Nietzsche lecture by Prof. Raymond Geuss 1/7

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  • Опубліковано 27 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 143

  • @MorningSignal
    @MorningSignal 3 роки тому +42

    I would listen to this guy go through the whole history of western philosophy.

  • @sandygermsmanson
    @sandygermsmanson Рік тому +19

    For someone that’s too tired, he has a lot of energy

  • @petergraysongs6444
    @petergraysongs6444 6 років тому +44

    Thank you so much Kotti Everdine, Professor Geuss, and Cambridge University. What an absolutely amazing opportunity to attend this lecture series from one of the top sources in the world. I learned so much and already see how my perspectives have broadened from just this 7-part series. I am extremely grateful to you all for making this content available and giving me a taste of Cambridge University.

    • @MANDINGLOST00
      @MANDINGLOST00 11 місяців тому

      Amen. I know it’s 5 years later but I am sitting here saying the same thing. What an opportunity we have! To be able to take this material in from these great minds. Amazing times we live in.

  • @PriyaGupta-yz7fr
    @PriyaGupta-yz7fr 4 роки тому +26

    These lecture series are so enriching. Thank you.

  • @JanAndhisfiets
    @JanAndhisfiets 10 років тому +19

    I've got kicked early from school because of some serious ADD problems.. But thanks to guys like Kotti Everdene i just can enjoy some cool lectures about Nietzsche!! Awesomeeeee thanks.

    • @kevinbraid9739
      @kevinbraid9739 9 років тому +2

      ***** Nietzsche helped my ADHD

    • @JanAndhisfiets
      @JanAndhisfiets 9 років тому +2

      Kevin Braid Nietzsche is dynamite :)))

    • @neitherpeternorpaul
      @neitherpeternorpaul 7 років тому +2

      Can't you find your way back? I also had some problems with it but i got back to school few years later to get acces to universities and I don't regret any of the effort I put in. Social support is important though. In some cases therapy is also a good antidote to add. warm regards

  • @Williamaster369
    @Williamaster369 2 роки тому +3

    Thank you, Prof. Geuss and the channel organizer. The history of the interrelation between human mentality, morality, and religion unfolds in Nietzsche's untimely works. This inspiring video helps for the detailed and elaborate historical background of the eras before and after Nietzsche.

  • @brianholden7981
    @brianholden7981 7 років тому +6

    Best lecture series of Nietzsche on UA-cam

  • @dickschwanzstein1789
    @dickschwanzstein1789 3 роки тому +15

    I love how this guy is super proud of his command of German (and the occasional French word as well)

    • @geiletoni764
      @geiletoni764 3 роки тому +2

      Understandably so, his pronunciation is quite on point tbh.

    • @dickschwanzstein1789
      @dickschwanzstein1789 3 роки тому +1

      Yeah. I agree. Maybe he's even read Nietzsche in German. Then he'd really have something to be proud of

    • @norzin648
      @norzin648 3 роки тому +4

      You are named after THE MALE GENITALIEA

    • @mofo-mindoffikeostensibly9626
      @mofo-mindoffikeostensibly9626 3 роки тому +8

      Raymond Geuss was my professor for several terms, and not only did he live in Germany for years where he studied and taught, but he writes and publishes in German. So, it comes rather naturally to him to mix German (and several other languages) with English. And yes, of course, he reads Nietzsche in German.

    • @massacreee3028
      @massacreee3028 2 роки тому +2

      @@mofo-mindoffikeostensibly9626 Nietzsche is beautiful in German, his prose is outstanding!

  • @pyryjaala6674
    @pyryjaala6674 6 років тому +9

    These kind of things is the best thing about youtube!. Thanks for the upload!

  • @lucielassy
    @lucielassy 7 років тому +16

    recovering from an operation, this is helping feed my brain - Thank you! would be interested to know what readings were required for these lectures

  • @FlosBlog
    @FlosBlog 4 роки тому +15

    So, is this Raymond Geuss when he's tired?

  • @CustomerServiceAssistant
    @CustomerServiceAssistant 6 років тому +19

    MOST of Nietzsche’s books are VERY readable. People seem afraid of a string of difficult aphorisms; those are for the most part confined to Will To Power, which was more or less the work of his sister after he died.
    There is great enjoyment waiting for you in those books.

    • @kristianj.8798
      @kristianj.8798 5 років тому

      I think Human All Too Human is the best start, as it feels like (though I'm not very sure) it kind of introduces a lot of the ideas he presents in his more iconic works.

    • @MacSmithVideo
      @MacSmithVideo 5 років тому +3

      ​@@kristianj.8798 I'd start with Genealogy of Morals. It was the most accessible for me and has most of his big ideas. I absolutely love Thus Spoke Zarathustra but wouldn't recommend it until people have read a few other Nietzsche books first. I'd be completely lost if I started with that one first. It's pretty difficult.

    • @massacreee3028
      @massacreee3028 2 роки тому

      @@MacSmithVideo I’d say twilight of the idols is easily the best intro to nietzsche.

  • @matureyoungman
    @matureyoungman 2 роки тому +2

    Excellent & impassioned pedagogy

  • @MasumKhan-ug8nr
    @MasumKhan-ug8nr 4 роки тому +4

    Thank You Sir . From Bangladesh . A Big Fan Of Nietzsche . Loved Your Lectures .

  • @josephr.gainey2079
    @josephr.gainey2079 4 роки тому +15

    He should have waited until he wasn't tired and delivered the whole lecture!

  • @jlewis9043
    @jlewis9043 5 років тому +3

    Thank you! So helpful for my daughter. We have been going through different lectures and videos for weeks!

  •  10 років тому +51

    First of all thank you very much for upload such magnificent lessons.
    If I'm not asking to much, could you please also upload the handouts.
    thanks a million!

    • @suzannesutton5636
      @suzannesutton5636 6 років тому +4

      Any clues on how to get notes? This is a fantastic series (as is Raymond Geuss)! Thanks for posting

    • @milomorning
      @milomorning 5 років тому

      @@suzannesutton5636 any luck finding the handouts?

    • @digitalfeelings66
      @digitalfeelings66 5 років тому +13

      drive.google.com/file/d/1I0ZflLm9YGCWC3dSfgTyGzl2ozQbbRwn/view?usp=sharing

    • @SomebodyLikeXeo
      @SomebodyLikeXeo 4 роки тому

      @@digitalfeelings66 Any chance anyone would have these notes saved somewhere? The link is unavailable.

    • @uselessgarbagehandler
      @uselessgarbagehandler 4 роки тому

      @@SomebodyLikeXeo I'm looking for them too if anyone has them!

  • @alanshteynberg8313
    @alanshteynberg8313 10 років тому +8

    Very in-depth, thank you!

  • @copalfilmurszulanawrot
    @copalfilmurszulanawrot 29 днів тому

    A very interesting lecture. Thank you ❤

  • @icmull
    @icmull 3 роки тому +3

    Imagine your boss being like can you redo that report and you're like nah Im tired Ill give you a summary.

    • @gabrielajonczyk5663
      @gabrielajonczyk5663 3 роки тому

      You can easily read all about Nietzche yourself. All in Latin, XIX century German, all his critique and then make UA-cam video for free. UA-cam is not a boss of professor. Capitalistic state of mind - got full lecture on subject but didn't understood nothing because been said at the beginning that lecturer is tied.

  • @gonzogil123
    @gonzogil123 4 роки тому

    14:00min It would not be, because they had no interest in people developing critical skills? would that be a possibility?

  • @bunebone
    @bunebone 8 місяців тому

    bro just hypnotized me, dang this is too great

  • @NGARV36
    @NGARV36 10 років тому +1

    Thanks for uploading this series!

  • @borel4lpv
    @borel4lpv 3 роки тому +1

    i feel like camera operator was very much on disagreement of the lecturer - god can you please keep the camera still?

  • @fionzhen2305
    @fionzhen2305 3 роки тому

    I love this guy! Good work, guy!

  • @elihuyale8107
    @elihuyale8107 4 роки тому +1

    Remarkable lectures, thanks

  • @gonzogil123
    @gonzogil123 4 роки тому +1

    Why could Nietzsche predict he would be so well received by Capital? if they loved Kant so much? treating people as ends in themselves?

  • @andreasj2429
    @andreasj2429 21 день тому

    As I read, new research suggests that Nietzsche did not suffer from syphilis, but from MELAS syndrome.

  • @dickschwanzstein1789
    @dickschwanzstein1789 3 роки тому +1

    What exactly does he mean by the second empire? Is that the France of Napoleon?

    • @arturogonzalez6232
      @arturogonzalez6232 Рік тому

      I think the first empire/realm was that of Charlemagne the second one was after german unification and I think we know what happened during the third realm

  • @piushalg8175
    @piushalg8175 3 роки тому +2

    Geuss is wrong in one respect: The Swiss revolution of 1848 (a liberal revolution) didn't fail. After a short civil war won by the Liberals modern democratic Switzerland was founded. That is why many Liberals from other european countries took refuge in Switzerland after the failed revolutions.

  • @LuckyLucky-pc3tz
    @LuckyLucky-pc3tz 3 роки тому

    Very knowledgeable...thank you professors...

  • @paulohara8967
    @paulohara8967 6 років тому

    We're all around it but what's it all about - history, the philosophy of history, or histrionics?

  • @dawitn3793
    @dawitn3793 2 роки тому

    Thank you!

  • @dneville3874
    @dneville3874 5 років тому +5

    Diogenes Laërtius gets slammed

  • @memphis8427
    @memphis8427 4 роки тому +1

    thanks a lot

  • @aksilrf2218
    @aksilrf2218 4 роки тому

    Thank you

  • @lethalbee
    @lethalbee 10 років тому +4

    Isn't it a bit wrong to call Nietzsche a romantic?
    Also, is it commenly agreed upon that Nietzsche probably didn't read many of the german idealists, like Kant and Hegel? He criticizes himself in "Ecce Homo" for being to "hegelian" in "The birth of tragedy"

    • @nickshel
      @nickshel 9 років тому +1

      +lethalbee Sorry to do it, but I have to correct you '*too "Hegelian"'

    • @henrycrampton-hays1478
      @henrycrampton-hays1478 5 років тому

      Kant wasn't an Idealist.

    • @MacSmithVideo
      @MacSmithVideo 5 років тому

      @@henrycrampton-hays1478 *transcendental idealist

    • @punkpoetry
      @punkpoetry 4 роки тому

      Nietzsche scholars have shown he only read expositions of Kant and Hegel in secondary literature, I believe.

  • @mikelewis6711
    @mikelewis6711 2 роки тому

    So good. I was dying when he kept going on and on about what an idiot diogenes laertius was hahaha. He used every synonym for moron to describe him hahaha

  • @jonathanmoore5619
    @jonathanmoore5619 3 роки тому

    Always sunny in Philadelphia... "I've grown quite whear-rah...

  • @ZebraStandards
    @ZebraStandards 4 роки тому +1

    Take a nap and report back

  • @jadenpotts4389
    @jadenpotts4389 5 років тому +1

    I want this guy to show me graybles

  • @mattbarber9694
    @mattbarber9694 10 років тому +1

    Lange was not a materialist. His book which Geuss refers to is The History of Materialism and a Critique of its Current State. It was three volumes, not two and Lange is not a materialist. Mystery is the leitmotif of his great book. The mind-body problem becomes the center point of metaphysics and mystery takes precedence over matter. Lange was brilliant and Nietzsche had read and studied his work more than once during his life.

  • @saudade5373
    @saudade5373 10 років тому +1

    thanks. very good.

  • @ARCTERYXSWEATSHOP
    @ARCTERYXSWEATSHOP 10 років тому

    DEEP

  • @piushalg8175
    @piushalg8175 6 років тому +1

    There is no complete failure of revolutions in 1848 in central europe. The civil war in Switzerland brings about a liberal constitution. And Switzerland has been a democracy ever since.

    • @MacSmithVideo
      @MacSmithVideo 5 років тому +4

      no one cares about Switzerland

  • @org-rat
    @org-rat 7 років тому +5

    So according to this ever so notable old fellow philosophy is nothing more than the study of which subjective fantasy deluded the people the most in a given period until purely external circumstances produced a new fantasy. I know philosophy isnt as concrete and immediately self evident as the external sciences but I think its worth allowing for at least the POSSIBILITY that truth might exist and might not be a complete waste of time looking for. If you're watching this lecture cause you're searching for some kind of meaning in life good luck. If you're in higher education, it probably doesn't matter one way or the other.

  • @CY-gi7vo
    @CY-gi7vo 6 років тому

    Wow!!!!

  • @MxolisiHuey
    @MxolisiHuey 2 роки тому

    Fucking rad.

  • @sanatmishra93
    @sanatmishra93 4 роки тому +3

    He has an uncanny resemblance with Boris Johnson

  • @mikemcinally3311
    @mikemcinally3311 7 років тому

    👍

  • @nononouh
    @nononouh 2 роки тому

    24 2744

  • @GDKRichardson
    @GDKRichardson 10 років тому +10

    Oh, dear. He's "too tired" to present a full lecture. How very illuminating...and how extremely un-Nietzschean!

    • @chrisconnor8086
      @chrisconnor8086 6 років тому +1

      the damned irony, I nearly spit out my coffee. This whole video is like a comedy skit

  • @johannesbekker1970
    @johannesbekker1970 5 років тому

    What is strikingly absent from this excellent lecture is Rudolf Steiner's (18r64-1925) colossal contribution to Philosophy covering all these philosopher/wannabees including many others not mentioned in this show. All the problems of transcripts are cancelled in Steiner because he was a seer in the proper sense of the word so he's more than a philosopher much more !!! hence the massif body of practical work put out by him before he was poisoned. Nobody touches Steiner... Find him @ rsarchive.org/lectures

  • @PeterBethanis
    @PeterBethanis 8 років тому +4

    To claim Nietzsche didn't read any Kant is a ridiculous assumption and lazy lecturing. This was late 19th century Europe not the dark ages and there were many copies of A Critique of Pure Reason floating around Nietzache might have read.

    • @terencemckenna6095
      @terencemckenna6095 8 років тому +3

      he's just saying he probably didn't given the evidence, c'mon, give him a break

    • @sweeneytod4734
      @sweeneytod4734 6 років тому +1

      @@terencemckenna6095 Nietzche critiqued Kant a lot throughout his works, often disagreeing with him.

    • @JackSmith-up7qt
      @JackSmith-up7qt 5 років тому +1

      @@sweeneytod4734 most likely second hand points via Schopenhauer. I think kant was almost too popular(disseminated) for Nietzsche to need first hand reading

    • @doublenegation7870
      @doublenegation7870 4 роки тому +3

      But he didn't read Kant or Hegel. His scant remarks on Kant and Hegel are without citation, his personal library possessed none of their works, and his library records from Basel show no check outs. What is your claim that he did read them based on? Nothing.

    • @jonathanbailey1597
      @jonathanbailey1597 4 роки тому +1

      @@doublenegation7870 It's true. He read Kant primarily through Schopenhauer.

  • @Sunfried1
    @Sunfried1 2 роки тому

    The stammering is annoying.

  • @JM-gs5jn
    @JM-gs5jn 3 роки тому

    Too tired??....you're talking not running a marathon!

  • @jeanluc1404
    @jeanluc1404 9 років тому +4

    I'm glad that I gave up on the absurdity of philosophy when I was in my twenties. I basically had to get off my duff & make a living. Die toten Deutshcen (die jennigen von wem er spricht) had nothing but time on their hands to sit and ponder endlessly. For the most part these great heroes of thought, lived off of others rather likes fleas on host animals. This speaker goes on endlessly sharing discordant facts which are ear marked by their complete lack of interest of any kind. This is fun stuff for atheists and other assorted pagans.

    • @soffa93
      @soffa93 9 років тому +34

      +Daniel Mooney Translated: I'm a plebian wageslave and I'm mad jealous of people with superior finances because I'm a complete subhuman.

    • @jeanluc1404
      @jeanluc1404 9 років тому

      Koennte Man wohl sagen.

    • @nickshel
      @nickshel 9 років тому +6

      +Daniel Mooney Lol, I'm glad you're completely self sufficient. What are you a caveman?

    • @captainspaulding2206
      @captainspaulding2206 8 років тому +5

      Well la dee da you pretentious boring fuck.

    • @MacSmithVideo
      @MacSmithVideo 5 років тому +5

      Last Man detected.

  • @hvp69
    @hvp69 4 роки тому +2

    "i can't give the full lecture because I'm tired." how incredibly brazen and lazy. lol

    • @DragonZombie2000
      @DragonZombie2000 4 роки тому +4

      Are you serious? He doesn't owe you anything

    • @hvp69
      @hvp69 4 роки тому +1

      DragonZombie2000 it's not about me. it's about him. how is he not embarrassed to say that out loud?! and have it get recorded and posted on the internet for all eternity. jesus.

    • @palavimooteveerene7072
      @palavimooteveerene7072 4 роки тому +6

      @@hvp69 didn't you listen to him carefully? He did say he already gave a full lecture but due to some problem for the tape. He have to do it again bit choose to make a summery. I like that he was honest and people can be tired and lazy from time to time💁‍♀️. No need to be embarrassed but here i wouldn't consider him as lazy.

  • @tommyconancoates7097
    @tommyconancoates7097 9 років тому +7

    Too tired, if your boss asks you to do something then do it when you're not too tired ...guy thinks he's wwaaayyyy smarter than he is...

    • @Amoney100
      @Amoney100 8 років тому +8

      Or maybe he's a tenured professor a.k.a they don''t get treated like a intern .. I mean Adjunct

    • @Lena-uh3ky
      @Lena-uh3ky 7 років тому +7

      can't the man feel tired?whats yr prob?

    • @lov3rman7
      @lov3rman7 6 років тому +12

      He has 75 years. What's wrong with you?

    • @joeblack363
      @joeblack363 6 років тому +5

      He already did the job he was suppose to do you nitwit, this is just extra.

    • @chrisconnor8086
      @chrisconnor8086 6 років тому +2

      hes a pompous prick. Camera man sucks too. total ineptitude