Life's meaning is found in nature - Hermann Hesse's Genius Philosophy

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  • Опубліковано 8 чер 2024
  • Do you sometimes get the feeling that modern life is a little stifling? Do you feel that perhaps you’re a free-spirited animal stuck in a human body? Do you feel like a lone wolf that does not fit in society? These are the questions this German-Swiss novelist tackled in his writings. Hermann Hesse was a novelist, poet, and painter whose best known novels Steppenwolf and Siddhartha have been influential since they came out in the 20th century.
    In this video I will dicuss the life of Hermann Hesse, summarise his two famous novels and dicuss some of his life philosophies.
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    00:00 Intro
    01:02 Life
    16:30 Siddhartha Summary
    25:00 Siddhartha analysis
    28:48 Steppenwolf summary
    35:49 Steppenwolf analysis
    38:45 Hesse philosophy
    #fictionbeast
    #hesse
    #literature

КОМЕНТАРІ • 231

  • @Fiction_Beast
    @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому +15

    If you want to read the script of this video, please join my Patreon or Kofi. Links are below:
    ► Buy me coffee: ko-fi.com/fictionbeast
    ► Join my Patreon: www.patreon.com/fictionbeast

  • @RobinMarks1313
    @RobinMarks1313 Рік тому +150

    Nature can be therapy. I know this firsthand. It saved me, from the worst of mental illness. I jumped into the wilderness and disorder to escape civilization and society. I then realized we are wrong about everything. I had been wrong about everything. A bear ate my tent. I didn't get angry. The universe made sense. I survived. And, I smile every time I think about it.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому +10

      This is a powerful comment. I love it.

    • @cheri238
      @cheri238 Рік тому +3

      Yes, it made me laugh so hard that I peed in my panties. (A little humor to not be so heavy.)

    • @skronked
      @skronked Рік тому +7

      That's a hungry bear!!

    • @theawakeningheard410
      @theawakeningheard410 Рік тому +3

      That’s fuckin great!

    • @theawakeningheard410
      @theawakeningheard410 Рік тому +8

      Acceptance is a solution to most situations. Grateful the bear ate the tent and not you! Great comment.

  • @kaiserrino8774
    @kaiserrino8774 Рік тому +66

    Hesse is among the most beautiful German writers, one can read. His books are like readable paintings.

    • @Hekaterian
      @Hekaterian Рік тому

      Wasn't Hess a Nazi? If he was then I couldn't care less about anything that he had to say or what he believed in.

    • @michaeldrew3292
      @michaeldrew3292 9 місяців тому +2

      Ok imma check out his work! You’ve persuaded me 😀

    • @707MrGrapes
      @707MrGrapes 8 місяців тому

      Siddhartha - read it. read it again. It hits hard!@@michaeldrew3292

  • @TheCompleteGuitarist
    @TheCompleteGuitarist Рік тому +86

    My big takeaway from Siddharta, my favourite novel, is this, as you quote.
    *“Wisdom cannot be imparted. Wisdom that a wise man attempts to impart always sounds like foolishness to someone else ... Knowledge can be communicated, but not wisdom. One can find it, live it, do wonders through it, but one cannot communicate and teach it.”*
    This philosphy informs my life as a person and as a teacher. This is the starting place for everything.

    • @robfromvan
      @robfromvan Рік тому +9

      Wisdom only comes from experience, it seems.

    • @lushianryder404
      @lushianryder404 Рік тому +7

      Knowledge, Wisdom, and Insight. All 3 go hand in hand

    • @randybackgammon890
      @randybackgammon890 Рік тому +3

      That's a wise observation.....so I guess it can't be imparted😂

    • @nancytenney5623
      @nancytenney5623 Рік тому

      @ChestPass87 Oh I resonate …training a spouse at a sport is tricky territory, as in life, best left for them to let you grow by experience!

    • @cathy7382
      @cathy7382 2 місяці тому

      Wisdom can be found in the bible, a whole book called Proverbs is found,
      and the beginning of wisdom is the
      knowledge of God who is the source

  • @fatemehbagherian1931
    @fatemehbagherian1931 Рік тому +13

    I’m so glad there was no music in background which is distracting 🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @jimicunningable
    @jimicunningable Рік тому +25

    "You see Mark, that's the thing. We've destroyed Nature. Irreversibly and immutably. All we need to do is keep on focusing on how Special we feel we are."

  • @karmabhutia706
    @karmabhutia706 Рік тому +35

    Thank you for another deep and insightful work.👏 As a former trained Buddhist monk...reading Herman Hesse's work makes one feel at home..a sort of living-loving bridge between the nature and culture..East and West..heart and mind. Thank you. 🙏

  • @richardlee4730
    @richardlee4730 Рік тому +26

    Another excellent essay. Thank you, Fiction Beast. I was a huge Hesse fan beginning at 17 and read everything. When I read Steppenwolf at 19 I identified with the 50 year old Harry Haller and still do. This is still my favorite Hesse book probably because of how Hesse places Haller in a position where he must face his dull, world-weary nihilism, which has him on the brink of suicide, and to find meaning in both the common, everyday experiences of human community (the dance hall, for example) as well as reconnecting him with the magic of the immortals, such as Mozart. We may always be part animal, but we can transcend that through compassion for the human condition and from our instinct to transcend the humdrum through the act of creation, when we are inspired by others and works to do so.

  • @sourabhchatterji5734
    @sourabhchatterji5734 Рік тому +15

    I am happy that You have finally arrived at Hesse. For those who haven't read him, they don't know what is greatness and what is beauty.

    • @user-yu8cg7lz2h
      @user-yu8cg7lz2h 10 місяців тому

      exactly arthur schoprpenhauer held onto the love of his dog this can be a stable effect on your life human ego is destructive force it can be tempered by studying philosophy emotions lead to nihilism theology fills these empty spaces

  • @chancerobinson5112
    @chancerobinson5112 Рік тому +8

    Excellent observation: “All artists borrow, great ones steal”.- Picasso. “The secret to creativity is covering your tracks!” - Einstein

  • @richardlee4730
    @richardlee4730 Рік тому +23

    "I have always believed...that whatever good or bad fortune may come our way we can always give it meaning and transform it into something of value." - Hesse (Siddhartha)
    Okay, but it sounds to me that Hesse's quote is not about accepting things as they are (the metaphor of accepting the wisdom of the river/nature) but transforming things as they are into something else, not of nature but of the mind, through an interactive process with the human psyche (i.e. what neuroscientists refer to as the infrastructure of our evolved brain and mind) which requires the person to interpret experience into meaning, because meaning is necessary for humans to survive and thrive. We are not meant to be nihilists. Nihilism, it seems to me, is an avoidance of the responsibility to find (invent?) meaning and so they may rationalize that, because they find no meaning in nature, that therefore there is no meaning for humans. But, it seems to me that this way of understanding meaning is question begging in that there is an assumption that the meaning must be grand, at the scale of all phenomena, including nature. But, if I am understanding the neuroscientists correctly, our need for meaning is not to discover some occult or gnostic wisdom, e.g. God, the creator of the order, and therefore leaving us to try to figure out the meaning inherent in the order, but rather, that our minds, having left the "garden" of instinct (like animals who seem to require no meaning because their brains/psyche/minds have not evolved to require it), we require more than instinctual drive to survive and prosper. We require meaning, which is a social construct, although not constructed on a blank slate, something we create together. And the most ingenious of the creators are those who seem to have an intuitive understanding of the psychic structure.

  • @googleg5877
    @googleg5877 Рік тому +34

    Hesse 's books are timeless !!! Thanks for making this video on my favourite writer !!! You are diamond... Thanks for sharing this. Your efforts in each video is inspiring

  • @spmoran4703
    @spmoran4703 Рік тому +8

    I have read Siddatha . I enjoyed it. When I feel a little down I escape to the nature and just spend time in it . Nature isnt perfect , but, it's more what I like . Than over crowded ,manufactured places.

  • @Sachie465
    @Sachie465 Рік тому +17

    I wonder if Hesse could really see hundreds if not thousands of personalities in himself like Titian who is said to saw fifty colours in what ordinary people see as one colour.
    I think the line ‘like opening a wound and staring at it without averting your gaze’ is a perfect description of Steppenwolf.

  • @sherabdorjee4966
    @sherabdorjee4966 Рік тому +6

    I LOVE GERMAN THEY CREATED LOTS OF PHILOSOPHY AND ENGINE FOR WORLD TO ENJOY.

    • @SC-gw8np
      @SC-gw8np 4 місяці тому

      Indeed. They are the creators of civilisation.

  • @786DaveD
    @786DaveD Місяць тому

    Currently reading all of Hesse's work chronologically, and I keep coming back to this detailed analysis of yours of his life and work. Really helps me contextualize his writing and oeuvre. Thanks mate for putting the hard work.

  • @ennuied
    @ennuied Рік тому +14

    Well done. I read all of Hesse and the Glass Bead Game was the book that I think is his most mature work, it is difficult to distinguish it from his other works, but it goes further so much that we find ourselves accepting the ending, the end, because the end is a new beginning. It is a meditation that asks one simple question in a teasing way of human earthly experience, it asks what do we know and gives the same answer.

  • @cliffordbernard7663
    @cliffordbernard7663 Рік тому +9

    Another great lecture. Just one tiny niggling criticism: an infamous Nazi war criminal was named Rudolph Hess. Our great writer was named Herman Hesse. You must pronounce the final e to avoid unsavoury associations. "hessa"

    • @ExxylcrothEagle
      @ExxylcrothEagle Рік тому

      Like Porsch'eh automobiles

    • @renzo6490
      @renzo6490 Рік тому +1

      He pronounces Goethe correctly…but mispronounces Hesse.

  • @erikafreebird6449
    @erikafreebird6449 Рік тому +8

    How many of us have been on top of the world, and then got entangled with a nightmare lover and plummited into dispair and depression?
    I relate to the painting after his tumultuous relationship he had with the singer that was 20 years younger.
    It's hard to ever get back to the happy, high mountain top again.
    I don't agree with going to the other extreme of loose living with drugs and sex...that only surrounds a person with people plagued with addictions running from their pain. Those individuals are creating a life that is far worse than that which drove them there to begin with.
    Best to practice self-love, heal the inner child through simple joys, and relearn seeing the world through eyes of wonder, and gratitude, but also retaining your pearls of wisdom.

  • @nakhorosualehe5667
    @nakhorosualehe5667 Рік тому +15

    This Guy's Channel is Gold 🤩🤩🤩(or something Beyond Gold)

    • @googleg5877
      @googleg5877 Рік тому +4

      Diamond !!! For forever ... His contribution on UA-cam is amazing

    • @cheri238
      @cheri238 Рік тому

      AMAZING!!!

  • @borntobemild-
    @borntobemild- Рік тому +6

    It's been ten years since I read Steppenwolf and I think I finally understand what the hell it was I read. Thanks for pointing out the literary connections too.

  • @tanukibrahma
    @tanukibrahma Рік тому +4

    Wonderful analysis! I was one of those hippies who read Siddhartha, then later Steppenwolf.

  • @juliecourville8227
    @juliecourville8227 Рік тому +10

    Your channel is wonderful! I'm so glad I stumbled upon it. Please keep going. 💛

  • @tengo257
    @tengo257 Рік тому +3

    "Yes, yes, yes and yes", me to all those questions at the beginning. Great video!

  • @DaleBhagwagar
    @DaleBhagwagar Рік тому +4

    I've criticised you for certain points in the past, but you are too good. Loved this one. Thank you.

  • @emmahardesty4330
    @emmahardesty4330 Рік тому +3

    Thank you, entirely enjoyable and made me realize I was too young when I read, and re-read, most of Hesse's books in hippie days. Time to reabsorb them again. Big thank you.

  • @fatemehbagherian1931
    @fatemehbagherian1931 Рік тому +6

    I usually listen to videos more than looking at them. This one was one of the kind I’ve listened ten time non stop , thank you 🙏🏻

  • @leighcecil3322
    @leighcecil3322 Рік тому +4

    Herman Hess.. my first spiritual book when I was 17 thanks Herman namista 🙏

    • @cathy7382
      @cathy7382 2 місяці тому

      I enjoyed reading several of his books as a teenager and one required reading
      in my English class was Siddhartha but
      after becoming a Christian, Hesse wasn't coming from a Christian world view

  • @derekharley7343
    @derekharley7343 27 днів тому

    When I was a child I used to lift up pieces of wood in my back garden and wonder at what I found. Slugs, millipedes, worms etc. This was the wonder of nature. Am 64 now and over the past 2 years have found that wonder in nature again. Looking into a stream for hours, or listening to birds. Retired 4 years ago and am thankful I have the time again.

  • @jeannedouglas9912
    @jeannedouglas9912 Рік тому +1

    Kinda puts you to sleep but thank you for this great memory of when first reading these books. Very genuine.

  • @mateoneedham6807
    @mateoneedham6807 Рік тому +9

    Thanks 1,000,000, Brother Matt, for sharing your work. Another gem! I read somewhere (sorry, no reference) that "The Journey to the East" was a thematic sketch for "The Glass Bead Game" in which the themes mentioned in the prior are fully developed in the latter. I love both of these. Also, for some reason, I haven't read Steppenwolf, but will now that you mention all that immorality!!!

  • @bernardofitzpatrick5403
    @bernardofitzpatrick5403 Рік тому +3

    Hesse is a favourite for me 🙌🏽🙌🏽thank you so much!

  • @backyard620
    @backyard620 Рік тому +1

    I read Hesse when I was a young hippie (now I am an older one) but his philosophy of life stayed with me and I grew out of it : same search of old souls !

  • @seyproductions
    @seyproductions Рік тому +4

    "...but from time to time we must also indulge in things that are not morally good or socially acceptable."
    I find this so relatable.

    • @hazelwray4184
      @hazelwray4184 Рік тому

      Shop lifting? lol

    • @seyproductions
      @seyproductions Рік тому

      Nope.

    • @randybackgammon890
      @randybackgammon890 Рік тому +1

      Well that could be used by an perv as licence

    • @randybackgammon890
      @randybackgammon890 Рік тому

      Well that be used by any perv as licence to practice

    • @nvraman
      @nvraman Рік тому

      yes, a fib or a flirt helps. A fib will rejuvenate your psyche, a flirting helps your love life.

  • @twhite8308
    @twhite8308 8 місяців тому

    This channel is great! I'm so lucky to find it. Thank you.
    🌟

  • @nfragala
    @nfragala Рік тому +3

    Thank you for all your work.

  • @alkaloitongbam6684
    @alkaloitongbam6684 Рік тому +3

    Wow this is so beautiful, thank you so much for this video ❤️

  • @heekyungkim8147
    @heekyungkim8147 Рік тому +5

    I love your work.

  • @wintkyaw7576
    @wintkyaw7576 Рік тому

    Thank you. I read and had taught his works. Your video essays help a great deal.

  • @vn8106
    @vn8106 Рік тому +1

    Great video and channel, brother. Thank you

  • @JasmineDaisy111
    @JasmineDaisy111 7 днів тому

    Learning greek is just wow!

  • @786DaveD
    @786DaveD 9 місяців тому

    Watched this analysis in a single sitting. Brilliant work Matt! Hesse has been a great influence in my writing and reading taste. I am working my way through 'Beneath the Wheel.' Strange thing is although written a century ago, it's still resonating with me because of its contemporary thought process. Please keep your videos coming, man. Awesome work!!

  • @WaseemKhan-tg9vf
    @WaseemKhan-tg9vf Рік тому +3

    Thank you so much sir,, after a long time I am watching a new video

  • @markantrobus8782
    @markantrobus8782 Рік тому +3

    I read Steppenwolf in Calcutta in 1967 on the brink of renunciation. I preferred it to Siddharta.

  • @soumiasoumia4330
    @soumiasoumia4330 Рік тому +3

    Very interesting! Adding yet another author to my list thank you ❤

  • @Sachie465
    @Sachie465 Рік тому +5

    Hesse practised asceticism for three years to take the difficult task of writing about enlightenment as close to the truth as possible. The interesting thing is that Siddhartha says fasting and meditation are only temporary anaesthetics against pain and the meaninglessness of life. He even says he could have learnt what he has learnt to this day earlier in the pub(!) He doesn’t follow Gautama (the Buddha) because he thinks if the nirvana experienced by the Buddha is put into words, the essential meaning is instantly undermined. Truths can only be learned by experience, not by words.

    • @dantechersi6056
      @dantechersi6056 5 місяців тому

      hesse novel are buda iven much more rich..hees talk and expiriance live like rich nature alow them to se beutty in eny particular way of expresion this is ultimate truth no limitacion truth

  • @markantrobus8782
    @markantrobus8782 Рік тому +1

    Thanks. Great work, with comic asides.

  • @blackfeatherstill348
    @blackfeatherstill348 Рік тому +1

    Thanks. One of my favourite

  • @atendriyadasa6746
    @atendriyadasa6746 Рік тому +3

    True a guru cannot realize life's goal for one a guru that's also an acharya shows one HOW to LIVE in such a way that one may. ✋

  • @markobrien4332
    @markobrien4332 Рік тому +1

    Impeccable presentation. Thank you.

  • @mateovenovski625
    @mateovenovski625 Рік тому +4

    u have no idea how much i love ur videos. Ти благодарам многу.

  • @ElectricCelt56
    @ElectricCelt56 Рік тому +1

    I enjoyed Narziss und Goldmund, and didn't realise Hess was writing about his own troubled youth and ideas of Nietzche. Interesting,

  • @monicanudelman
    @monicanudelman Рік тому

    Amazing!Thank you so much.🙏

  • @roberthenahan7885
    @roberthenahan7885 Рік тому +1

    Thanks, I needed that

  • @to6941
    @to6941 Рік тому +1

    Excellent video thank you

  • @ashrafjehangirqazi1497
    @ashrafjehangirqazi1497 Рік тому +4

    Siddharta's philosophy anticipates quantum mechanics in that one can be at every place and at every time simultaneously and that life is an infinitely complex unity. But art is in the telling of it through poetry, literature, music, painting, building, and human kindness.

  • @VenusLover17
    @VenusLover17 Рік тому

    Thanks so much for this great video

  • @zk1479
    @zk1479 Рік тому +2

    Nature can be everything to mankind. Man is in nature and lives and learns from her. He cannot develop nor ennoble himself without close loving respectful relationship with nature. Nature is not to be exploited as modern deludes himself of. Rather nature teaches man everything he needs to become truly what he should be, a spiritual being dwelling in nature.

  • @isminidog
    @isminidog Рік тому +1

    Thank you for this.

  • @timothypeden3516
    @timothypeden3516 Рік тому +1

    I've read Siddhartha and enjoyed it very much!

  • @omarmy3495
    @omarmy3495 Рік тому

    "The Glass bead game" - a life changing book of philosophy and so many other pseudo sciences, all beautifully interwoven into this one masterpiece.

  • @juneyang1400
    @juneyang1400 Рік тому +3

    It matches my inner observations and love of nature that I thought all were accessible. Carl Jung, about subconscious actually determines or directs our conscious; Hesse’ view, and Kafka’s, I couldn’t disagree more. How wonderful I get to know their views. God is in Nature, as it created it, the rivers and also the stars, isn’t it.

  • @monicaaparecidaoliveira8063
    @monicaaparecidaoliveira8063 Рік тому +1

    I also read "The Prodigy" and enjoyed it very much. I find Hesses` novels very unique.

  • @constancewalsh3646
    @constancewalsh3646 Рік тому

    "Harry and .... oops!" Very funny! and the rest, very wonderful. Love the narration, your wit and intelligence. Thank you!!

  • @elenilouarasi2828
    @elenilouarasi2828 7 місяців тому

    Great work, thank you🙏🏻 Stevenson’s novel “The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde” and Dostoyevsky’s “The Notes from the Underground” came across my mind while listening to your analysis on “Steppenwolf” and of course Nietzsche’s novel “Thus Spoke Zarathustra” on the analysis of “Siddhartha”.

  • @MichaelAlberta
    @MichaelAlberta Рік тому +1

    Subscribed, thanks!

  • @blossm4002
    @blossm4002 Рік тому +1

    im just about to read steppenwolf this video came at a perfect time fr

  • @brunocurti2810
    @brunocurti2810 2 місяці тому

    THANK YOU

  • @Invest4Cash-Flow
    @Invest4Cash-Flow Рік тому

    Beautiful 🎉🎉🎉

  • @onenewworldmonkey
    @onenewworldmonkey Рік тому +2

    Wow. I woke up this morning with a question in my head. I reached for the Google God in my phone for answers and came here.
    Just a couple of weeks ago I wrote a lengthy comment in a video you made about Carl Jung. To which, you thanked me for my "wonderful" comment about how I live alone in the woods and have found that we are all problem solvers stemming from that characteristic in predators who want to eat every day.
    Once again, your video is extremely well written.
    Perhaps this is a coincidence-if I believed in coincidence.
    Perhaps it is a sign that I should continue work on my book-if I believed in signs.
    Perhaps it is because I subscribed but my phone did not know that (I keep my phone in the dark).
    Regardless, thank you for your great video and supportive replies.
    BTW there was a moving picture of a wide-eyed child coming out of a portrait in this video. I've never seen it before today. Thank you for that, too.

    • @onenewworldmonkey
      @onenewworldmonkey Рік тому +1

      Pere Borrell del Caso (1835-1910), Escaping criticism, 1874

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому +1

      That’s really to hear that my videos can inspire you. I say you should write. You might get immense satisfactions from it. Also something you can share with the world. I think many people stuck in cities dream of living in open spaces. Close to nature.

  • @Sachie465
    @Sachie465 Рік тому +4

    Western philosophy is questioning, arguing and sedulous writing, while Buddhism is...I don’t know, but when I read the Japanese essays written in the 12-14th century; during the turbulence of civil wars and natural calamities, I saw how Buddhism struck their chords.
    Steppenwolf was abstruse for me (it was a while ago). I hope to understand better by re-reading it after having watched this and the Jung video.
    I like that the video is calm and soothing like the river.

    • @hazelwray4184
      @hazelwray4184 Рік тому

      'how Buddhism struck chords'?

    • @Sachie465
      @Sachie465 Рік тому

      @@hazelwray4184 There already existed an idea of reincarnation so Buddhism was easy to accept (it was imported via China so it was a little different from the original). The idea of being born to this world of suffering again and again was daunting, so the nirvana, which means getting away from the cycle, was very attractive.
      Jodo-shu promises nirvana after death if you only chant, on the other hand, Shingon-shu (or Zen) which was targeted to the warrior class, teaches you to reach nirvana in this life by rigorous practices.
      Can you guess which became more popular?
      Caution: I’m not a Buddhist priest nor a historian.

    • @davidtrindle6473
      @davidtrindle6473 Рік тому

      Philosophical arguments never satisfy. There is no end to it, no resolution.

    • @Sachie465
      @Sachie465 Рік тому

      @@davidtrindle6473 But it’s part of the distinctive and rich culture of the west from my point of view.

  • @abictor3312
    @abictor3312 Рік тому +3

    Eastern philosophies like Hinduism and Buddhism is centralised more upon the "non-dual" aspect which not only doesn't include nature, but becoming something that is beyond nature or it's laws.

    • @susieb7305
      @susieb7305 Рік тому

      This does not make sense. Learning from the truth of the way things are, meditation on the four elements - Buddha learned from nature.

  • @CinemaSatsang
    @CinemaSatsang Рік тому +1

    nice!

  • @archie6945
    @archie6945 10 місяців тому

    Read a couple of his works while learning German. Recommended Siddharta to an Indian friend as an example of what a philosopher might make of a religious figure, but didn't find that or Demian particularly appealing. As a backgammon player at the time, intended to read "das Glassperlenspiel" & might invest in "Die Morgenlandfahrt"(Journey to the East) as my son was interested in Eastern philosophy. But it was Hesse's art that does appeal to me...I need it to be decorative, and it is; very.

  • @Baczkowa78
    @Baczkowa78 Рік тому

    I’m carving that path. Learned that long ago. Individualism. One with self.

  • @ernststravoblofeld
    @ernststravoblofeld Рік тому

    I saw the characters of Siddhartha and Gautama as the historical Buddha split in half, between the search for enlightenment and the elimination of suffering.

  • @phelan5387
    @phelan5387 Рік тому +2

    Hesse's greatest work was Narcissus and Goldman.

  • @cutzymccall7675
    @cutzymccall7675 Рік тому +1

    I am a Goddess worshiper. I love Herman Hesse’s fiction. I believe in the Earth Goddess: all of Nature as the Higher Power.

  • @not_emerald
    @not_emerald Рік тому

    I missed your videos

  • @stephen2975
    @stephen2975 Рік тому

    Nature speaks, it shouts of our creator!

  • @donaldkelly3983
    @donaldkelly3983 Рік тому +4

    Liked this video a lot!
    I read Hesse in college about a million years ago, so revisiting the novels was good.
    However, if you want to encourage future Hesse readers, don't associate him with Timothy Leary.

  • @dedaglima
    @dedaglima 8 місяців тому

    My theory is that Peter Camenzind wrotes the treatise of Steppenwolf

  • @Granted1754bsurd
    @Granted1754bsurd Рік тому +1

    Please do a video on Hemingway, Mr Beast, it will bring extreme enjoyment to me, as does all of your painfully good content. ERNEST HEMINGWAY PLEASE FICTION BEAST

  • @ThomasDoubting5
    @ThomasDoubting5 Рік тому

    Nature is alive it's all conscious and alive , I knew this from a very small child you and it are not separate . When you think you are you have issues then .

  • @BrockLanders
    @BrockLanders Рік тому +2

    My interpretation of Steppenwolf was a man experiencing a spiritual awakening/spiritual crisis and his attempts to integrate the shadow function.

  • @petermiesler9452
    @petermiesler9452 Рік тому

    (...deleted...) Interesting and worthy review of two very interesting books by Herman Hesse.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому

      Watch it again.

    • @petermiesler9452
      @petermiesler9452 Рік тому

      @@Fiction_Beast Okay, thank you for the challenge, I have listened again, and I’ll admit, I was a victim of my own expectations. I’ve read Siddhartha and Steppenwolf and others, thought about them a lot, but at this point I myself was looking for something more biographical about Hesse himself. That said, your observations on both stories are excellent, especially Steppenwolf (the more challenging for me.)
      Allow me to highlight some of your own words from the section about Siddhartha specifically about the nature human connection:
      22:40 Siddhartha realizes he and the river are one …
      26:30 Siddhartha’s true teacher was a river …
      26:45 In the East, Nature and Human are pretty much the same thing …
      28:45 Hesse: ‘There’s a river running inside of you.’
      ____
      Have you reviewed, “Das Glasperlenspiel”?

  • @harrydebastardeharris987
    @harrydebastardeharris987 Рік тому

    Hesse didn’t inspire me to go to India as I travelled from India overland to Australia as that was my original intention.
    But having read all of his books as an alternative person,
    they certainly influenced me and all of my friends to go there,especially “Journey to the East”,people I met on the way certainly looked for a Guru or some answer to Western Rationalism and it’s empty promises.

  • @akelofgren9468
    @akelofgren9468 Рік тому

    Natures good but l learned /experienced the strongest fit to use ,destroy 'weaker'

  • @johntsavaris8804
    @johntsavaris8804 Рік тому +1

    👍

  • @ExxylcrothEagle
    @ExxylcrothEagle Рік тому

    Magister Ludi came to my meditation hut this morning

  • @janecote
    @janecote Рік тому

    That's him? His writing creeped me out. Now I know why

  • @PravdaSeed
    @PravdaSeed 2 місяці тому

    ⭐💯💓💯⭐

  • @dharmapalsharma2679
    @dharmapalsharma2679 Рік тому +1

    🌺✝️☸️🔯♈️🕎♉️☮️✡️⛎☦️⚛️☪️🕉️🌺
    Prima facie convincingly so Inspiring to combine the Advait Unity of Existence with Islamic Wahadat Al Vuzud with the Absurd philosophy of Albert Camus… All bliss is the fruits culminations out of the soil of Meaninglessness & Boredom etc.
    It’s Divine Absurdity which we may endeavour every moment 🌺🌺🌺

  • @roncarpenter7240
    @roncarpenter7240 Рік тому

    I'm a little disappointed that you didn't mention the rock 'n roll group that took is name from Steppenwolf.

  • @keysemerson3771
    @keysemerson3771 5 місяців тому

    Love your work. Just a comment on your audio. You a popping your mic(plosives). Learn about gain staging and use a pop filter.

  • @flipfeef
    @flipfeef 18 днів тому

    can someone explain why jordan peterson would love the snake in the story

  • @FirstmaninRome
    @FirstmaninRome Рік тому

    Siddhartha is the only unread book on my Buddhist shelf. DL somerset Maugham?

    • @FirstmaninRome
      @FirstmaninRome Рік тому

      I like how he discovered schopenhauer after nietzsche like me, poor schopenhauer was underapreciated even then, I guess before the dm nazis, Nietzsche is so overrated.

    • @FirstmaninRome
      @FirstmaninRome Рік тому

      This was great though

  • @renzo6490
    @renzo6490 Рік тому +1

    His name, Hesse, is pronounced as we pronounce Goethe.
    More like Hesseh. Or Hessah

  • @dharmapalsharma2679
    @dharmapalsharma2679 Рік тому +1

    Sidhartha: BOOK 📕 BY HESSE…
    Perhaps something closest to my Absurd philosophy etc.😴🤫😂

  • @alltheserobotsshallfall
    @alltheserobotsshallfall 3 місяці тому

    Nietzsche Nature - sounds a lot like with your accent