Classical Greek Philosophy: Socrates and Plato

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  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2024

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  • @Aristos_Arete
    @Aristos_Arete Рік тому +36

    For those of you interested in philosophy, primary sources are very important in the learning process. The humanities are different from the stem fields, in that you don't need to read the Principia, to understand newtonian physics deeply; for the humanities, primary sources are a part of the process, the more you read them the better off you are. In this case, for example, there is a lot of detail omitted, and the socratic method is much richer than depicted here, if you read the dialogues, and while there may be some weird twists of logic now and then, on the whole, it is a wonderful and a beautiful artwork of reason, most of the problems in philosophy are contained in the platonic dialogues, and a lot of the solutions given are valid and cogent; of course, some more or less depending on your paradigm. The general method Socrates takes is a dialogical one, where the person who's in gestation will seek the truth, and try to give birth or light to it. While socrates is the midwife of this truth and will try to seek it out, avoiding all possible bouts of falsehood. In these sinotic and diaretic procedures, from the many to the one, and from the one to the many, you gain a more keen and lucid view of reality, key distinctions and many insights that come together into a more unified organic view of life. Very inspiring ethically, metaphisically and epistemologicaly. It is said that all of philosophy can summed up as footnotes to Plato, and that all began on account of Socrates.

  • @Road2Med
    @Road2Med Рік тому +81

    Big fan of you diving into these philosophical videos. It's so good to ensure we all have at least a basic understanding of such important historical figures and their philosophies.

  • @John-k6f9k
    @John-k6f9k 11 місяців тому +184

    When Plato was asked by an interviewer how it felt to be the smartest Greek philosopher in the world he replied " I don't know you'll have to ask Socrates"

    • @CapnSnackbeard
      @CapnSnackbeard 11 місяців тому +4

      He ought to have paid more attention to him.

    • @gravity.inescapable
      @gravity.inescapable 11 місяців тому +1

      When Einstein was asked by an interviewer.....🤡

    • @mistersonnen848
      @mistersonnen848 11 місяців тому

      Interviewer? 😂😂😂

    • @Philbert-s2c
      @Philbert-s2c 10 місяців тому +1

      @@John-k6f9k When Keith Richards was asked...

    • @Quantum_015
      @Quantum_015 10 місяців тому

      When Katt Williams was asked …

  • @williamcompitello2302
    @williamcompitello2302 11 місяців тому +60

    Fan of Socrates: I LOVE YOU!
    Socrates: What is love?
    Fan: Very wise words!
    Socrates: What is wise?

    • @alexwelts2553
      @alexwelts2553 9 місяців тому

      Cheese doodles, dipsy doodles, ya know, wise.

    • @cvleb777
      @cvleb777 5 місяців тому +5

      Missed opportunity to type in "Baby don't hurt me, don't hurt me, no more" as a reply to Socrates.

    • @aahhhhhhhhhhhhh
      @aahhhhhhhhhhhhh 4 місяці тому

      ​@@cvleb777😂

    • @indouralicspirit
      @indouralicspirit 2 місяці тому

      baby dont hurt me

  • @WisdomisPower-10inminute-dn5no
    @WisdomisPower-10inminute-dn5no Рік тому +13

    Your approach to explaining complex concepts is brilliant. It makes everything so clear!

  • @motivemystic
    @motivemystic 10 місяців тому +7

    Wow, what an amazing video on Classical Greek Philosophy! Socrates and Plato have always been such fascinating figures to me. Their ideas and teachings continue to inspire and shape our understanding of the world today. Thank you for sharing this insightful and engaging video. I can't wait to delve deeper into their philosophies!

  • @joshuajackson3344
    @joshuajackson3344 7 місяців тому +7

    These guys were geniuses it’s crazy ahead of their time!

  • @palakd18
    @palakd18 3 місяці тому +1

    He was knowledgeable . He was not a rebel, and he was no threat. He was a teacher. He had the credibility and power to educate and help people, anyone. ❤ And other people had plans against people or they just didn't like that he helped people. Or maybe others were jealous. It was an honor to be able to speak to him. Something else was happening at that temple during or after that time I think possibly some other rebel.

  • @alelzarterl212
    @alelzarterl212 Рік тому +8

    I hope Stoicism is getting a video

  • @mjbalbo
    @mjbalbo 9 днів тому

    I applaud you for not neglecting philosophy, as many men of science do. Einstein himself said that a scientist that ignores philosophy is not a true seeker of truth, but a mere technician.

  • @nirmalmishra6404
    @nirmalmishra6404 Рік тому +19

    There once was a wise man named Dave
    Whose love for chemistry was all the rave
    He taught his students to seek the truth
    And to question everything they knew since youth
    With Socrates' spirit, he challenged the fake
    And Plato's wisdom, he sought to make
    He debunked the lies, he tore them down
    With knowledge as his sword and truth as his crown
    He blended the qualities of these great men
    Until he matched them, time and time again
    For like Socrates, he asked the hard questions
    And like Plato, he searched for true perceptions
    So let us raise a glass to Professor Dave
    Whose passion for knowledge will never fade
    For he is a true philosopher at heart
    And his teachings will always be a work of art.

    • @Marytere8
      @Marytere8 Рік тому +1

      😂😂😂😂

    • @Marytere8
      @Marytere8 Рік тому +1

      ​@@hm-dq5sq
      Hello, how are you?😂😂😂😂

    • @jigsaw2253
      @jigsaw2253 Рік тому +4

      Thanks Chatgpt poet

    • @LordDeathAku
      @LordDeathAku 10 місяців тому

      You have my like as well as my comment

  • @syl3nt7
    @syl3nt7 6 місяців тому +4

    Aristotle defines Eudaemonia as the end of all things, living and non living, then he moves on to mention that the good is most likely a divine monotheistic being, characterized as the sun in Plato’s allegory of the cave. I’d like to know what you think of this Dave.

  • @surreal5444
    @surreal5444 Рік тому +12

    They say philosophy has to be more felt than be comprehended. And this made easy with your new series which are seeding basic understanding thoroughly.
    Excellent presentation and keep it coming Dave 👍:)

  • @tomsmith7429
    @tomsmith7429 6 місяців тому +26

    The greatest chain of teacher-pupil relationships in history. Socrates instructed Plato who instructed Aristotle who instructed Alexander the Great who instructed the world

  • @kurichan355
    @kurichan355 Рік тому +3

    I know you had nothing to do with this but I literally just did an exam on the two yesterday.
    Comunque adoro il tuo lavoro!

  • @Terry_of_Astoria
    @Terry_of_Astoria Рік тому +1

    Oh, boy! I'm a BIG hole fan! Years ago, I saw a bit in the paper - apparently there were four thousand holes in Blackburn, Lancashire. But I'll wager those were just a few of the holes -just the holes that turned out for the concert, or something. I've forgotten now. Anyway, I suspect there are many, many morel) holes than those.
    My car has holes. My mechanic adds fluids through those. My garden has holes. Moles made those holes. Or perhaps those who made the holes are voles. My shoes have holes. My head has holes. Collecting holes was one of my goals. I put my first hole in a bowl. But then, there was a hole in the bowl!Out the hole in the bowl my first hole had rolled! At the time, though, when I looked in the bowl, I thought my hole had been stolen. When I started school, I'd gathered hundreds of holes, & I'd learned a whole lot about holes, and I knew a way how to stow me a hole and a way how to stop it from rollin', or being stolen. Hold open one hole & stow all the holes in the hole that you're holdin'! Though my knowledge has not reached perfection, I affirm that this method really does work for even a whole hole collection!

  • @major7thsmcgee973
    @major7thsmcgee973 6 місяців тому +2

    Good video, but the thing you forgot to mention about Plato was how he was the inventor of the plate.

  • @mikotagayuna8494
    @mikotagayuna8494 Рік тому +27

    Fun fact: Plato is the nickname given to Aristocles because of his physical broadness.
    That's right. The poor dude has us calling him thicc until the end of time.

    • @Julian0101
      @Julian0101 Рік тому +4

      But wasnt that because of his broad forehead?

    • @petroserk9370
      @petroserk9370 Рік тому +13

      Plato (Platonas in greek) doesn't mean wide in volume but more like "wide level surface" (like a table top) and refers to his forehead being wide.

    • @mistersonnen848
      @mistersonnen848 11 місяців тому +1

      I'm pretty sure it was to his wide shoulders and that he was a wrestler

    • @cvleb777
      @cvleb777 5 місяців тому +2

      ​@@petroserk9370it's his shoulders not his forehead 💀

  • @ironicinorironic.
    @ironicinorironic. Рік тому +6

    I waited for a long time for this video.. idk out of nowhere I'm suddenly intrested in Greek philosophy

  • @TheMilitantMazdakite
    @TheMilitantMazdakite Рік тому +4

    What you just said about Socrates' ethical theory was actually developed by Zoroaster, and likely influenced Socrates.

  • @peterwyetzner5276
    @peterwyetzner5276 10 місяців тому

    It's not so much that Plato wrote the first written philosophy, it's that it was only shortly before his time that writing began to be used to record abstract ideas. We also have the first works of history from this period. Even then, works like plays, poems, and possibly dialogues like Plato's would have been primarily oral compositions, either recorded after the fact or written so as to be read out loud to others.

  • @coffej6
    @coffej6 2 місяці тому

    the intro SLAPS🔥🔥🗣🗣

  • @philparis796
    @philparis796 Рік тому +13

    Great stuff! Would you be open to discussing radicalisation? Specifically what causes it, what radicalised people think and how to escape radicalising mindsets?

    • @CapnSnackbeard
      @CapnSnackbeard 11 місяців тому

      Imagine: an alien beams you and a radical up and asks you each to explain your actions. It knows you as a citizen, and them as a radical. The radical names the long list of injustices in the world, and then say: "I found all the killing, stealing, and raeping by the country i live in, in my name and with my money too horrible, so I gave up on living in that way, and stared to fight against it."
      And then the alien asks you what the country you live in does, and what you did about it, and you have to tell them you paid for it, supported it, ignored it, made excuses for it, and otherwise enabled all of it, what do you imagine the alien will believe a "radical" is, and a "citizen" is?
      You plainly think you know, but I think a space alien would understand it better.

    • @philparis796
      @philparis796 11 місяців тому +1

      @@CapnSnackbeard That's a depressingly single-minded way of viewing things. One can fight for a cause without being a radical.
      For example, Veganism: the overwhelming majority of vegans choose to be so because they don't want to cause, support or encourage the harming of animals. There are many vegans that practice their beliefs in private, some are open about it, some can even be very anal about it, but then you get radical vegan who choose to insult and belittle the people they aught to want to convince to their side. Some radical vegans have even committed murders and other extreme criminal acts to make their point.
      Perhaps unsurprisingly, the age of the internet has made radical vegans the loudest and most well known group, actively drowning out non-radical voices who, from what I myself have looked into, make actually really solid points, even if I ultimately don't agree with them.
      My point is that the difference between a radical and a non-radical in my eyes is someone who makes their point by making enemies to fight, even if those enemies might have otherwise been sympathetic. I just find the topic fascinating and would like an easy resource to point to when talking about it with others.

  • @seanh4841
    @seanh4841 Рік тому +2

    Bertrand Russell does a great series on the history of western philosophy

  • @IsaiahGarba
    @IsaiahGarba 2 місяці тому

    Thank you professor Dave 😊

  • @guillermo3412
    @guillermo3412 Рік тому +1

    Can you please talk about the patristics and scholastism next video please? Im going to need that for my philosophy class

  • @lisasims9237
    @lisasims9237 Рік тому

    I am here, Socrates, the Greek.
    I knew that you thought of me and I was attracted by your thought. If such spirit is in rapport with you or has a similar soul quality; the soul condition is the great medium of attraction.
    I have been with you before, and there is a rapport growing out of your soul qualities. I am now a believer in the Christian doctrine of the soul’s immortality, and in the teachings of Jesus as to the way to obtain the Divine Love of the Father, as you are, and, hence, our qualities of soul are similar.
    I am now a follower of the Master and believe in his Divine mission on earth, although he had not come to earth when I lived. After I became a spirit I realized my belief in the continuity of life after death, and lived in the spirit world a great many years after Jesus came before I learned and believed his larger truth of immortality.
    Of course, when I taught I had only a hope which was almost a certainty that I should continue to live through all eternity, but I had no other foundation for that belief than the deductions from my reasoning powers and the observations of the workings of nature.
    I had heard of the visitations of the spirits of the departed, but had never had any personal experiences in that direction, but I readily believed it to be true.
    My conviction of the truth of a future continuance was so strong that it amounted to a certainty, and hence when I died, I comforted Plato and my other friends and disciples, by telling them that they must not say that Socrates will die but rather that his body will die; his soul will live forever in fields Elysian. They believed me, and Plato afterwards enlarged on my belief.
    And Socrates did not die, but as soon as his breath left the body, which was not very painful even though the fatal hemlock did its work sure and quickly, he went into the spirit world a living entity, full of the happiness that the realizations of his beliefs gave him.
    My entrance into the spirit world was not a dark one, but full of light and happiness, for I was met by some of my disciples who had passed over before me and who had progressed very much in the intellectual development. I then thought that my place of reception was the heaven of good spirits, for there were good spirits to meet me and carry me to my home. I was then possessed of what I thought that I was in the home of the blessed; and I continued…
    Received 7/8/1915, new-birth.net

  • @shankz8854
    @shankz8854 Рік тому +1

    Love this series!

  • @CjqNslXUcM
    @CjqNslXUcM Рік тому +1

    Clipart-socrates' demented smile is somehow extremely funny to me.

  • @afh7380
    @afh7380 Рік тому +4

    Socrates did reductio ad absurdum, not appeal to extremes.

  • @SuccessMindset2180
    @SuccessMindset2180 6 місяців тому +1

    Knowledge gained through dialogues then

  • @hamhuemandeyt9019
    @hamhuemandeyt9019 11 місяців тому

    Great video, missed a few points like socrates demon

  • @thewillsfamilyaccount6486
    @thewillsfamilyaccount6486 Рік тому

    Nicely done!

  • @Rico-Suave_
    @Rico-Suave_ Рік тому +1

    Watched all of it 8:55

  • @OmniphonProductions
    @OmniphonProductions Рік тому +5

    As you talked about Socrates, I couldn't help noting numerous parallels between his story and another one that was written more than 400 years later. It's quite a coincidence...or maybe no coincidence at all...that the New Testament tells the story of an enlightened teacher who attracted a posse of disciples, sought to share his teachings with children, challenged the authority of those in power, and was eventually put on trial and executed as a heretic. Side Note: yesterday during a conversation I had with a friend who recently escaped an oppressive, authoritarian religion, I compared her journey to Plato's _Allegory of the Cave._ Upon finally seeing see the truth...and lies...she can't ever go back to believing what she did before.

    • @nagoranerides3150
      @nagoranerides3150 Рік тому +3

      Also, he wrote nothing down himself.
      The difference is that we have eye-witness accounts of Socrates from his own time, including some hostile voices. Nothing was written about Jesus in his supposed life.

    • @OmniphonProductions
      @OmniphonProductions Рік тому +1

      @@nagoranerides3150 And, as Dr. Richard Carrier points out, the first person ever to write about Jesus (Paul) freely admitted to never actually meeting him when he was alive.

    • @nagoranerides3150
      @nagoranerides3150 Рік тому

      @@OmniphonProductions Which also raises the question - what about Paul? We have letters by different people all claiming to be him, but which is the real one? Are any of them really Paul? Christians have faked so many documents it's hard to know anything about the early days of the religion at all. Even the famous Pliny letter now looks like it was forged.
      Smoke and mirrors.

    • @OmniphonProductions
      @OmniphonProductions Рік тому

      @@thotslayer9914 You asked for a link to mainstream academic research. I provided _two_ such links, one of which is a video that doesn't even require actual reading, and _neither_ of which involves _any_ input from Dr. Richard Carrier, whose alleged bias you initially decried. Yet, you are still arguing about researcher bias. Thus, I'm forced to ask. What do _you_ mean when you say, "Mainstream academics,"? Is it really that _all three_ researchers I cited (who know the Bible _and_ history better than you or I ever will) are biased _(and in the same way),_ or is it that _you_ only accept as _mainstream_ that which _you_ believe? How about this? If _you_ share a link to clarify _your_ position, _I'll actually read it._ I dare you to do the same.
      Meanwhile, since the comment with the links I initially shared seems to have disappeared from this stream, I'll share these; one that I originally shared, one that's even better than the one it replaces (both in detail and in its qualification as _mainstream),_ one straightforward timeline of New Testament authorship, and one little bonus about Paul's writings.
      ua-cam.com/video/bnrWljdsEsk/v-deo.html
      www.worldhistory.org/Paul_the_Apostle/
      www.religion-online.org/book-chapter/approximate-chronology-of-the-new-testament-writings/
      bustedhalo.com/ministry-resources/if-st-pauls-letters-are-older-than-the-gospels-why-does-he-leave-a-lot-out
      The bottom line is this. Regardless of what you think about Dr. Carrier's ideas on Euhemerism, the _one_ reference I made in the conversation merely cited him as the source through which I learned the _absolutely mainstream academic consensus fact_ that Paul was the first person ever to actually write about Jesus.

  • @nobodyowens4918
    @nobodyowens4918 Рік тому

    This was brilliant thanks

  • @athuik
    @athuik Рік тому

    amazing ! thanks, love this topic

  • @OshadhaRanawaka
    @OshadhaRanawaka 6 місяців тому +1

    Professor Dave love your content and Tutorials I like to one thing what is your personal view on Buddhists believes and theories ?

  • @Timewarpradio
    @Timewarpradio Рік тому

    This was great 👍

  • @satpalnayak9180
    @satpalnayak9180 Рік тому

    It is amazing

  • @glennpearson9348
    @glennpearson9348 Рік тому +1

    Would it be fair to say that an "appeal to extremes" is akin to a "false dichotomy?" Interestingly, the word "dichotomy" comes from the Greek word, "dikhotomia," which means "to cut in two, apart."

  • @txgooner9119
    @txgooner9119 Рік тому

    Love you dave wish you were my teacher

  • @schiggsboson7684
    @schiggsboson7684 Рік тому

    @Professor Dave,, I think there is much less probability ot you reading this,, but a video explaining "why light speed is constant" And "what is actually time" And "what was before big bang" .... These types of explain from you is really wanted by me coz your explanation is the best.... And i am not still able to find satisfactory basic answers to this questions.. Most of the answers given are based on the theory itself.. Like why 1+2=3? Because 3-2=1 which is not a basic answer I guess.... Looking forward

    • @juicetime910
      @juicetime910 Рік тому +1

      you’re asking questions we don’t have the answer to, we just know that light speed is constant and that there was a big bang. sometimes science can’t tell you, it’s why there’s religion

    • @ezrakatz6742
      @ezrakatz6742 Рік тому +1

      Check out his classical physics, modern physics, and astrophysics playlists. It gives a basic overview of what we know. If one of your questions isn't answered, it probably means that we don't know or an in-depth discussion of the question requires complex topics that goes beyond the general nature of Dave's videos.

    • @juicetime910
      @juicetime910 Рік тому +1

      you can derive the fact that light speed is constant if you get a physics degree too😀, you’d probably also figure out what time is in the sense that you mean, before the big bang they can’t tell you, because there might not be anything before the big bang tho

    • @schiggsboson7684
      @schiggsboson7684 Рік тому

      Appreciate your replies and understandings.. Thank you 🤓

  • @grahamjones5400
    @grahamjones5400 Рік тому

    "Just asking questions! Do your own research....as long as it agrees with my answers!!"
    Ancient Greek Philosophy

  • @asiancooking5297
    @asiancooking5297 Рік тому

    Beautiful and very informative video. In your video two Philospher i.e Socrates and Plato statues in Acadmey entrance area but whereas is Aristotle statue located? Please let me know cuz we are going next month to Athens. Thanks & Regards

  • @jeremyhodge6216
    @jeremyhodge6216 9 місяців тому

    Socrates is my favorite philosopher no doubt 😉👌💯

  • @Skeptical_Numbat
    @Skeptical_Numbat Рік тому +5

    If there's one major thing that I agree on with both these (& other) philosophers, it's that *Ethics* (including *Philosophy, Logic & Reasoning, Epistomology, Axiology, Politics/Government, Law/Prosocial Behaviors, etc.)* should be a foundational course of study for _EVERYONE._
    I'd absolutely want to see *Ethics* being taught alongside other core units like *Science, Mathematics* & *English* (or language & communication in general), from *Primary School* through to *High School (years 1-12),* with more narrowly defined aspects for University students (⊚). Note that there's a great deal of overlap with these (& other) subjects, too:
    ~ *Logic & Mathematics,*
    ~ *Natural Philosophy & Science,*
    ~ *Rhetoric & Language,*
    ~ *Aesthetics & Art.*
    So by educating in one unit we may assist in the integration of knowledge towards mastery of another.
    This isn't even particularly revolutionary, with similar *Ethical* teachings commonplace in many other cultures worldwide. (including many of the *European* countries which consistently score in the top ten best public educational systems.)
    ~ ~ ~
    From my perspective, our current society has been far too influenced (even corrupted) by the endlessly malleable pseudo-ethics of religions - especially *Christianity* (with Prosperity Gospel completely inverting the core "Christian" values of Humility, Charity & Altruism!) - leading to profoundly unethical behavior vitually being an essential trait for modern leadership.
    Politicians, CEOs, Lobbyists (etc.) are consistantly responsible for deeply repugnant & immoral behaviour - ranging from blatant deceit, to placing "profit" far above human lives - often without social pushback, let alone consequences!
    [ nb: There have been psychological evaluations performed on business entities (given all the privileges of legal "personhood" / none of the responsibilities) like corporations - which go to demonstrate how twisted the enterprise has become. "Sociopathic" & "Psychopathic" behaviors are rewarded, while "Empathetic" & "Altruistic" behaviors are openly denigrated - the very opposite of what we should expect in a rational society... ]
    ⊚ - Which we already do at the University level:
    *Scientific Ethics ~ Biologist,*
    *Legal Ethics ~ Lawyer,*
    *Business Ethics ~ Business person,*
    *Medical Ethics ~ Doctor/Nurse/Therapist*

    • @kaantax8666
      @kaantax8666 Рік тому

      lmao no, because learning ethics won't give someone the ability to make money, so in the eyes of the public, it's useless.
      what you are saying could only happen in a less dystopian world than ours.

    • @monstroburger2604
      @monstroburger2604 Рік тому +1

      At least in some California schools, they teach some basic philosophy and ethics in high school English classes as it’s a closely related subject

  • @ozkang654
    @ozkang654 3 місяці тому

    i know one thing thats that i know nothing. Socrates-
    power of ignorance is underestimated most of time
    and people really dont understand what is ignorance ?
    to know something wrong ?
    or to dictate something even that is wrong ?
    both of them is not ignorance
    ignorance is a heavy stone that idealism trying to carry it to another place

  • @CapnSnackbeard
    @CapnSnackbeard 11 місяців тому

    Plato transformed his wise mentor's words "I know nothing" into the way of life we live today. Plato's philosophy is "YOU know nothing." They are polar opposite to one another.

  • @someone-wo5nu
    @someone-wo5nu Рік тому +3

    Based and Socrates pilled

  • @dkurt2725
    @dkurt2725 4 місяці тому

    I don’t recall him saying i know i know nothing if I remember correctly (and I cant help my self toremember)after questioning someone who claimed some knowledge and literally torturing him he pointed out his ignorance snd he liked to belittle himself

  • @MisterTutor2010
    @MisterTutor2010 9 місяців тому

    The Immortal Words of Socrates: I drank what? :)

  • @dutonic
    @dutonic Рік тому +1

    Honestly so hyped to go chill with the AI reincarnation of these bad boys in virtual reality in 20 years or so

  • @woodearthdvd
    @woodearthdvd Місяць тому

    Even back then “think of the children” is a thing.

  • @leonardoforti6603
    @leonardoforti6603 7 місяців тому +1

    Homaging Majestic Zeus

  • @areuokay4984
    @areuokay4984 3 місяці тому

    3:35 i meant socrates lol

  • @Bryanvaughn-s4t
    @Bryanvaughn-s4t 5 місяців тому +1

    36,000 years ago

  • @nikdelta399
    @nikdelta399 10 місяців тому

    The work of Platon is called STATE [ΠΟΛΙΤΕΙΑ] not Republic

  • @mishapurser4439
    @mishapurser4439 8 місяців тому +2

    I wonder if Socrates was an enlightened figure. I can't help but find parallels between him and the practices of Zen Buddhist masters.

  • @rainbow0027
    @rainbow0027 Рік тому +1

    I love philosophy

  • @Indisolnews
    @Indisolnews 5 місяців тому

    First writings were from India

  • @owenswabi
    @owenswabi Місяць тому

    We’re all just dust in the wind, man

  • @getrektm8785
    @getrektm8785 Рік тому +1

    Hey Dave I have recently looked at a lot of Graham Hancocks research and "documentaries" I feel that they are interesting and a bit more though out than flat earth however still very speculative and not really evidence based. Would you ever make a video about this?. He is known for his theory that 12,000 tyears ago an advanced civilisation was wiped out by a comet or meteor and are now only visible tghrough ancient megalithic sites, he also thinks the sphinx are 12,000 years old or something ike that - Thanks Max

  • @JohnSims-su8tn
    @JohnSims-su8tn 5 місяців тому

    😂 Socrates was the "BLESSED FOOL" of the trio... It rolled downhill from there 😢

  • @daviddelgado6090
    @daviddelgado6090 7 місяців тому +1

    Unfortunately, Plato saw no redeeming value in the arts.

  • @haseebullah3416
    @haseebullah3416 Рік тому

  • @yoyo6314
    @yoyo6314 Рік тому

    Hey Dave I have a question that doesn't have to do with the video because the thought has been bothering me: Do lie detectors really work? I've heard people say they don't pick up on emotions but what else in the brain could they be picking up on and how would anyone know the difference between someone who's lying and someone who's stressed out cuz they're accused of something awful?

    • @mistersonnen848
      @mistersonnen848 11 місяців тому

      That's why they're not used in courts, at least not in the West.
      The work due to the change in sensory inputs measurement. So they ask questions that they already know the answer to gauge your response, and based on that, they know which answers are dishonest

  • @mehrshadgafarzadeh2944
    @mehrshadgafarzadeh2944 Рік тому

    What does Socrates mean by(I know that I don't know)...?

  • @frederiquecouture3924
    @frederiquecouture3924 Рік тому

    ⚔️

  • @waelfadlallah8939
    @waelfadlallah8939 Рік тому

    😃

  • @escovision1986
    @escovision1986 Рік тому

    WOW! ...I instantly understood! ..
    This is literally a version of The Bible ...SAME CONCEPT &SAME CHARACTERS ...
    FASCINATING !!!

  • @melm4251
    @melm4251 Рік тому

    can't believe socrates ripped off Operation Ivy

  • @Noahwillwalk
    @Noahwillwalk Рік тому

    CoCrates

  • @anaibarangan4908
    @anaibarangan4908 7 місяців тому

    Fusion bridge from ancient Greco Roman philosophy became modern Christian religion.

  • @Stephan96367
    @Stephan96367 Місяць тому

    🎶🎶🎶🎼🎼🎼🎉🎉🎉🌈🌈🌈🪈🪈🪈🪻🪻🪻⚡⚡⚡🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

  • @EricPham-gr8pg
    @EricPham-gr8pg 10 місяців тому

    If officers were commissioned by the president and recommended by congress and enlisted like us are slaves?

  • @ZealousCatechumens
    @ZealousCatechumens 5 місяців тому +1

    Wow he just described Christianity. Plato stoled his philosophy and wisdom from the Old Testament. The early Christian kinda of make fun of him because his work is straight up the Old Testament wisdom which is good at least he understood the spiritual meaning from the Bible more than the Jews did.

    • @Chrono-Curator
      @Chrono-Curator 5 місяців тому

      Interestingly enough I read something about this the other day

    • @ZealousCatechumens
      @ZealousCatechumens 5 місяців тому

      @@Chrono-Curator yes if you read the early Christian writings they talk about this. I hope links work in comments but here is one. It’s about Plato stealing from the Old Testament
      ua-cam.com/video/GRfsWprgKHs/v-deo.htmlsi=DbaDhNoBfDtCdqwU

  • @Izannaziza
    @Izannaziza 9 місяців тому

    Egyptians were the teachers of the Greeks.

  • @hrvatskinoahid1048
    @hrvatskinoahid1048 4 місяці тому

    Moses is the ultimate and supreme prophet for all time.

    • @coalcat5417
      @coalcat5417 4 місяці тому +1

      Why

    • @hrvatskinoahid1048
      @hrvatskinoahid1048 4 місяці тому

      @@coalcat5417 The authenticity of Moses is based on the public revelation at Sinai: God revealed Himself to the entire nation of Israel, at least three million people, and proclaimed before them the Ten Commandments. The entire Jewish people personally experienced that revelation, each individual in effect becoming a prophet, and each one verifying the experience of the other. With their own eyes they saw, and with their own ears they heard, as the Divine voice spoke to them, and also they heard God saying, "Moses, Moses, go tell them the following ..." They did not receive the occurrence of that event and accept it as some claim or tradition of an individual, but they experienced it themselves. That public revelation, therefore, authenticated the bona fide status of Moses as a prophet of God, and the Divine origin of the instructions he recorded in the Torah. That, and that alone, is the criterion for the belief in, and acceptance of, Moses and his teachings, as God said to him, "I will come unto you in a thick cloud that the people may hear when I speak with you and will also believe in you forever" (Exodus 19:9).

  • @KitaBooBear
    @KitaBooBear 8 місяців тому

    Can You talk over each other in class

  • @AX-sq5vm
    @AX-sq5vm Рік тому

    science lead to physics and that to Philosophy

  • @dude1458
    @dude1458 Рік тому +1

    So he is jesus then?

  • @DendriticFractals
    @DendriticFractals 5 місяців тому +2

    Pseudoscience b.s.

  • @palamirtammarimuthu1752
    @palamirtammarimuthu1752 Рік тому

    🎉❤💞🙏🏽👍🏿👍🏻👍 dialogue 😅

  • @jessicarose9208
    @jessicarose9208 10 місяців тому

    This makes me angry. How did Socrates get to be famous because his friend said he was cool. That’s the only reason I’m sorry, but I don’t think we should talk about him anymore that’s not fair.

  • @frogmand.142
    @frogmand.142 Рік тому

    😶

  • @grolstum211
    @grolstum211 11 місяців тому

    You think you have grasped the essence of Socrates and plato and then you go to Parmenides and you realise you don't understand shit...

  • @languageandmana9255
    @languageandmana9255 5 днів тому

    ❤✅🙏🙏🙏

  • @Squire_Slime
    @Squire_Slime Рік тому

    sockrteez lore

  • @themistokles9203
    @themistokles9203 Рік тому +1

    For someone who claims to know a lot you seem to be very ignorant when you say BCE and CE. It’s actually BC and AD. Kinda sad you don’t know that

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  Рік тому +5

      It's BCE and CE, sweetie. Historians don't refer to Christian mythology when talking about history. Try and learn something while you're here.

    • @YoungAstronomicalReaserc-zf8zy
      @YoungAstronomicalReaserc-zf8zy 5 місяців тому +1

      @@ProfessorDaveExplains I honestly don't care if its AD or CE, if it works it works.

  • @emilrusznak8814
    @emilrusznak8814 9 місяців тому

    Compare Deuteronomy and Jesus with the chaots like Socrates and Plato (I know, that I know nothing" Plato expelled from Athens, the first known misleading communist.) Those chaots did not bring anything positive, bringing nothing good untill our days....

  • @SajiSNairNair-tu9dk
    @SajiSNairNair-tu9dk 8 місяців тому

    🤔👉Jesus? 🏃😲

  • @escovision1986
    @escovision1986 Рік тому

    There's also No Written text of Jesus Christ himself ..every record comes from the work of others ...
    I don't know my destination
    I do know I'm on the right path.

  • @KitaBooBear
    @KitaBooBear 8 місяців тому

    Crates of Socks

  • @danielcrafter9349
    @danielcrafter9349 Рік тому

    mid-WIFF-er-ree
    SOF-ists

  • @Zero.freingetei
    @Zero.freingetei 7 місяців тому

    Pmop na TT ive alveon

    • @Optimistic2345
      @Optimistic2345 7 місяців тому

      ua-cam.com/video/vzoDZzxNdwE/v-deo.htmlsi=LxrrSUItv-_5KuB-

  • @infoakulcsokhoz
    @infoakulcsokhoz Рік тому

    Man, I am really disappointed. Nothing about Socrates main idea of “Know Thyself.” Nothing about the State” . Clearly you dont know your subject you talking about. Please read the “State” at least, man.

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  Рік тому +2

      Um, Thales said that, sweetie. As I explained in the tutorial on presocratic philosophers that you didn't watch. Who doesn't know what they're talking about now, kiddo?

    • @kingko3920
      @kingko3920 Рік тому

      That’s crazy

  • @charlesdu84
    @charlesdu84 11 днів тому

    This is AI made content…

  • @TimeTraveller010
    @TimeTraveller010 10 місяців тому

    Philosophy, it is the only immaterial principle greeks gave to the west. Maybe mathematics, but the Egyptians and Persians had already established the numerical paradigms. Greeks derived most of their ideas from the levant. And then greeks like to shame Italians for copying them, there is nothing to copy from Greece, Italy is its own paragon. Not much can be done with philosophy, unless one prefers to sit in a room of Greeks. Or over-entitled anglo-saxons that were privileged on birth to attend private or grammar school. Romans: Give to Caesar what is owed to Caesar. Rome is the foundation of the West!

  • @StephenAnderson-k8k
    @StephenAnderson-k8k 9 місяців тому

    Your approach to explaining complex concepts is brilliant. It makes everything so clear!