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Why are Smart People So Dumb?

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Wisecrack

Wisecrack

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 6 300
@WisecrackEDU
@WisecrackEDU 3 жыл бұрын
Who's the best (and worst) intellectual alive right now?
@Feefa99
@Feefa99 3 жыл бұрын
Without hesitation, Noam Chomsky He's best
@KOWAL19898
@KOWAL19898 3 жыл бұрын
Biased Wisecrack is the worst I can think of
@jhh-jiynks6568
@jhh-jiynks6568 3 жыл бұрын
Omg you're beautiful. Great topic to cover thank you for sharing
@Dude_Abides
@Dude_Abides 3 жыл бұрын
Rick Sanchez and Kreiger....what???
@MeatCatCheesyBlaster
@MeatCatCheesyBlaster 3 жыл бұрын
Worst Jordan Peterson and Sam Harris. They are frauds
@Will-tu3fh
@Will-tu3fh 3 жыл бұрын
If Dungeons and Dragons has taught me anything, it's that Intelligence and Wisdom are two very different stats Edit: Didn't expect so many of you to come out and comment here. Play nice folks
@petersegers6684
@petersegers6684 3 жыл бұрын
I think most of these talkers focus on their charisma stat
@Vincentpanh
@Vincentpanh 3 жыл бұрын
Wisdom is the stat that make you “shut-up” at the right time, intelligence is the stat that make you boring if you keep yapping about it, and Charisma is the stat that make you talk like CHAD THUNDERCOCK.
@jessegoonerage3999
@jessegoonerage3999 3 жыл бұрын
Strength: I can lift it. Dexterity: I can dodge it. Wisdom: I can see it. Intelligence: I can solve it. Charisma: I can fuck it.
@jsnel9185
@jsnel9185 3 жыл бұрын
You rolled at nat20 on this comment.
@SerifSansSerif
@SerifSansSerif 3 жыл бұрын
Truth. I prefer to be a cleric over a wizard any day... (though rogues are my faves TBH)
@zemorph42
@zemorph42 3 жыл бұрын
Everyone is dumb sometimes. Especially when they are speaking outside of their area of expertise.
@nicholasgeere5125
@nicholasgeere5125 3 жыл бұрын
The lack of self awareness in this video is absolutely wild
@farhanrafi8481
@farhanrafi8481 3 жыл бұрын
But as dumb as you are, Neil saying “whats the point in philosophers fighting on meanings behind words” that just shocks me, never knew smart people could be THAT dumb
@thesauceisme
@thesauceisme 3 жыл бұрын
@@nicholasgeere5125 lack of self awareness elaborate??? If someone were smart they'd be smart enough to think "gee maybe I shouldn't speak on a topic I know little to nothing about on my massive platform"
@nietzschesghost8529
@nietzschesghost8529 3 жыл бұрын
It's simple: one shouldn't speak outside of their area of expertise. Most of these "public thinkers" have gone to grad school, and it is a near universal sentiment among grad school students that they don't know shit about what they thought they knew. At some point during your schooling, when you see how deep the hole goes in your chosen discipline, you come to the realization that other disciplines are similarly nuanced, technical, and highly specialized. I fancied myself knowledgeable of evolutionary biology because I read several books on the topic, and so I thought I knew my shit. After going to grad school for a different subject, I dare not speak authoritatively on anything beyond the mere basics of biology, because I realized that the world of PhD expertise in evolutionary biology is so beyond anything that I know that I will inevitably sound like a complete eejit if I even tried to talk about it. So there's no reason why Neil DeGrasse Tyson, Jordan Peterson, and others should not have that same humility and restraint.
@maynardburger
@maynardburger 3 жыл бұрын
Well I think the argument would be that an intelligent person would know when they are not speaking from expertise and not try and act like they know better.
@clippychan530
@clippychan530 2 жыл бұрын
I think that tons of intellectuals are incredibly smart within one field and believe that because they understand these complex subjects within their field they can automatically understand complex subjects outside of themselves. Rather than approaching a new subject as someone who knows nothing and is ready to learn they insert their half-baked/surface-level opinions into the conversation and think that their background of previous knowledge will carry them the rest of the way.
@killgriffinnow
@killgriffinnow 2 жыл бұрын
You are so right. I saw this guy appearing on several UFO pseudo-science vids who was a "Dr." /PH.D - also "author & Broadcaster" (of some book you have never heard of). I looked him up on Wikipedia and he really did have a Ph.D - in "Ancient Chinese ceramics" - or some Professor giving talks with Ken Hamm supporting Young Earth Creationism - turns out he was a civil engineer. I mean, nobody asks a biologist to build a suspension bridge.
@ktli5648
@ktli5648 2 жыл бұрын
true
@kevinc.cucumber3697
@kevinc.cucumber3697 2 жыл бұрын
Pretty much they’re egotistical
@Friendly_Neigborhood_Astolfo
@Friendly_Neigborhood_Astolfo 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who is seen as very intellegent, I can confirm that this is accurate. I do well in terms of Anime, video games, some art history, and other pop culture stuff, but put me in front of astronomy and...
@Speciimenn
@Speciimenn 2 жыл бұрын
That's the Dunning-Kruger effect in motion mah dude. You'll notice the smarter the person, the more they'll realize they actually know NOTHING. With someone like neil, he KNOWS he's smart and understands things that only a fraction of people do, but that egotism just blinds him
@danielrogge3085
@danielrogge3085 Жыл бұрын
Calling Elon Musk an "intellectual" broke something deep inside of me.
@JannisSicker
@JannisSicker Жыл бұрын
feel u, but I think his laughable lies and dangerous doings were less exposed and less apparent 2 years ago
@francescoragnoni8042
@francescoragnoni8042 Жыл бұрын
The worlds (and my) opinion of him has shifted significantly
@imperialmotoring3789
@imperialmotoring3789 Жыл бұрын
True, but he did a lot to stop censorship.
@danielrogge3085
@danielrogge3085 Жыл бұрын
@@imperialmotoring3789 like what? 😂
@notoriusdrifter40
@notoriusdrifter40 Жыл бұрын
@@imperialmotoring3789 Yeah he also exploits tons of workers and works actively against worker co-ops. He did nothing
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 3 жыл бұрын
Not me. I'm the best of the best. Everything I say is right
@696Productions
@696Productions 3 жыл бұрын
Can relate
@anshb6872
@anshb6872 3 жыл бұрын
Obviously
@alexstorr3357
@alexstorr3357 3 жыл бұрын
Well.... second best, Trump is number one!
@SlenderHime
@SlenderHime 3 жыл бұрын
Me tooo
@eatingsteakisfun
@eatingsteakisfun 3 жыл бұрын
*.
@xxxburke
@xxxburke 3 жыл бұрын
"There are some ideas so absurd that only an intellectual could believe them." George Orwell
@socratias
@socratias 3 жыл бұрын
He wrote 1984 right
@clearmenser
@clearmenser 3 жыл бұрын
.... the guy who bought into the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis (which is, I admit, very attractive). IMHO Aldous Huxley hit closer to the truth more often.
@socratias
@socratias 3 жыл бұрын
@Nick Aries no Big Brother is watching me man idk where u live
@skellurip
@skellurip 3 жыл бұрын
like what? criticizing police state while at the same time collaborating with the police?
@stich1960
@stich1960 3 жыл бұрын
@@socratias NSA: Am I joke to you?
@hirobeez
@hirobeez 3 жыл бұрын
I once had an old History teacher who apparently loved his job. If you spoke to him he would gladly give you some good dialogue. He barely taught any History - sometimes because it felt pointless to try - , but the one thing he frequently repeated to us was "never automatically believe any word anyone says, even mine." In the fascinating state public schooling is, when you basically are force fed bullet points to answer a multiple-choice all-deciding piece of paper, that still feels to this day one of the most useful things I learned in school.
@JazzYachtrocker
@JazzYachtrocker Жыл бұрын
Underrated comment.
@theearthisntflatpleasestop9899
@theearthisntflatpleasestop9899 Жыл бұрын
It's funny because you go to any place on the internet where people think they are free-thinkers, like 4chan for example, and all they do is believe everything posted there and then repeat the talking points. Everything is like a cult now, end everyone is cult-like.
@popularjockboyf615
@popularjockboyf615 2 жыл бұрын
I used to work with nonfiction authors. The smartest among them were the first to admit when they didn’t know enough about a given situation to comment. Others never found a topic they couldn’t comment on. The second group always sold more books. When your income and power comes from holding the attention of as many people as possible, you have no incentive to admit your limits.
@codydavis3100
@codydavis3100 Жыл бұрын
That's the problem with the world. I wish the people that were in charge of publishing would hold standards like hey this person apparently talks about every subject, maybe they aren't as smart as they say they are. It's so upsetting to see the mediocre rise to the top and people allow them to
@codythompson4777
@codythompson4777 8 ай бұрын
Personally, I find that people who diversify their knowledge base beyond one subject tend to be more wise than those who are obsessed with one subject. While it is true that some use this to their own personal gain, I feel that those who diversify themselves want to relate to as many people as possible because they are empathetic and want to empathize with a larger population
@Wilson91191
@Wilson91191 3 жыл бұрын
Me after almost every single Wisecrack deep dive: "cool. Everything in the world is garbage."
@origrammar
@origrammar 3 жыл бұрын
Pretty much.
@EffectzHeroez
@EffectzHeroez 3 жыл бұрын
Time for a hard reset
@castlegarden2999
@castlegarden2999 3 жыл бұрын
Is it that everything in the world is garbage or everything in the world has both good and bad in it?
@x_glitter_crab_x
@x_glitter_crab_x 3 жыл бұрын
For real, I love this channel but this video depressed tf outta me. I get these videos are supposed to serve as conversation starters, but it some proposed solutions would have been nice. Also the irony of Wisecrack as a brand making this particular video is not lost on me.
@drunken_moose
@drunken_moose 3 жыл бұрын
@@EffectzHeroez Corona is doing its best. Give it a few more years.
@TheOmen04
@TheOmen04 3 жыл бұрын
Wisecrack: TED Talks are between 5 and 10 thousand dollars Me, an intellectual watching them on You Tube for free
@jacekcierpiszewski
@jacekcierpiszewski 2 жыл бұрын
Lol, people pay for this piece of shit....
@thedreamz9376
@thedreamz9376 2 жыл бұрын
@@jacekcierpiszewski who? Cause I sure don't
@jullcepts8780
@jullcepts8780 2 жыл бұрын
Ah, I see you're a man of culture as well
@mrshaunkim
@mrshaunkim 2 жыл бұрын
You should do a TED Talk on it
@milascave2
@milascave2 2 жыл бұрын
Fred: Right? It doesn't seem very intelligent to spend ten grand for something you could get for free.
@WhosAlx
@WhosAlx 2 жыл бұрын
I’m glad you brought up TED tickets being expensive. Around ten years ago I looked up tickets and they weren’t $5k-$10k but they were expensive enough for me to consider TED a scam.
@scottgrindrod
@scottgrindrod 11 ай бұрын
TED talks went from interesting discussions of complex topics in a relatable manner to Silicon Valley Bros explaining something *painfully* obvious to everyone badly because they just found out about it and thus assumed no one knew. And they usually do it by badly paraphrasing someone else's research.
@rafaelzamot42
@rafaelzamot42 2 жыл бұрын
I had this professor in college that you could just tell he was very intelligent in his department but just wasnt able to teach properly and nost students disliked him, he always seemed like he was trying to make you feel dumb for not understanding something he was so adept at.
@Cynsham
@Cynsham 2 жыл бұрын
This is the exact reason why a great many "smart" people shouldn't be teachers. There's a massive world of difference between being smart enough to understand the curriculum yourself and being smart enough to get others to understand the subject.
@matthewsaunders4820
@matthewsaunders4820 Жыл бұрын
That's most professors. Teaching is just a requirement to many of them. They're more interested in the recognition they get from publishing papers, not teaching.
@Unknown-jt1jo
@Unknown-jt1jo 11 ай бұрын
Cool story. Also irrelevant to the video.
@Demomandan
@Demomandan 3 жыл бұрын
Whenever Neil degrasse tyson talks about philosophy: “Knowing enough to think you are right, but not knowing enough to know you are wrong” - Neil Degrasse Tyson
@andreab380
@andreab380 3 жыл бұрын
@David Orozco Except we have no way to ascertain the boundary once and for all, nor to assess scientifically which questions are worth asking, so philosophy will remain necessary. Philosophy is not just something that precedes science, only to fade when answers can be given; it's the very foundation of science. These guys seem to think, instead, that science is 100% on the path to answering all relevant questions, so that philosophy is becoming thinner and more useless.
@reneemclane1845
@reneemclane1845 3 жыл бұрын
I did not think that that statement by Tyson was so dumb.
@pathwaystoadventure
@pathwaystoadventure 3 жыл бұрын
@@andreab380 This. Science, philosophy, and even religion/faith all have a place in intellectual "searches" for the "truth." I really love how Fullmental Alchemist explores all of these concepts through its character's and their growth throughout the series: Edward/Al = Science is the only means to the truth, Leore Peeps / Ishvalans / Scar = Science is nothing if Faith says otherwise, science has caused our downfall and murdered our people Father = My philosophy to attain the truth is to remove all 'imperfections' in myself so I can be a pure, godly being. State = Suppression of religion and scientific oppression leads to a stable society You see so many characters grapple with the above 'lenses' to understanding their world and their place in it. Ed by the end of the series has to accept that alchemy (science) literally cannot solve all problems, and that it is important but not as important as his loved ones, his brother in particular. Wrath learns that a 'miracle' of the sun blinding him during his duel with Scar is what caused him to lose the fight. Scar learns that alchemy can be used to help people and that he has been a hypocrite by only 'deconstructing' with it, and once he starts to use it he was able to help save everyone. Rose from Leore learned to 'walk on her own two feet' and to not take religious prophets at face value just because they 'give you something you desire.' Its really such a wonderful fiction that hits home for our 'reality' we face even in 2020. Everyone loves to assert their framework for understanding the world is 'the best' while the others are 'less than.' It really takes an appreciation for the limitations of all frameworks and a collaboration between them to get a broader view of what "might be the truth" of a given subject.
@andreab380
@andreab380 3 жыл бұрын
@@pathwaystoadventure I love FMA (Brotherhood) too! Such a well-crafted plot and such high concepts for a manga/anime. And I do kind of agree with their stance on Truth as well: science, philosophy, and spirituality (I won't use the word religion, because I'm not a huge fan of organised religion) are all valuable parts of our search for the truth. It is obvious to intellectually honest scientists that science does not solve everything, at any point in time; it is rather a neverending search, and that's what's actually beautiful and useful in it.
@JingleJangleJam
@JingleJangleJam 3 жыл бұрын
@David Orozco Science can speculate things without knowing it for truth. Albert Einstein wasn't the man that proved relativity is a fact, it was actually some observations in astronomy years after the fact that Einstein wrote that theoretical equation that the movement in the stars did in fact prove Einstein right and therefore that the question of relativity was known.
@MelodicQuest
@MelodicQuest 3 жыл бұрын
Just noting, no one should be logging onto Twitter in the hopes of hearing words of wisdom. Twitter is basically just everyone screaming into a crowded room and hoping people agree with you
@nagelsleu3339
@nagelsleu3339 3 жыл бұрын
twitter.com/billwurtz?lang=en enters the chat
@KarlSnarks
@KarlSnarks 3 жыл бұрын
True, same goes for KZbin comments ;)
@greggeverman5578
@greggeverman5578 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting comment. I thought that's what Twitter was...though I never go there.
@oedipussy
@oedipussy 2 жыл бұрын
I think the first problem that pops up when looking at the group we consider to be public intellectuals is placing Neil Degrasse Tyson, someone whose intellect is evidenced by his grasp of astronomy and literally changing how we perceive the solar system, in the same group as Elon musk, someone whose intelligence is “evidenced” by being born into money and using it to buy the right things and start the right companies,
@fuzzypanda1684
@fuzzypanda1684 Жыл бұрын
Your bias is on full display. Musk became the richest person in the world, is the head engineer at SpaceX, and is brilliant at understanding and solving problems as "evidenced" by people that have worked with him. Tyson is a brilliant astrophysicist, but has horribly misplaced views on social issues and pretty much anything that doesn't involve the macro universe. Perhaps you just don't like Musk's political views and therefore deem him not an intellectual.
@jordypierce57
@jordypierce57 2 жыл бұрын
short answer : they are not dumb, they just have they own agenda either its money, brand influence or political power
@Nightfreed
@Nightfreed 3 жыл бұрын
wisecrack commenting on intellectualism as a commodity. ive fallen into quicksand or something. im glad they're at least self aware.
@paulgotik
@paulgotik 3 жыл бұрын
yes I agree with the criticism they are making, but even in this video you can apply the same criticism to them.
@viniciusnogueira3465
@viniciusnogueira3465 3 жыл бұрын
I think one of the goals of the video was exactly to work as an metacritic for all youtube channels that runs in the "intellectual" discourse. Best way to find a criteria for this is to aways analise their methodology of research for the information they share and criticise their conclusions. Scientific method applied in informal situations also work haha
@shavedata5436
@shavedata5436 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking... Like, how are you different? Shouldn't you just be happy we keep watching your videos? I heard this stupid smart person the other day who made a distinction between a mark and a smark. A mark is someone who's being duped and doesn't know it. A smark is a mark who knows they're being duped but keep coming back anyway.
@punkrockreverend2328
@punkrockreverend2328 3 жыл бұрын
I saw this as more of an explanation of the whys and how’s... not so much as a “Listen to me!” Situation...
@BigBoss-sm9xj
@BigBoss-sm9xj 3 жыл бұрын
@@viniciusnogueira3465 so the first homework they are assigning is to criticize the teacher? In this case to criticize their vid and use it as an example
@flightlessboy4040
@flightlessboy4040 3 жыл бұрын
Moral of the story : take everything with a grain of salt. Even this video.
@JingleJangleJam
@JingleJangleJam 3 жыл бұрын
@Flightless Boy Are you, by any chance, trying to ''thought lead'' those humble of us too thick-skulled to follow her points in the video with that comment. . . Or merely trying to encapsulate everything she said into a sole, single, Confucius - style parable of wisdom, like a mantra we can apply to all things and be done to think about it? I did take a grain of salt with this video, and that grain turned out not to be a grain, but to be a piece of honey, because these words she has said, are words I have so longed to hear as this intellectual climate of thought leaders has sucked the life dry off my bone until I'm almost at the point where I feel too numb and wary to even try to have any semblance of a kind of freedom of thought anymore.
@flightlessboy4040
@flightlessboy4040 3 жыл бұрын
@@JingleJangleJam listen all I'm saying is that everyone has their own agendas and points that should be taken with grains of salt because everyone has their own thoughts.not even wisecrack is free of this. In the age of information we ironically seem to be in a world of mis information. How do we know that wisecrack themselves are trying to "thought lead"? And I get it , you yourself have taken in this video with a grain of salt but some may not. People should be able they want and things like ted talks and the likes should be as well.
@JingleJangleJam
@JingleJangleJam 3 жыл бұрын
@@flightlessboy4040 I don't know what the point you're trying to make about her video is. In which point in the video is it that you actually disagree with her on the topics she says about? I don't mind if you have disagreeing thoughts, it is just that you have no stated them in a clear enough way, and her argument to me, seems completely untouched by the comment that you had made. She has stated clear facts. The process of democracy is tainted by disinformation, and not only that, but in your reply, you have reiterted and reinforced her own point also so it seems that you agree with her, and also think that it is ironic and we live in an age of disinformation, which was her own take...
@flightlessboy4040
@flightlessboy4040 3 жыл бұрын
@@JingleJangleJam I'm sorry im really just confused on what you where saying. I agree with what she is saying but I also want to point out that we also need to be careful with this video as well because she herself is painting a picture like many of these "thought leaders". My original comment was paraphrasing in a comedic way what the video was saying.
@JingleJangleJam
@JingleJangleJam 3 жыл бұрын
@@flightlessboy4040 Oh, well she distinguishes in her video between 'thought leaders' and 'intellectuals' and I thought she fit into the latter category because she does refer to true intellectuals like Simone de Beavoir. I apologise I got a little offended when I thought you were mocking her, because I do not think it to be the correct context, in a joke, to say that you should take a woman saying that sexual harassment of women by CEOs that happen factually frequently from overwhelming evidence shown through investigative and legal teams, that cannot help but filter into the media although it is often blurred with sensationalism - and concrete solutions never offered and acted as though they are somehow miracolously impossible to come up with on this issue (thus avoiding further substantive decision making and using the fact a woman is raped for making money by spreading sensationalism on the news that also gets people worked up and start to believe anything, like even a pedo cult could exist, and to start to totally become desensitized with this money-drive thoughtless reporting until they become desensitized to the issue rather than learn about it. I do not think it the right context to say you should take a grain of salt with a woman saying that corporate leaders who often are mixed up in sexual abuse selling info that says that women who are having depression and anxiety from being harassed (instead of us solving their social harm caused by others) should be striking ''power poses'' and blaming it upon their own lack of willingness to be happy, then I do not think you should say that a woman sho says this is blatantly horrible and wrong, is an opinion that should be taken with a grain of salt. To taker something with a grain of salt means to take said thing as being put forward, in a slanted and biased way, and to trey to get a better balance and understand the views of those whom are on the ''other side'', meaning those CEOs who put out the crap information saying a woman who is having these deep traumas with her self identity from a predatory sexual environment, should give a false solution to her dangerous social enviroment that we, as a society, lethargically allow to continue without being dissolved. I'm sure, put that way, you might find hard to disagree, although you I do not know might have been thinking of a different thing when you said what you had said, and an impression of the words someone says can often be different from the intention of who is the speaker.
@brianfeldz1797
@brianfeldz1797 2 жыл бұрын
The powerpose didn’t get me that raise or that new job, but it did make my back feel a whole lot better for a few hours.
@thribsilva
@thribsilva 2 жыл бұрын
This video is a good reminder to always criticize, always scrutinize and never take anything at face value, even this video. Observe the world, listen to others and make your own conclusions, while leaving some room for revising and criticizing the same conclusions you made in the past. I love this channel ❤️
@zekramnordran9526
@zekramnordran9526 3 жыл бұрын
The wisest man is he who knows he knows nothing -Socrates
@greggeverman5578
@greggeverman5578 3 жыл бұрын
Peterson too...more or less.
@bothi00
@bothi00 3 жыл бұрын
"I'm kinda retarded" - Alex Jones.
@l_shaun_bunds_l
@l_shaun_bunds_l 3 жыл бұрын
“It isn’t the 20th century: it is 1993, so it is the 19th century...” my father, David Koresh, Waco, TX edit-Korean wasn’t my dads surname... it was not koresh either but the dumb ass changed it from Vernon Howell.
@Autistic_Internet_Slap_Fights
@Autistic_Internet_Slap_Fights 3 жыл бұрын
I guess that makes the smug know it all, narrating this video completely unwise.
@andrewrollout1657
@andrewrollout1657 3 жыл бұрын
@@Autistic_Internet_Slap_Fights A broken clock is right twice a day...the video can be narrated by idiots and still be completely true. It is best to evaluate content on its own merit rather than being biased by looking at who is its speaker.
@free2trvl
@free2trvl 3 жыл бұрын
"I won't name any names" I'll just show pictures 😂
@LyamWitherow
@LyamWitherow 3 жыл бұрын
This is one of my favourite wisecrack episodes you've ever put out. Well done!
@umbomb
@umbomb Жыл бұрын
The question here isn't, "Why are smart people so dumb?" The question this video essay poses is, "Why doesn't high intelligence cancel out self-interest?" The answer is, "Why would it?"
@inigocasanovadiaz5927
@inigocasanovadiaz5927 3 жыл бұрын
"Pluto is a planet" - Jerry Smith, scientist from earth
@AmberAmber
@AmberAmber 3 жыл бұрын
😂😂🤣🤣❤
@nikos4677
@nikos4677 3 жыл бұрын
rick and morty gang
@cowboydoggo6168
@cowboydoggo6168 3 жыл бұрын
It is tho
@keane6
@keane6 3 жыл бұрын
it kinda is. a dwarf planet literally is just a very small planet, no other differences. pluto isn't much smaller than mercury, which is considered a planet.
@baz1184
@baz1184 3 жыл бұрын
@@keane6 wooosh
@felipeiglesias
@felipeiglesias 3 жыл бұрын
I agree with what you said but I would add other fact: narcissism. When everyone is telling you "how smart you are" you start to think that you can speak about everything. And that's not a very "socratic" way to find the truth, is just fame. And that's what's happening with people like Neil: they are blinded by their success. On the other hand, Elon Musk is just a jerk. Kudos!
@thedoctordowho2022
@thedoctordowho2022 3 жыл бұрын
When people say this to me , l always think that l need estudy more if l want talk about some subject.
@suckitt88
@suckitt88 3 жыл бұрын
WELL I DONT. SO WHAT THE FUCK IS UP.
@gamingislife3332
@gamingislife3332 3 жыл бұрын
A presidential historian said "every president is a little bit of a psycho. They have massive ego thinking they can solve the nation problem" i say we all have a little bit of that
@axelpatrickb.pingol3228
@axelpatrickb.pingol3228 3 жыл бұрын
@@gamingislife3332 It ties into what Frank Herbert said about those who seeks power being implicitly insane...
@vineetn6059
@vineetn6059 3 жыл бұрын
That's a really good point you made
@rexplorer.official
@rexplorer.official Жыл бұрын
More people should see this video, honestly. Our standards for intellectuals should be higher.
@jasonl6130
@jasonl6130 3 жыл бұрын
As a former bookseller, the concept of public intellectual peddling ideas that seem great, but has no substance is nothing new.
@12fulworld69
@12fulworld69 3 жыл бұрын
Host trying to hold back opinions on people whilst editor is going HAM. LOL.
@azzor4134
@azzor4134 3 жыл бұрын
True LMAO. Some dissonance between writer, host and editor.
@vetobandito2635
@vetobandito2635 3 жыл бұрын
@@azzor4134 yeah the talking head is trying to save theiur viewership and the writer and editor are just like "fuck that we dont respect our viewers"
@condor-yz6bo
@condor-yz6bo 3 жыл бұрын
Was looking for a comment exactly about this when she said legitimate people then Oliver popped up I was like yep there it is.
@magavsdeepstate2095
@magavsdeepstate2095 3 жыл бұрын
It’s also a subtle way to tell the truth without saying it
@ashsteepingtea
@ashsteepingtea 3 жыл бұрын
@@magavsdeepstate2095 this is what they have to do on this platform, I agree with you
@georgebynum2659
@georgebynum2659 3 жыл бұрын
Helen DESTROYS smart people! Sorry, I just like being a smartass. This is a good break down of the modern idea industry. I think we put too much stock in names. When Neil Degrasse Tyson talks about cosmology, I tend to listen, but I don't really care what he thinks about other topics. I think we should listen to experts when they speak on their particular field. We can't assume that someone knows a lot about everything just because they know a lot about one thing.
@wvu05
@wvu05 3 жыл бұрын
Ironically, the amount of focus that you have to have on _one very specific thing_ in order to get your credentials as an intellectual often leads to being clueless in other areas. While not academic, Garry Kasparov is arguably the greatest chess player to ever live, but he thinks that all artifacts over 600 years old are forged. I do not say this to mock them at all. I tried my hand in academia (I didn't get my PhD because I couldn't demonstrate written proficiency in German), but I can probably tell you more about the Cross of Gold speech than all but maybe 50 people alive on the planet (most people who study Bryan today tend to focus on the Scopes trial), because that would have been the topic of my dissertation, and once you get to a certain level, you spend an awful lot of time focusing on one thing.
@Thessalin
@Thessalin 3 жыл бұрын
Helen ANNIHILATES philosophers. Helen WRECKS intelligence. Helen EVISCERATES the ivory tower. Such strong verb choices.
@georgebynum2659
@georgebynum2659 3 жыл бұрын
@@wvu05 I'm exactly the opposite. I drive for a living and listen to a lot of podcasts and audiobooks about a wide range of subjects. Because of that, I have a general, broad overview of a lot of things, but am an expert in few if any. But I also don't speak on a subject with any authority unless I have a few experts and data to point to. I also end long rants or explanations with "but what do I know? I drive a truck for a living."
@wvu05
@wvu05 3 жыл бұрын
@@georgebynum2659 Indeed. I am not one of these people who tries to show off my credentials, but I realize that there are only a few areas where I can speak remotely credibly when having any sort of discussion, but I do realize what those limits are. My academic training is in religion, and I have some real world experience in politics (I ran for a seat in the state legislature in my late 20s and have worked on a few campaigns, some as a paid canvasser) and I have enough familiarity with a few other subjects that I can discuss the basics, but you have to know what you know and also what you don't know to avoid the thought leader trap.
@hoptimas5415
@hoptimas5415 3 жыл бұрын
Preach
@TheChannelTroll
@TheChannelTroll 3 жыл бұрын
Hey, Hbomb is popular enough to have his face on Wisecrack for 1 1/2 seconds! We did it guys!
@101242cg
@101242cg Жыл бұрын
Nothing wrong with hbomberguy
@RADIUMGLASS
@RADIUMGLASS 3 жыл бұрын
My schools were full of these. They may have aced tests probably due to a trashcan memory, but when it came to common sense and cognitive skills, I am shocked they're still alive.
@killme5630
@killme5630 3 жыл бұрын
Same with me here. I love knowledge and can memorize stuff quickly, but I lack common sense and a thinking that makes people successful leaders and such. It's pretty hard knowing that the c students around you may become bosses and A students may become workers. It just becomes depressing to even study and makes me hate my qualities
@MylesKillis
@MylesKillis 3 жыл бұрын
Let's not forget that being intelligent and able to understand abstract concepts may alienate you and thus cause you to not get experience socially. It doesn't mean your naturally bad at socializing you just lack experience doing so
@NgNhLe
@NgNhLe 3 жыл бұрын
@@MylesKillis wow i didn't know that, thanks for sharing the knowledge
@barathor
@barathor 3 жыл бұрын
@@killme5630 why do you tend to associate studying or intellect in that matter with work? Is that all there is to life or education in your opinion?
@killme5630
@killme5630 3 жыл бұрын
@@barathor not really. Even tho in the present I am rather obsessed with the notion with getting grades, or rather, studying for better job opportunities, I know that it may not be, in the end, that necessary. This is coming from the perspective of a student who was deemed "gifted" and now believes the only thing they can do is memorize stuff quickly and they better put that stuff to use in order to survive such a world, since they do not have the wits or brains to manipulate the system for their gains. Eh, personally I'd rather write, draw and be in my own imagination- not uncommon, I know. Not a perspective of a person who is always chasing victory and these are the qualities people would associate with a "weaker" pers . But it is true. The only reason I even care about grades and work now is because the scores I have achieved have put expectations on me and I cant let other people down or disappoint them - I'm too fragile for that. So yeah. The only reason I seem so "obsessed" with work maybe because of all the things I gave been taught since I turned 13. It may seem nice to achieve a high grade, but it is not some sort of insane drive of mine.
@Spiral.Dynamics
@Spiral.Dynamics 3 жыл бұрын
"Humans can be literally poisoned by false ideas and false teachings." - Alfred Korzybski
@richardcranium6081
@richardcranium6081 3 жыл бұрын
People have surrendered their minds and their wills to some other entity who does not have their best interest at hand. I don't confuse smart/ genius with someone rich in book knowledge (public school teachers, police officers, retail managers etc). Those 3 examples listed have book knowledge, but they don't have the common sense of the average 2nd grader of the 1970s, nor the work ethic or sense of responsibility. More like toddlers pretending to be grownups
@Kilo_Charlie626
@Kilo_Charlie626 2 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, the biden followers
@CATDHD
@CATDHD 2 жыл бұрын
Hasnt heard that name for a long time
@dibrentley7915
@dibrentley7915 2 жыл бұрын
@@richardcranium6081 so true. I think the most important qualities humans should have is curiosity to learn, common sense, Resilience and a strong work ethic. I think all of those qualities are missing in a whole lot of people.
@ciupenhauer
@ciupenhauer 2 жыл бұрын
"Korzybski was a fraud" Robert Anton Wilson
@titussalter8070
@titussalter8070 2 жыл бұрын
Big props to Bill Nye for picking up new books and reevaluating his views on the philosophy.
@giniwelle
@giniwelle 3 жыл бұрын
I have often regretted my speech. Never my silence. - A wise man
@michaellyden2580
@michaellyden2580 3 жыл бұрын
Wait, so people actually pay $5k to $10k to attend a seminar that I can watch on KZbin, whenever I want, for free!?
@chipmonklarry
@chipmonklarry 3 жыл бұрын
It’s to network with others that can afford to pay that amount for an event.
@zon3ful
@zon3ful 3 жыл бұрын
@@chipmonklarry And to feel smug about it.
@KarlSnarks
@KarlSnarks 3 жыл бұрын
But I'd assume that TEDx events are way cheaper. We had a few at my college, and I'm pretty sure students can't afford 5-10k (neither in dollars nor euros)
@krombopulos_michael
@krombopulos_michael 3 жыл бұрын
Most of them aren't paying for it themselves, their company paid for it. Still pretty absurd imo, I doubt the company gets that much value back from it.
@dimasakbar7668
@dimasakbar7668 3 жыл бұрын
@@zon3ful so basically just another "conspicuous consumption" under intellectualism cloak.
@regularjim3193
@regularjim3193 3 жыл бұрын
Debates are more exciting than conversations. Debates are about winning and "destroying" the opponent, which people seem to love. But only through thoughtful and respectful (and boring) conversations can get to the heart of key issues and find workable solutions.
@wewho1279
@wewho1279 3 жыл бұрын
fair
@dirkmaes3786
@dirkmaes3786 3 жыл бұрын
A debate is really nothing more than enforcing a formal structure to a conversation - not every debate is a competition.
@maxmoloney3105
@maxmoloney3105 3 жыл бұрын
dafuq. A conversation is literally just two people talking. A debate isnt about "destroying" the opponent at all. What you described as a conversation is what a debate actually is.
@LouiWoodman
@LouiWoodman 3 жыл бұрын
You confused an argument for a debate, and a debate for a conversation
@WadWizard
@WadWizard 3 жыл бұрын
I find debates too draining and stressful, id rather have a conversation, theres a deeper connection to be found in it, why does everything have to have drama for it to appeal to people...
@BillRemski
@BillRemski Жыл бұрын
We live in a deluded culture. When you replace knowledge and reason with drama and lies, you get things like "thought leaders."
@BrianMcInnis87
@BrianMcInnis87 3 жыл бұрын
0:17 'Hello there, I'm a KZbin celebrity pundit on a channel providing opinion pieces on cartoon shows and I'm smarter than Neil deGrasse Tyson!'
@iiireeeneee
@iiireeeneee 3 жыл бұрын
The editing did Hbomberguy so dirty Lmao
@luisgapro
@luisgapro 3 жыл бұрын
lol yeah. They did say good or bad but he was still the first to be shown.
@methinksish
@methinksish 3 жыл бұрын
I was like wait... WHAT DID HE DO??
@Fabelaz
@Fabelaz 3 жыл бұрын
ehh, he's not a saint you know?
@theocean1973
@theocean1973 3 жыл бұрын
@@Fabelaz are you referring to that whole exaggerated (no)thing from a few years ago? Next!
@Fabelaz
@Fabelaz 3 жыл бұрын
@@theocean1973 I'm not sure what you are talking about. Can you elaborate? Answering your implied question though, I honestly don't remember all of the problems I have with him or his content, but one of them is that he is a bit full of himself which I dislike. Doesn't mean I can't enjoy his content though. Also, "next!" - excuse me but what the fuck?
@mbanerjee5889
@mbanerjee5889 3 жыл бұрын
"Hey genius, stay in your lane." Being knowledgeable in one subject does not make you knowledgeable in other subjects.
@thatboii3094
@thatboii3094 3 жыл бұрын
well scientist are a kid that never grow out of their room of toys
@thatboii3094
@thatboii3094 3 жыл бұрын
so they will continue
@HeckleJeckle87
@HeckleJeckle87 3 жыл бұрын
THIS, I think is the biggest problem which we can see in play with Neil Degrasse Tyson. Very knowledgeable astrophysicist, but doesn't know a thing about philosophy. So why is he commenting on philosophy?
@paulgotik
@paulgotik 3 жыл бұрын
well you can be knowledgeable in more than one, but not in everything. And even if you are knowledgeable in one subject doesn't mean you know everything about that subject.
@paulgotik
@paulgotik 3 жыл бұрын
@@HeckleJeckle87 because everyone has the right to comment on what they want. You just assume he is right if you want.
@TweakaliciousTV
@TweakaliciousTV 3 жыл бұрын
Considering Elon musk an intellectual is offensive to intellectuals. He's rich. That's it. He was born that way.
@incarceratedtoast5725
@incarceratedtoast5725 2 жыл бұрын
Stuck on dark souls? Power Pose! Posture is key! Me stuck on Sekiro: Ah poop.
@grandsome1
@grandsome1 3 жыл бұрын
5:28 That kind of BS is why I stopped watching TED talks and started listening to actual reviewed books.
@NelsonStJames
@NelsonStJames 3 жыл бұрын
I can remember a time when I thought TedTalks were the greatest thing; but that sorta' didn't last long after I started seeing what some of these talks were about, or the qualifications of the people giving them.
@TerrorTerros
@TerrorTerros 3 жыл бұрын
There still a gem here and there IMO, they've always been hit or miss.
@hexonatapeloop
@hexonatapeloop 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, they should be good but they’re crap
@HouseFromSmartCity
@HouseFromSmartCity 3 жыл бұрын
They’re just a toastmasters event on steroids...I hope the pseudo-storytelling trend along with the poor use of hand gesturing in presentation that TED Talks have turned into a template fizzles out soon. I also think people get the point by now that “doing what you love and what makes you happy” is the secret to the arbitrary definition of “happiness”. If not, don’t worry - they’ll have 3 new speakers next week ready to remind you.
@cagedgandalf3472
@cagedgandalf3472 3 жыл бұрын
Are AI TedTalks good or am I just blind?
@aspergale9836
@aspergale9836 3 жыл бұрын
Only good ones I remember or see nowadays are ones about physical inventions. Like when someone was demoing his app (for tablets) for kids to learn language by some abstract visuals plus pronunciations and such. I don't remember the details, and it might not have been too useful of a thing as is, but it's tangible and something you can actually test and refine. The rest needs a lot of effort to validate and the speakers usually don't provide that validation machinery in the talk itself, which makes it suspect _even_ when I find myself agreeing, shocked, or questioning at points.
@banditbro25
@banditbro25 3 жыл бұрын
"If it's stupid but it works it isn't stupid." -Spartan Edward Buck
@rynjp
@rynjp 2 жыл бұрын
“Anyone can put text in quotations and have it be considered true” -Johnathon Jinglehiemer
@nemmorajala4699
@nemmorajala4699 3 жыл бұрын
I think, that instead of people getting dumber, it is people getting way more chances to be heard. A lot has happened just because of social media and globalisation. Better media reading skills will make that go and actually, I think people are already smarter than before. Dumb people just happen to want to share their ideas before thinking about them twice. Also, a smart guy can still be smart, even after believing into something wrong for a while.
@jupitervideos7702
@jupitervideos7702 2 жыл бұрын
That is of much possibility
@GodlordBazi
@GodlordBazi 2 жыл бұрын
A German scientiest (forgot his name) put it that way: Not that long ago, every village had its own idiot. Everybody knew that he was an idiot, so nobody listened to him. The idiot understood that circumstance and kept his mouth shut to avoid making people's view on him even worse. Now all those idiots have access to the internet and are able to connect. Its idiots listening to idiots, so nobody amongst them is smart enough to tell the idiots that they're idiots. That's why idiots don't know that they're idiots anymore and so they don't keep their mouths shut anymore. Now that we can't ignore them anymore like we did back in the day doesn't mean that they've grown in number. There's still one idiot per village, it's just that progress gave him the ability and confidence to speak.
@PvblivsAelivs
@PvblivsAelivs 2 жыл бұрын
People have had more chances to be heard, censorship by the "gatekeepers" notwithstanding. Previously, only the "approved thoughts" (which, depending on the time could well be "the earth is flat") could be heard. But dumb people don't have any ideas of their own. They believe something because someone told them to believe it. And they are the sort of people who will respond to a detailed argument against the position of their preferred echo chamber by just typing back "wow" or maybe "that's a big wall of text." Ideas, even bad ideas, even incorrect ideas, come from smart people. Smart people may sometimes make dubious connections. But dumb people can't make connections at all.
@billbuyers8683
@billbuyers8683 2 жыл бұрын
ok so if you could prove that statement, you may have a point. (even though i don't see how being smarter has to do with being heard at all lol. but really people have always been intelligent and i doubt you could survive 1000 years ago as people 1000 years ago could not survive today if we were to somehow switch places over night. the point of the vid is that people are being wrong on purpose in order to please the corporate handlers of information.
@arthas640
@arthas640 Жыл бұрын
I was reminded of this not too long ago when I saw a 20-30 year old video of an author on TV talking about his books which were turned into a TV series. Back then it was rare for an author to speak directly to the viewers about his books before the start of the program and even interviews were rare, now authors have fans tweeting at them 24/7, they do year round interviews with journalists and tv hosts, they've go their own websites, and they have sites dedicated to them sometimes even including things like wiki sites that host every detail about their franchise ever mentioned or written and every time they appear in public a fan has them on video.
@musicnerd1023
@musicnerd1023 3 жыл бұрын
"We earn credibility by having a very strong point of view and never deviating from it" That right there is the real problem in a nutshell. Credibility from ideas/thinktanks/intellectuals used to be based on if they were right or wrong. Now it's moved or is moving towards them being consistent in their views, this is stupid and dangerous.
@loganproksch9305
@loganproksch9305 3 жыл бұрын
I like what you said." Truth" without data is the opposite.
@malikmuhammad9085
@malikmuhammad9085 3 жыл бұрын
We have to realize that all these people are flawed just like anyone else and if data doesn't show it they're wrong just like all the other humans
@loganproksch9305
@loganproksch9305 3 жыл бұрын
Glad to know there are still people that recognize this. If they disappear we will be in a lot more trouble like @musicnerd1023 said.
@darlalathan6143
@darlalathan6143 2 жыл бұрын
Yep. Think tanks have become fanatical political propaganda machines, instead of fact-checkers.
@vebdaklu
@vebdaklu 2 жыл бұрын
I found it very refreshing to discern between "opinion" and "information". When someone says that someone died, that is an information I can check easily, but when they tell me why they died, I know that is an opinion, even if that man is a coroner or doctor. His opinion is more likely to be correct, yes, but there is still room for error in interpretation. That's why research is important, it provides information, and information is better for forming decisions than opinions.
@homemmakako3073
@homemmakako3073 2 жыл бұрын
So, about deGrasse's sentence, I actually understand where he is coming from: many times such profound questions ("the meaning of the meaning" as he says) are irrelevant to many areas of science; to a physicist, exploring and debating the most intrinsic details of things would be just a waste of time as it diverges from their area of study. It's not that such questions are senseless, just that such questions would be meaningless to an astrophysicist. This kind of divergence is in fact quite well discussed in philosophy when it comes to the acquisition of knowledge (dogmatism and skepticism) and one could even include Plato and Aristotle and their famous painting in this discussion. To summarize, I believe he meant it as "it sounds ridiculous to me (as an astrophysicist)" much more than "it is simply ridiculous", which, although I do not agree, I find it understandable from his point of view. Note: not trying to "defend" him, that's why I won't talk about the other things he said, and might even be wrong in my interpretation of what he meant, since I do not know him (and his way of thinking) that well. I am talking about this specific sentence as I find it interesting the discussion of where "regular science" ends and philosophy continues.
@mgc7199
@mgc7199 2 жыл бұрын
It turns out that if you want people to remember what you say, a joke helps to strengthen the connection. Now I'm not saying this was a particular good one, but you can expect him to make fun of other fields and ideas and take them into absurd metaphors. It's pretty low hanging fruit but you've got to remember the target audience is not his fellow scientists. The good thing about philosophy is that it asks questions and uses logic to derive an answer. You could say a scientist asks questions for which the elements are known or at least suspected to exist whereas philosophers don't really care whether the elements contained in their questions exist as long as the answer makes sense.
@MrWenjieZhu
@MrWenjieZhu 3 жыл бұрын
The ad show up during this video is neil degrasse tyson saying: One of the great challenge of this world Is knowing enough of a subject to think you are right, but not enough about a subject to know you are wrong. XD
@unvergebeneid
@unvergebeneid 3 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure if you're joking!
@skylersmith7
@skylersmith7 3 жыл бұрын
@@unvergebeneid I mean I feel like the point is that Neil Degrasse Tyson is an astrophysicist, and that his sentiments on other subjects, like philosophy, should be seen with relevant skepticism.
@unvergebeneid
@unvergebeneid 3 жыл бұрын
@@skylersmith7 Yes exactly. That's why the irony is overwhelming!
@MrKobicalaca12
@MrKobicalaca12 3 жыл бұрын
I really fucking hate that guy
@MrKobicalaca12
@MrKobicalaca12 3 жыл бұрын
He acts like he’s the genius on all fields, stay on your fucking lane neil.
@ashmarie5049
@ashmarie5049 3 жыл бұрын
My Highschool physics teacher was a complete genius. He was a genius to the point that he would just say the dumbest, rudest shit. A staff member I was close to said “he’s so smart that he can’t interact with everyone else like a normal person.” And that seems to be a general trend among all of the mega smart people I know.
@dewut420
@dewut420 3 жыл бұрын
@DJHart not when they are arrogant
@agstinacueva1673
@agstinacueva1673 3 жыл бұрын
@DJHart of course it ok to be rude if you're rich :)
@samgourhan207
@samgourhan207 3 жыл бұрын
I think rude & arrogant people are stupid. i kinda think Rick & Morty made it a trend for smart people to be loud arrogant assholes. Say what you will i think smart people are more like keanu reeves or morty. Maybe i mean wise.
@foreverlikethestarss
@foreverlikethestarss 3 жыл бұрын
So that’s why elon likes Rick and morty
@321sarahbob
@321sarahbob 3 жыл бұрын
This is painfully true and accurate of a lot of my college professors. Had one dude that was uber smart and he said he cared about teaching too, not just research. He attended a lot of education conferences and came to the conclusion that cold calling students in a lecture hall of about 300 kids would be beneficial to comprehension. I'm normally pretty good at paying attention in class, in part thanks to anxiety. But bro's cold calling made me almost have a panic attack in class everyday. He was so smart that he didn't think to assess and adjust his teaching style
@NottanALias
@NottanALias 2 жыл бұрын
I have long since abandoned wisecrack as either it deteriorated or I developed away from it. However this video reminded me of the old days. Thank you for speaking out on the topic.
@fancycrafts7774
@fancycrafts7774 2 жыл бұрын
Seems like when you become a public “smart person”, and everyone quotes you to try to sound smart, you start to believe the myth. And then you’re constantly on camera, believing that you are definitively smarter, and people should listen to your thoughts...
@mikedangerdoes
@mikedangerdoes 3 жыл бұрын
I mean, anyone relying on twitter for intellectualism probably needs their head examined.
@primtones
@primtones 3 жыл бұрын
A lot of intellectuals is sharing interesting knowledge about their fields on Twitter. Problem is, you have to look for them. They don't have 50 million followers.
@PomadaGaming
@PomadaGaming 3 жыл бұрын
@@primtones you’ll have that trouble in every social media,not only twitter.
@gtothereal
@gtothereal 3 жыл бұрын
Maybe we should stop expecting intellectuals to be smart at everything. Yes sometimes they shove their way into a topic they shouldn’t but often we demand someone to have a statement on everything. I actually don’t care if neil is bad a philosophy. That isn’t why I love him. There are many controversial people I love. I don’t judge them harshly for being wrong because I don’t hold their takes outside their fields very high in the first place. Remember we’re all people and you probably have some stupid beliefs yourself. I don’t know.
@spicybaguette7706
@spicybaguette7706 3 жыл бұрын
I agree, that's just being human I guess. Maybe if we were all smart human beings we would respectfully correct each other and not just get totally haywire over some things because we are emotionally invested
@SimonNZ6969
@SimonNZ6969 3 жыл бұрын
Pretty much.
@erasmus9511
@erasmus9511 3 жыл бұрын
Fax
@diz5342
@diz5342 3 жыл бұрын
100% agree high levels of expertise tends to be specific, not broad
@gh0s1wav
@gh0s1wav 3 жыл бұрын
Well Malcolm gladwell is famous for the 10,000 hours book but that idea's been proven wrong. The lady Helen opened with...her claim to fame was proven wrong as well. The problem is that some of these people are becoming known as public intellectuals because they are just illustrating common thought in an "intellectual" way and other people's claim to fame is legitimate but their reputation starts speaking for their work rather than their work speaking for itself.
@oscarg6924
@oscarg6924 Жыл бұрын
Modern public intellectual discourse is much worse than.... what? Mid-20th century intellectual life? Keep in mind that in 1950 around 50% of the world's population was illiterate. There might have been some formidable intellectuals out there at the time, but public discourse nonetheless was dominated by Cold War era propaganda. And if you go further back in time, you'll see even smaller audiences, less peer reviewing, less rigorous application of the scientific method, and more propaganda. What are we so nostalgic about?
@janea4777
@janea4777 Жыл бұрын
Mike Lindell must be power posing before every interview 😂
@akhileshzmishra
@akhileshzmishra 3 жыл бұрын
"If you torture the data enough, it would confess". We take everything, every "research" at face value without as much as questioning the bias of the researcher.
@SeSdesc
@SeSdesc 3 жыл бұрын
Well, sometimes a study doesn´t certify a point. A research is part of the process that we know as science. A research is not a "definitive" truth. Is dangerous that people take them like that just to "prove" their points, and that´s not the researcher´s fault. And, the other risk is that people use the bias thing to discredit researches that don´t certify their point of view or their ideologies... That leads to a lot of BS...
@IncredibleMD
@IncredibleMD 3 жыл бұрын
@@SeSdesc The reason why the CDC wants you to think its hands are tied researching gun violence is because the director of the CDC, in the early nineties, decided he was going to use his position as the CDC to spread anti-gun propaganda under the guise of "research", which lead to a ban on the CDC being allowed to produce partisan studies designed to promote specific policies. Even today, the CDC is still so biased that a ban on producing partisan studies designed to promote specific policies has kept the CDC from producing studies on the subject. Because "researching gun violence" and "partisan study designed to promote specific policies" are synonyms to them. So they just went ahead and ignored actually doing research and just declared "gun violence" a health crisis, as if we aren't in the middle of a literal pandemic. Because they're an organization of lifelong government bureaucrats attempting to gain as much power over society as they can.
@THE_BEAR_JEW
@THE_BEAR_JEW 2 жыл бұрын
@@IncredibleMD While that may very well be true, the U.S. does have a major gun problem and there's no denying that. Biased research can't be disregarded in light of what we actually see. We aren't seeing guys go into Wal Marts in other 1st world countries shooting people up. I do agree there is far too much of a Boogeyman mentality about guns (especially from those who have never even held one before), but we can't just pretend there's not a problem whatsoever.
@miked412
@miked412 2 жыл бұрын
Who takes every research at face value? - I assume an unintentional grammatical error, but I do not understand what "every research" even is. To take research at face value literally goes against what research is.
@miked412
@miked412 2 жыл бұрын
@@THE_BEAR_JEW we don't have a firearm issue in America, we have a mental health issue coupled with easy access to equalizing weapons. - Also, so many studies are confounded by adding in suicides as firearm violence. I call a firearm an "equalizing weapon" because [within reason] it doesn't matter your gender, age, mass, etc; most people can become proficient enough with a firearm with minimal work (and cost). But, I struggle to understand the mainstream argument surrounding the effect (firearm violence) and not the cause (mental health issues). - And even the root cause of mental health issues. Both sides just seem to want to argue to argue and not actually work on the actual causes.
@Pazuzu4All
@Pazuzu4All 3 жыл бұрын
The problem with the idea of a "Free Marketplace of Ideas" is that it favors the most palatable and well-presented ideas, not necessarily the true or most accurate ones.
@KarlSnarks
@KarlSnarks 3 жыл бұрын
True, though I'd still rather have a free marketplace of ideas rather than a system that censors ideas (and I can't think of a third option apart from those two). Now I think to combat the problem with it, we'd need a way to cultivate a longer attention span, incentive to want to know the truth rather than to confirm your own biases, and good education on dissecting an argument (even for people who haven't got the fortune to attend college). Oh and ofcourse the introspection to asses our own biases.
@bananajoe113
@bananajoe113 3 жыл бұрын
@@KarlSnarks You can't have a free market of ideas with no restriction on those ideas. We deplatform specific people who talk about crazy shit. We don't need to give a platform to holocaust deniers because "We can't censor anyone". We need intellectual security to some degree. You can't have total physical freedom because it causes anarchy and the same I would think holds true for Ideas. Some ideas are just dumb and dangerous.
@CDB12345
@CDB12345 3 жыл бұрын
@@KarlSnarks you don´t get it, the "free marketplace" is an illusion, the most prominent ideas on this space will always be the ones that benefits the corporations who offers money to this "market". it´s a rigged system, where truth is never a primary concern. I agree with you that censorship is not the solution, but the system we live in operates in a similar way just undercover
@aspiringretard
@aspiringretard 3 жыл бұрын
No one has ever said "Free" Marketplace of Ideas. They only ever said "Marketplace of Ideas".
@ruthspanos2532
@ruthspanos2532 2 жыл бұрын
There are so many varied fields of knowledge that we are all bound to be victims of the Dunning-Kruger effect. Even genuine experts in a field can’t know or understand the experience of every individual. It’s impossible to be an expert in everything, even if one is legitimately a genius. But with social media everyone can find people and site which support their biases. And people with some levels of notoriety can immediately be supported in whatever they state publicly by their fans.
@CristMakhanya
@CristMakhanya 2 жыл бұрын
What did Neil do to you guys, did he kill your pet rock? 😂
@IncredibleMD
@IncredibleMD 3 жыл бұрын
"Why are you concerning yourself with the meaning of meaning?" I dunno, Neil, why did you decide to dedicate yourself to deciding if Pluto was *this* arbitrary classification of stellar object or *that* arbitrary classification of stellar object? That seems a hell of a lot more pointless than trying to understand ourselves as an existence. Philosophers: "We're trying to understand what is right and what is wrong." Scientists: "Cool, but have you considered dedicating your time to naming all the spiders instead?"
@wewho1279
@wewho1279 3 жыл бұрын
You smooth talker.... ;)
@browngosling3929
@browngosling3929 3 жыл бұрын
Each field is important, the most absurd thing to do is to claim you know that one is intrinsically better than another.
@firstnamelastname7003
@firstnamelastname7003 3 жыл бұрын
@@browngosling3929 nope. The field of homeopathic medicine is not important. And even as a planetary scientist, I can say that the work done on social and technological solutions to climate change is more important right now than what I am doing.
@browngosling3929
@browngosling3929 3 жыл бұрын
@@firstnamelastname7003 nope, that’s completely subjective. You may be a planetary scientist but once again, claiming that your science is greater than herbal medicine, whether it be a science or not, is absurd. Some have been touched by homeopathy more than knowing the orbit of certain planetary objects. I’m a man of science too but it’s quite arrogant to take away meaning of anything to any individual.
@firstnamelastname7003
@firstnamelastname7003 3 жыл бұрын
@@browngosling3929 yes, of course it's subjective. Subjectivity is in the definition of the word important - there's no objective measure of it. That doesn't mean one person can't claim that one thing is more important than the other, or the word important would be meaningless. And a consensus on importance based on common values can be created. We can agree that the world not ending is important to us humans in general even if a few of us are nihilists. Gosh, pedantism is dull.
@handlesarestupid154
@handlesarestupid154 3 жыл бұрын
These guys' intellects pale in comparison to the average Rick and Morty fan
@jamalisujang2712
@jamalisujang2712 3 жыл бұрын
To be fair...
@drinksavant
@drinksavant 3 жыл бұрын
...You have to have a very high iq to understand...
@iancardenas-spanishbutcomp4074
@iancardenas-spanishbutcomp4074 3 жыл бұрын
Facts 👆
@erickrocha3677
@erickrocha3677 3 жыл бұрын
Cringe
@MeatCatCheesyBlaster
@MeatCatCheesyBlaster 3 жыл бұрын
How many reddit points do you need before you can truly get rich and morty
@IceGoddessRukia
@IceGoddessRukia 2 жыл бұрын
"There are some great intellectuals doing great work" *shows Contrapoints* LOL
@Mystical_13
@Mystical_13 2 жыл бұрын
Some of these people clearly haven't even watched the video.
@clarkkent2725
@clarkkent2725 3 жыл бұрын
A good quote I stumbled across a while back... “Show me a wise man and I’ll show you a man that’s made the most mistakes.” I take it as learning through experience, we all “mess up” along the way at some point. There’s a difference between “book smarts” and “street smarts”, I’ve seen it many times.
@straightupanarg6226
@straightupanarg6226 2 жыл бұрын
Some people have both. I spent a decade homeless, but was trained as a philosopher. Wait.
@DJ-Brownie-UK
@DJ-Brownie-UK 2 жыл бұрын
bravo fella, agreed. One killer fact is this "All things written (codecs) are made up by arranging various types of vibrations (keys) into a recognised pattern (cipher) so as it is decoded and interpreted correctly. Therefore it is always open to interpretation , meaning anything ever written by someone is just an opinion, or the best model so far, theory , What is a Fact ? anything known as a fact which is based on scientific theory is actually a serious deception these placebos can cause serious mental issues and physical illnesses,
@luketimewalker
@luketimewalker 2 жыл бұрын
I love that, Mr Kent
@austingoyne3039
@austingoyne3039 2 жыл бұрын
@@DJ-Brownie-UK I mean… if the message is conveyed *effectively* then the meaning shouldn’t be contentious, as long as we’re talking about practical communication (e.g. poetry might be a diff story)
@WhatIWantToListenTo
@WhatIWantToListenTo 10 ай бұрын
​@@straightupanarg6226 Diogenes?
@kaizokujimbei143
@kaizokujimbei143 3 жыл бұрын
"Why are smart people so dumb?" It's because they weren't "smart" to begin with. The idea of the "genius" is one which has been perverted by modern society to mean "a person who possesses omnipotence and who is all knowing." However, that definition of "genius" is false, and it's also historically inaccurate. Historically speaking, a genius is a person who is a master at a particular area or activity. There is the philosopher, the scribe, the leader, the general etc. A person can be a genius at his own area of expertise but be a complete fool when it comes to everything else. The myth of genius as it exists today is even a thing because of a misunderstanding of what an IQ test actually does. An IQ test is designed to test your abilities on a very particular set of mental exercises, therefore, there is a statistical bias ingrained in its execution and in its results. And there is also the fact that the results of an IQ test are further skewed when we take into account that there is also a statistical bias on focusing on particular socioeconomic backgrounds which further works to define the general intelligence of the human population under a very specific and ultimately flawed way.
@demonposessed7413
@demonposessed7413 3 жыл бұрын
Actually, geniuses are polymaths, like da Vinci, who had 220IQ, thus defeating your fallacious inbred garbage blabber by a factor of a trillion
@MylesKillis
@MylesKillis 3 жыл бұрын
I agree with you until your started criticizing Iq. Actual valid IQ tests actually overcome the problems you address. They aren't biased because they extract out and test the skill that is common across all areas of knowledge and what common trait takes to learn them all. That's IQ. Crappy quick iq test don't do this.
@PomadaGaming
@PomadaGaming 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah,it’s basically “We made this test with these certain questions and these certain topics,if you fail you have a low intelligence level,regardless of any other social or emotional knowledge you may have experienced and learned from”,which is basically the main reason i hate school so much,since it’s just such a primitive way to classify people for how well can they memorize a book or two to then spit it out on a paper on a limited amount of time,and even worse is that apparently your performance on said activities represents your worth,and future;again regardless of any other aspect that you may have skills on. Power is still on the wrong hands.
@AmberAmber
@AmberAmber 3 жыл бұрын
@@demonposessed7413 The highest recorded IQ was 184. There were no IQ tests when Da Vinci was drawing insane looking vaginas.
@AmberAmber
@AmberAmber 3 жыл бұрын
@Kaizoku Jimbei Yup. XO
@dylanmuraco3986
@dylanmuraco3986 Жыл бұрын
A true intellectual will understand that he doesn’t know anything and the more he learns exponentially correlates to how much he doesn’t know
@simpletown323
@simpletown323 Жыл бұрын
I find myself running into this a lot lately. I find myself capable of understanding complex ideas a lot quicker than most people. I can think further and faster than some people but I often realize the longer I go down a rabbit hole of thought, the more I realize just how little I know. But at the same time, I feel like I can apply my preexisting knowledge or experience onto other topics but end up missing the mark a lot lol
@dolphininbikiniateallmyore0s
@dolphininbikiniateallmyore0s 11 ай бұрын
YOU DESCRIBED ME!!!!!😭😭😭
@peppep1704
@peppep1704 3 жыл бұрын
"The goal of life is not to find oneself in the majority, but to escape the ranks of the insane." -Marcus Aurelius
@gtothereal
@gtothereal 3 жыл бұрын
It’s easy to be cynical but this is the golden age of intellectualism. Most of the planet is literate. And a millions are spending their free time consuming intellectual content. And that content has the least censorship ever. No moment in history even comes close. Sure the mainstream can be crap but that’s life. Transformers outsells Casablanca. We should talk about the issues but not lose sight of what we have accomplished.
@godsstrongestmagicalgirl5217
@godsstrongestmagicalgirl5217 3 жыл бұрын
I’d digress. Yes, more people than ever are going to school, but I don’t think school actually makes ppl any more intelligent.
@patstevens4560
@patstevens4560 3 жыл бұрын
Even in the past century many people weren't educated in things we consider basic. It's a marvel that most people in modern society can read, write, do some basic math, etc. It's disheartening to know, more than ever, the opportunity to be informed is wasted by a high number of us.
@uchewb3
@uchewb3 3 жыл бұрын
People are still expected to source their information to some degree, but the issue here is that information can be bought from “intellectual figures.” Sometimes this scientists w expertise (research, phd, etc) and sometimes nothing. For example, PragerU is one of the biggest sources ppl use, but all of their content uses evidence from thinktanks owned by corporations from major industries like fossil fuels or weapons. They also promote distrust to scientific research if its “paid for by the government” aka taxpayer funds which create taxpayer owned research. If no facts are trustworthy, why not turn to anyone at all with any opinion?
@5Chaor
@5Chaor 3 жыл бұрын
@@uchewb3 There's also people like Sam Harris, Jordan Peterson, Neil deGrasse Tyson. They will talk on matter such as religion, politics and social issue despite having no prior understand of field or even basic reading of history. And then is theres internet commentator. Who's completely talking out of their ass. I remember when a bunch of atheist channels was talking about social justice and it was clear had no idea what they were talking about.
@edwardofgreene
@edwardofgreene 3 жыл бұрын
@@5Chaor I too am an internet commenter with no idea what I'm talking about.
@yoboimichproductionsinc.2948
@yoboimichproductionsinc.2948 2 жыл бұрын
The REAL problem is that people are not making their own minds and going to the big infulencers for their opinions on things but everyone need to doubt things and decide for themselves
@GreatWhite00000
@GreatWhite00000 3 жыл бұрын
I find it fascinating how a well-informed video like this, discussing the biases in information, poses "democrat and reublican" as the entirety of the spectrum of thought.
@Padtedesco
@Padtedesco 3 жыл бұрын
To Elon Musk: Bolivians send their regards
@batbite_
@batbite_ 3 жыл бұрын
Really, fuck Elon Musk - what a complete psychopath.
@batbite_
@batbite_ 3 жыл бұрын
@@secretname4190 He isn't doing shit, he's just some rich guy taking the honour and money of other people's work and giving money to fascist coups in South America because he wants cheap minerals. People like him is degenerating our world towards a dystopian hellscape with his greedyness and psychopathy. Yes, he was a bit poggers on a potcast once, but please don't simp him just because your favourite marvel hero is inspired by him or because he has a really good marketing team who is really good at making happenings and promoting his name. With his Bolivia comments it's clear that he's ready to do ANYTHING for power and money.
@batbite_
@batbite_ 3 жыл бұрын
@@secretname4190 Elon Musk would literally support Hitler if he thought it would make him a buck, how tf don't you see a problem with that?
@batbite_
@batbite_ 3 жыл бұрын
@@secretname4190 he has stated that he would support a fascist coup just to get lithium - what is your response to that? Until then I thought that he was better than most bourgeois - I kinda liked what he did. Now it seems clear to me that he is just another psychopathic fat cat.
@batbite_
@batbite_ 3 жыл бұрын
​@@secretname4190 Are you really sure? A normal and famous brand like the banana brand Chiquita is doing stuff like this through the collusion organiziation "the United Fruit Company", american firms has supported fascist coups in south america, africa and the middle east since forever; it really wouldn't suprise me if a firm like Tesla joined in on coups like this. Thereby I'm not able to just brush off Musks comment as "just a joke bro" easily. Furthermore it still stands that Musk, like any Bourgeois, exploits his workers and take the honour for what they have done. I want to be clear; when i said "I kinda liked what he did", i meant being entertaining while exploiting his workers, and these entertaining ideas are probably again other's hard work that he takes the honour for. My point is that any simping for Musk is and has always been cringe and should remain so coup or not.
@spol
@spol 3 жыл бұрын
Even the smartest people get things wrong.
@matthewcuriel991
@matthewcuriel991 3 жыл бұрын
Being smart or intelligent was never about how often you can be correct tho. Rather what you can produce when knowledge is acquired. Which I believe many pseudo intellects or just other people get too lost in trying to achieve the stature of ALWAYS being correct, Rather than making positive high magnitude outcomes for others to realize the magnitude of their intellect. Example) einstein's regarded as a high grade intellectual because his findings with the knowledge he had ... had a positive impact on the world as a whole. And he displayed that's how capable his intelligence was. If you have examples of "intellects" yet their ideas only lead to self improvement or inevitably have bad outcomes for groups or others avast. The intelligence decreases. Tho technically someone who does things that are supremely terrible can be percieved as intellectual based on its definition ... I often reserve the term for those worthy of reverence through positive outcomes. Not those willing to go about negative outcomes for self with consideration of knowledge in front of them (like the hitler types ... surely he was knowledgable of the impact of his actions but still chose to do something haneous. And surely he was knowledgable of circumstances and of systems in place to gain traction. But cuz of this I wouldnt call him an intellectual because if he was fully intelligent hed know not to do what he did.) Also ... when you reject the possibility of being wrong regarding ideas that's when you open the door for unrelenting stupidity which I personally believe plagues many people in some form or another (even myself at times but I try to catch it and grow from it). At least that's how I see it. It's great to know there is a lot of things they may not know to have an openness to understand outside perspective beyond your intuitive beliefs. Especially should those outside perspectives aid your principles or ideals. And even then to have a willingness to concede the flaws/cons in your own ideals and perceptions of life if reason presents itself
@imakevideos5377
@imakevideos5377 3 жыл бұрын
its only human to get things wrong
@PomadaGaming
@PomadaGaming 3 жыл бұрын
Yet the wisest are the only ones who acknowledge those mistakes and try to improve from them.
@agstinacueva1673
@agstinacueva1673 3 жыл бұрын
NO WAY
@GizmoFromPizmo
@GizmoFromPizmo 2 жыл бұрын
I follow a few naturopaths and nutrition folks who teach against the mainstream medical model - that our bodies are able to heal themselves of chronic disease but we have to feed them the proper foods in order for them to do that. It can be an echo chamber at times but their applied science has REALLY been shown to be far superior to the advice given by most Medical Doctors (MDs). No MD in his right mind would claim to be able to cure type 2 diabetes but if by "cure" you mean to reverse all the cause of the disease then naturopathic (holistic) medicine combined with better eating decisions have been curing this disease for a long time. Whereas the best your MD can do is prescribe more Metformin or insulin injections, the naturopath prescribes fasting, reducing of ceasing the ingestion of starches, table sugar, fructose sweeteners, and omega 6 (rancid) seed and bean oils. These ideas are revolutionary and deserve to be heard and so I'm glad that they have a platform like KZbin et. al. to use as their sounding board.
@thelastcube.
@thelastcube. 3 жыл бұрын
I get to watch these _intellectuals_ being picked apart for their hollowness _AND_ getting some dope ass book recommendations? You guys really squeezed a lot in there
@NarrowMullen
@NarrowMullen 3 жыл бұрын
Did y'all really just compare hbomberguy to Ben Shapiro lmao
@xbaker3868
@xbaker3868 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Dear lord.
@henrybemis9956
@henrybemis9956 3 жыл бұрын
They are twisting themselves into knots trying to show how "BOTH SIDES" are equally bad. Notice how they mentioned a bunch of horrible things that thinktanks do, and every single one of the examples was conservative rightwing think tanks paid for by billionaires? But both sides are equally bad. SMMFH
@swivelmaster
@swivelmaster 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah that was pretty disappointing. Comparing a guy who cites, reads, links, and is very comprehensive about sources (and admitting he could be wrong) to a guy who will entertain the idea that climate change is real only as a hypothetical is... well, it's bad.
@AvgJane19
@AvgJane19 3 жыл бұрын
@@springss1861 that's not what either of those words mean
@leonardorossi998
@leonardorossi998 3 жыл бұрын
It's weird because when she cites a good case she only shows Contrapoints, which doesn't seem to follow the "both sides" thing. I mean, if she wanted to choose a more "controversial" youtuber from the "left tube" she could have chosen someone like Vaush (I don't have any particular feelings towards the guy, but I've read many more complaints about him than about hbomb).
@a_e_hilton
@a_e_hilton 3 жыл бұрын
"I'm not going to name any names." *Editor, who just showed their faces, sweats profusely*
@LinkEX
@LinkEX 3 жыл бұрын
Fridge Logic joke , lol. How could the editor possibly have matched the visuals to the audio wihtout knowing precisely what is being said at that point?
@KZ-xt4hl
@KZ-xt4hl 3 жыл бұрын
@@LinkEX It's a fucking joke you utter clown. it points out dissonance, that's why it's funny
@polishane8837
@polishane8837 Жыл бұрын
Nowadays I hate elon musk so much, he takes money from good infrastructure projects to make the "hyper halahsjfhsgauwosvs" that's a more inefficient train
@kozhedub
@kozhedub Жыл бұрын
This is why metal guitarists do the power stance when we're onstage. We're actually super embarrassed to be playing our music in front of real people
@davegoehrig7674
@davegoehrig7674 3 жыл бұрын
the irony is thick with this one, can we have a Wisecrack meta-commentary deconstructing how Wisecrack is a perfect example of this premise?
@user-fd5zv3wm8u
@user-fd5zv3wm8u 3 жыл бұрын
This guy gets it
@killagilla24
@killagilla24 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly, she seems like the biggest pseudo-intellectual at wisecrack.
@angel-emiliovillegas5562
@angel-emiliovillegas5562 3 жыл бұрын
I like that idea, though I'd say that Wisecrack up to date has shown a surprising amount of academicship when using outside sources for their analysis, and in several of their analysis of popular culture I believe they acknowledge what they say as an interpretation rather than the ultimate point of view.
@coastermaker3832
@coastermaker3832 3 жыл бұрын
The whole premise of this video is self-contradicting, because a lot of stuff that she points out as "dumb" are actually points still in discussion (like everything in science, as an example). If you're calling diverging points of view on an undecided topic. Well... You ARE the pseudo-intellectual you're trying to debunk.
@firstnamelastname7003
@firstnamelastname7003 3 жыл бұрын
To be fair, a medium examining itself is a sign of growth towards maturity. It's surely a step in the right direction, ironic or not.
@socialinteraction_8252
@socialinteraction_8252 3 жыл бұрын
Nobody: This comment section: *Q U O T E S*
@FocusMrbjarke
@FocusMrbjarke 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah everyone trying to act smart lol
@lumpystilskin5367
@lumpystilskin5367 3 жыл бұрын
For the clout
@moresoulthanasockwithahole3493
@moresoulthanasockwithahole3493 3 жыл бұрын
Nobody: You: atill using unfunny nobody jokes in 2020
@socialinteraction_8252
@socialinteraction_8252 3 жыл бұрын
@@moresoulthanasockwithahole3493 Nobody: You: Commenting an "unfunny" joke back at my "unfunny" joke to console your lack of self confidence and horrible grammar by putting others down in the KZbin comment section. Have a nice life, sir. :)
@kamiiwave
@kamiiwave 3 жыл бұрын
i know right? i scrolled through the comments hoping that someone would say something smart that make me think but there’s only quotes.
@matteyevee2333
@matteyevee2333 3 жыл бұрын
Elon musk is the Big Bang theory of humans just projecting this paper thin veneer of nerd culture while pretending to be smart.
@NickSkilly
@NickSkilly 3 жыл бұрын
Hey, I just want to say that I watch your videos all the time, and noticed you quoted one of my articles on creativity at 00:12:36 That was such a cool surprise, so thank you. Totally unexpected.
@bazzfromthebackground3696
@bazzfromthebackground3696 3 жыл бұрын
Journalists are "what" people. Scientists are "how" people. Philosophers are "why" people. Politicians are "who" people.
@abiylakew3328
@abiylakew3328 3 жыл бұрын
And The Doctor is the "when and where" person
@GodheadJudgement
@GodheadJudgement 3 жыл бұрын
Time Travelers are "when" people
@Feefa99
@Feefa99 3 жыл бұрын
Dictators are "whose" people. Businessmans are "how many" people. Boomers are "how old" people.
@thatboii3094
@thatboii3094 3 жыл бұрын
@@Feefa99 man of progress (people are a means)
@croixrennie892
@croixrennie892 3 жыл бұрын
Capitalist 🇺🇸 are “mine” people Communist 🇷🇺 are “ours” people
@rturae
@rturae 2 жыл бұрын
"I am so so smart! I am so smart! I am so smart! SMRT! I mean SMART!"
@hugs4drugs205
@hugs4drugs205 2 жыл бұрын
Also shout out Jimmy Carter, respectable not gaining massive campaign contributions for arbitrary speeches pandering to a specific audience
@theshamanite
@theshamanite 3 жыл бұрын
"Truth comes from dialogue and consensus, not from a weird fetishization of conflict and debate." TRUTH
@FenixIzyuze
@FenixIzyuze 3 жыл бұрын
glad we have experiments in science, or the "consensus" would sayed that atoms didnt exist
@theshamanite
@theshamanite 3 жыл бұрын
@@FenixIzyuze Lol you've got me there
@pathwaystoadventure
@pathwaystoadventure 3 жыл бұрын
@@FenixIzyuze But, the scientists who conducted, verified, and replicated those experiments had to, gasp, have a dialogue and consensus about their results. Scientists are never, EVER immune to the flaws that impact all humans. That's how some of our absolute worst 'science' in history, that hurt people and robbed them of their dignity, were perpetuated. Example: Go look into IQ testing and its origins. It was SO biased around a white, middle class, American education context. So when applied to children from different backgrounds, with less educated parents, with less resources, going to schools with less funding, and on children with vastly different life experiences, they scored much lower on average. This then was extrapolated out to support racist views on "intelligence" between people of color and non-color, when in reality it was using a poor control protocol and not being aware of, or giving a shit about, the methodologies that biased the results by not considering factors in the formation of the measure. Or if you want an example of shit science in my field: Social psychology. Good read up on the Bystander Effect and the Kitty Genovese case. A misreported news article, an erroneous conclusion by a scientist, who then formed an entire theory based on this incorrect information, that later on was difficult to replicate outside of specific contexts, oh and that resulted in life long trauma and at least one suicide attempt of one of the so-called bystanders. Experiments CAN be valuable. They CAN be ethical. They CAN really attempt to grasp at the realities they are attempting to study. But we must always be vigilant against shitty science. "Consensus" absolutely should matter at times, especially with dialogue from *everyone* impacted by the study. This researcher could have just interviewed the people who were involved in this case instead of extrapolating an entire theory based on a false news story...
@JustThatOneRandomGuy
@JustThatOneRandomGuy 3 жыл бұрын
Can someone elaborate this quote ?
@pathwaystoadventure
@pathwaystoadventure 3 жыл бұрын
@@JustThatOneRandomGuy from what I gather, truth comes from a collaborative conversation that leads to a consensus rather than a conflict driven debate about who is right or wrong.
@ProjSHiNKiROU
@ProjSHiNKiROU 3 жыл бұрын
Peter Coffin in multiple videos: “Attention is the currency in the marketplace of ideas”
@Garbloom
@Garbloom 3 жыл бұрын
Invest in BAT now!
@youare5907
@youare5907 3 жыл бұрын
Pretty shocking seeing a a fan of Peter coffin here
@KZ-xt4hl
@KZ-xt4hl 3 жыл бұрын
@@youare5907 I mean, peter is right
@theocean1973
@theocean1973 3 жыл бұрын
@@youare5907 I know right? Wisecrack doesn’t even speak in overly complex academic jargon that is completely inscrutable to anyone lacking a PhD in social sciences. You know, like Coffin does.
@peanutch
@peanutch 2 жыл бұрын
"Your brain gets smart, but your head gets dumb." - Smash Mouth
@michaelcstonebear420
@michaelcstonebear420 Жыл бұрын
Ok, my 2 cents worth. I have a PHD in philosophy and psychology, I loved college and grad school after I started them, in my 40’s. I was raised in a very poor American family, was in a gang by age 12 and had many adventures and misadventures as a teen and young adult. My father was killed when I was 9 months old and was I raised in a family where the motto was “if you get into trouble, get yourself out of trouble”. I grew up in the streets and learned a poor man’s philosophy, which is not an intellectual’s philosophy but has a deep-rooted meaning, none the less. Philosophy appears to me to stem from the desire of a thinking person wanting to better human understanding of their environment. As the environment became more complex so did the intellectual’s philosophy, but not so for the thinking poor man. One has to start with the understanding that the vast majority of people act like sheep and will follow the thoughts of any strong voice, this was the reason that governments were formed in the first place. That people needed to be taken care of, like sheep, was obvious to the one’s that thought about things and so they developed laws and regulations, but this led to the need for moral justification to support the acts of the leaders, thus religions were developed, to placate the fear and anxiety of the masses. Philosophy, any philosophy or philosopher only has an effect on the people that are interested in philosophy. Real philosophy or “street philosophy” has just one goal or statement to make and its based-on nature “only the strong survive”; strength in body, mind or spirit is the only thing that is relevant. That is why a strong-willed person like Jim Jones can convince people to drink poison cool aide, I doubt any of those people truly wanted to die and yet they drank because they weren’t strong enough in their will to live to say “no”. The only philosopher that made any sense to me was Socrates as he argued his points of view with all the leaders of his city. Which eventually angered them enough where he was told get out of town or drink a cup of poison, so the story goes and he drank the poison. So, to me all of this noise about post modern philosophy is just a bunch of people mentally masturbating about B.S.
@irighterotica
@irighterotica 3 жыл бұрын
Kind of funny Harry "Bomberguy" got passively compared to Ben Shapiro because of an editing job
@keegee8703
@keegee8703 3 жыл бұрын
And then contra and Peterson. Feels weird
@hap995
@hap995 3 жыл бұрын
ah, exactly what i thought.
@GabeVPrice
@GabeVPrice 3 жыл бұрын
Essentially by clipping in Breadtubers with clips of 'Dark Web intellectuals' while discussing the issue of 'Public Intellectuals being actually dumb' Wisecrack is implying that they're equally bad and stupid. Whereas Breadtubers like HBomberguy and Contrapoints usually not only heavily source their arguments and videos, but will also often take a moment to explain the limits of their expertise on the subject, where as Shapiro and Petersen . . . well, we all know how well-sourced their bullshit is.
@Hotshot2k4
@Hotshot2k4 3 жыл бұрын
Something favorable was being said during the first time Contra was shown. Don't feel like looking for it specifically, but they did say something along the lines of them being in the same category doesn't mean they are equally problematic
@QuikVidGuy
@QuikVidGuy 3 жыл бұрын
@@keegee8703 they did actually say contra was doing a lot of good thi
@ManuYoCom
@ManuYoCom 3 жыл бұрын
This video actually got me to understand a joke in Brooklyn 99 where Rosa tells Amy that nobody needs a "power pose" seminar. Now because of this video that gag makes even more sense.
@willtews955
@willtews955 Жыл бұрын
Society is exhausting. Full of ego and greed. The world's on fire and nobody even noticed.
@LoveIXTC
@LoveIXTC Жыл бұрын
Amen, it just hurts if you have any kind of empathy left...
@highonlife341
@highonlife341 Жыл бұрын
Billy Joel noticed
@willtews955
@willtews955 Жыл бұрын
@@LoveIXTC I have more empathy than me using my own emotions. I had to learn to control my frustration and anger, mostly because I was always misunderstood. My empathy is subjective though and doesn't apply to people in the real word but characters that are portrayed in media. Connecting with anyone real, will eventually get you screwed, however no one wants to just talk anymore and they weigh if your worth their time.
@LoveIXTC
@LoveIXTC Жыл бұрын
@@willtews955 it's always nice to communicate with human beeing you can relate with. i do agree with what you say, sadly most people are mislead by false prophets wich preach about money(status) and power over compassion and gratitude. greed is our worst enemy, living in a system wich capitalises on greed... my frustration is on it's peak... tell me how did u became ignorant and overcome your frustration towards society ? lots of love
@LoveIXTC
@LoveIXTC Жыл бұрын
@@willtews955 "they weigh if ur worth their time" is so fkin sad actually, however there are still a few humans wich treasure your company regardless, it's on us to find them.
@chrissyatkinson3971
@chrissyatkinson3971 2 жыл бұрын
This video made some grave and truly ironic errors in self-awareness and judgment. None of the points made were well-conceptualized (hell even the title fails to quantify what exactly “dumb” means in this context) and relied on somewhat passive-aggressive pictures with no explanations to do the very thing it was attempting to call out - which, to say, includes a hyper-critical, overgeneralized stab at the massive corporations running all our lives. Also, don’t channels like WiseCrack have groups of people conducting the research? With the arguments made here, it would be assumed that the host/narrator we see wrote and researched this entire video themselves with no one else on the team contributing? Probably not, and that’s perfectly fine. Wisecrack has shown itself to be competent up to now, but with the insights gleaned from this video, should we not expect true intellectual discourse and sound reasoning that doesn’t rely on pictures with no explanations, and generalized, buzz-word addled criticisms of the fact intellectuality no longer exists on a larger scale? I can see the point in recognizing the issues with corporate lobbyists and the ways in which groupthink affects our ability to discern whether or not we are being advertised to due to the infiltration of media into our very personalities, but it truly doesn’t even seem like a point that’s relevant to what I hoped would be discussed. I hope I was not alone in anticipating an insightful and research-based narrative that sheds light unto why we as intellectuals on an individual basis often feel ill-equipped in other areas of our life such as inter-social contexts and the like. I say this one warrants a do-over wisecrack, I’ve come to know you lot to be better than this
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