathernebulous 6 ай бұрын
Wow! Very kind of you to say so, I certainly hope so. Cheers! 👍🍻🔝
@kathleenthijs29
@kathleenthijs29 6 ай бұрын
One Nietzsche phrase a day ...😀
@urmomscrush
@urmomscrush 6 ай бұрын
love this guyyyy
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