The most disturbing chapter in The Brothers Karamazov

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 2 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 158

  • @matthewwarren7879
    @matthewwarren7879 4 роки тому +218

    If you were to ask randoms in the street nobody would know what yourre talking about.

    • @tww1671
      @tww1671 3 роки тому +17

      It's an unfortunate truth

    • @DaTryHardCamper
      @DaTryHardCamper 3 роки тому +5

      Ahahah truth I have just gotten past this chapter but really wanted another's views on this just about to start the poem

    • @robertimmanuel577
      @robertimmanuel577 3 роки тому +7

      @@tww1671 nothing unfortunate about it. Just different interests.

    • @tww1671
      @tww1671 3 роки тому +3

      @@robertimmanuel577 Good point. I agree :)

    • @lukasmiller486
      @lukasmiller486 3 роки тому +5

      I read the book twice (not for college but enjoyment) so I knew right away what you were referring to in the title.

  • @di9645
    @di9645 3 роки тому +141

    Yes, this was a brilliant conversation. I thought the chapter where Ivan is visited by the "Devil" was quite disturbing, too.

    • @di9645
      @di9645 3 роки тому +4

      What Ami1649 is discussing here from the book about the 6 years old girl being in a cellar not knowing what she did to deserve the life she had and the recent discovery of unmarked graves of over a thousand children in Catholic schools in Canada.

    • @gilliofrancesa
      @gilliofrancesa 2 роки тому +6

      I just read that chapter. I thought it was brilliant!!

    • @yuanmona
      @yuanmona Рік тому +1

      agree! and the actor in the movie is intellectually lively

    • @aliceentayyab452
      @aliceentayyab452 6 місяців тому +2

      I literally felt sick to a point where i thought someone was sitting in the corner of my room far from me yet breathing heavily behind my ear. I came to a point of almost sleep paralysis like state and afterwards felt very dizzy.

    • @williamorpheus2635
      @williamorpheus2635 4 місяці тому +2

      For me it was the interaction between Smerdyakov and Ivan toward the end of the book. There's an expression of Smerdyakov's soul that disturbed me

  • @andrew3249
    @andrew3249 Рік тому +44

    The themes of fatherhood are so complex and interesting. Ivan and Alyosha are philosophical rivals, and that rivalry shows in the teaching by example they do: Alyosha tries to prepare the future generation through the kids at the end of the book, while Ivan's teachings led to murder. Also, its very interesting how Ivan talks about loving children, yet Alyosha is the only one who seems to be around them.

  • @JoeChrisMorris
    @JoeChrisMorris 2 роки тому +26

    I like that though Dostoyevsky ADORES Alyosha, he still allows him to love Ivan. And Ivan.. Ivan is a split personality. Hes torn in 2. Figure Rodya in Crime and Punishment

  • @thetinmaamfromozthemagicdragon
    @thetinmaamfromozthemagicdragon 3 роки тому +54

    I always really liked how Ivan cut the Bullshit when they were sitting together and said that they both knew what they really wanted to talk about: "The Eternal Questions"

    • @amdavad
      @amdavad 2 місяці тому +1

      that really felt like the author talking to the audience like, ‘’thru these characters and the world i created, let’s get down to what the intent really is with them’’

  • @1stAllegiant
    @1stAllegiant Рік тому +24

    In describing Ivan, the author says he wrote newspaper articles on theology and Christians and Atheists alike believed his words supported their views. Dostoevsky does the same with this novel. Be wary in implying he has definitively supported your viewpoint. I’d argue that Ivan’s ways led to perdition and Alyosha was the only consistent beacon of light throughout the book. Alyosha answered all of his questions, not with words but how he lived. Ivan had all the words but his life amounted to an odorous vapor.

    • @guy_gardner4098
      @guy_gardner4098 7 місяців тому

      Dostoyevsky is very obviously pro-orthodox church, like ffs please, it's written all over his books.

  • @jeanettesdaughter
    @jeanettesdaughter 2 роки тому +10

    “Too high a price is asked for harmony.”

  • @robertimmanuel577
    @robertimmanuel577 3 роки тому +41

    I'm almost done with the book. I will really miss it. I'll cherish the remaining 200 pages I haven't yet read.

    • @ami1649
      @ami1649  3 роки тому +2

      Enjoy!

    • @paladin1726
      @paladin1726 5 днів тому

      Remember that the first read of the book is just an introduction to the characters. You'll soon want and need a re-read!
      I sobbed like a baby when I finished.

  • @ragnarwinther4984
    @ragnarwinther4984 Рік тому +19

    I know it’s not this black and white, but what I got from this chapter and the grand inquisitor is that Ivan believes in God, but can’t accept him because of the horrors he allows to happen on earth?

    • @ryanparkercolour
      @ryanparkercolour Місяць тому

      I think Ivan is saying he rejects God by acknowledging that he understands nothing and feels it’s ludicrous to suggest some divine power that makes sense of all the chaos that’s going to bring it all into ultimate harmony.

  • @kevinrombouts3027
    @kevinrombouts3027 2 роки тому +36

    Yet Doestoevski was a very sincere Christian. He had the depth and honesty to present the strongest possible challenges to faith in Christ imaginable. It would have been interesting to hear more of the younger brother and his perspective.

    • @za4310
      @za4310 Рік тому +5

      I somewhat doubt the standardness of Dostoyevskys stated beliefs, to the point where I think he might have been more of atheist despite claiming otherwise. I think he considers himself at worst an Ivan who has gone mad from the truth and at best a zosima who acknowledges the truth but persists. I think he considers the talk of immortal souls and heaven to comfort grieving mothers to be an opposite side of the coin or the grand Inquisitor. Lies to control and supposedly help humanity. He seems to believe it's okay to comfort individuals but to mechanically control human society and lock up people like zosima/jesus is wrong. Zosima doesn't want to establish a church-state relationship either, and it's basically because he already understands the meaning of Ivan's poem without having heard it. He knows that the state mechanically loves "humanity" yet ignores individuals. Any great state, church or not, is somewhat like the girl in the wheelchair. She claims to love humanity but has no love for individuals.
      So I think Dostoevsky believes religion is pragmatically true for individuals but he doesn't believe it literally. He sees it as a form of madness that could either comfort your in your grieving or haunt you with apparitions of the devil.
      This is reinforced especially by his constant references to holy fools. He sees a falseness in some of them, but those qualities of taking on strange beliefs and behaviors in order to help others is essentially what he feels about religion. He considers the will to care for others and show love as a measure of the truth.

  • @hollywoodbb
    @hollywoodbb Рік тому +15

    I had Alyosha’s outlook when I was younger. Then at 18 I became a first responder. It was only for a year, but I had 3 bad cases, one involving an infant. Now at 28, I have more of Ivan’s outlook. I don’t know what to believe as far as a higher power goes, but if there is one, I would have some hard questions about those events. This chapter made me feel understood in a way.

    • @brigs369
      @brigs369 10 місяців тому +2

      do you believe in free will? because suffering becomes pretty obvious if you do
      now the unobvious, and unanswerable, is why suffering is a conduit to existence and/or God. The best answer one can give is that our only hope is that those who suffer find eternal peace in the afterlife

    • @dukaslatvuh3205
      @dukaslatvuh3205 5 місяців тому

      ​@brigs369 they find greater peace than most of us! Eternally!

    • @hollywoodbb
      @hollywoodbb 5 місяців тому +1

      @@brigs369 I do believe in free will. But I also wonder why innocent people can be harmed as a result by no fault of their own. I agree that suffering generally is a conduit to existence. And suffering usually yields growth, fortitude, and understanding. But I am strongly suspicious of classifying the type of suffering endured by a victim as the same as self inflicted suffering, such as abstinence or something similar.
      Basically, if you deny yourself indulgence now and choose suffering, that is most often good. However, if suffering is cast upon you by another, I cannot see that as good. Suffering is tiered.

  • @tamjansan1154
    @tamjansan1154 Рік тому +10

    In Ortodox Christianity self inspection and repentance of sin is the key to the door we knock on for Jesus .The Truth. By Acknowledging our own wrong we start to feel love and compassion for others who do wrong while blind and ignorant as we are, but also to recognize Lie that is trying to manipulate us.
    In repentance, Holly Spirit presence manifest, starts to teach us....to be wise as serpent and harmless as dove.

  • @pearlwalker4205
    @pearlwalker4205 3 роки тому +44

    While short, the chapter “A Little Demon” hit me super hard. The imagery is similar to Rebellion in how it details horrible acts being done to children, yet Lise talks about it in a way completely different way. She’s depressed, numb, and revels in the idea of hurting herself or others as some kind of escape, smiling as she describes violent atrocities. And the way the chapter ends with her slamming the door on her finger, with it being described as black and oozing. Lise looks at what she did to herself, about to cry, thinking how even that wasn’t enough. It’s so short but it was such a poignant depiction of depression

    • @kyutifer
      @kyutifer 2 роки тому +4

      This part hurt. The loss of innocence really gets to me, and the worst part is that it makes sense.

    • @Foushee217
      @Foushee217 2 роки тому +2

      I was so confused after reading the Little Demon chapter, but now i think i understand it's because I've never really suffered from depression. The previous chapter about Lise was so sweet and hopeful, and then she is completely lost. My wife, who has had depression, said it made sense to her. But it broke my heart, and never really gets resolved!

    • @user-rr9to2ul6n
      @user-rr9to2ul6n 2 роки тому +2

      omg i wrote a poem about this section because it was so resounding to me when i first read this book

    • @ghostfriendly6474
      @ghostfriendly6474 2 роки тому +2

      Most disturbing sentence of the book, absolutely "I don't know'. The virtuous and sincere monk is unable to deny an anti-Semitic blood libel

    • @ghostfriendly6474
      @ghostfriendly6474 2 роки тому +4

      @@Foushee217 Not a full resolution but she sent flowers to the small boy's funeral at the end

  • @Leebearify
    @Leebearify 3 роки тому +8

    Astonishing! Absolutely astonishing. Thank you so much for this.

  • @NicolasSchaII
    @NicolasSchaII 7 місяців тому +1

    I like your analysis of that chapter, well done! There is more to the chapter, but this might be a great start for people trying to understand more about it

  • @callmeishmael7452
    @callmeishmael7452 2 роки тому +6

    Nicely presented young man. You are a natural born teacher.

  • @StashWyslouch
    @StashWyslouch 3 роки тому +12

    just finished book today, this was a great way to start 're-reading' it, thanks for the brilliant overview !

  • @jeanf8998
    @jeanf8998 Рік тому +5

    Excellent video. I’m a Roman Catholic and when Jesus was born Herod had all the first born males slaughtered. I think they are the first martyrs of the Church. But they were also “old testament “ Jews now having their sons slain absurdly in search of Herod’s fear of a new king having been born. This is the story of mankind’s fallen nature. And it has brought blood lust into the world for as long as it lasts. God created angels before man with free will. Yes we want freedom no matter how far it degrades us. We have free will. The Holy Innocents that were slaughtered the night Jesus was born were immediately in glory. But still as believers we are commanded to give our lives to come to the aid of the suffering and that itself is not absurd.

  • @TheEggman51
    @TheEggman51 3 роки тому +7

    When I saw the heading title of your video, I remembered that chapter in all its horror, and wholly agree with you. Even the axe murder scene in Crime and Punishment pales in comparison.

    • @sonyafirefly3879
      @sonyafirefly3879 3 роки тому +1

      The only one that's harder to read in his work is the chapter in Demons that the publishers refused to leave in (but which explains the book's ending).

    • @burntt999
      @burntt999 3 роки тому

      @@sonyafirefly3879 oh damn im about to read demons next.. how’d you find out about missing chapters? And im assuming they are online somewhere?

    • @sonyafirefly3879
      @sonyafirefly3879 3 роки тому

      @@burntt999 It's at the end of the Pevear and Volokhonsky translation. Makes the ending of the book make a heck of a lot more sense, but it will make you feel angry and sick (seriously, thinking about it just now made me cry). I don't know exactly where Dostoevsky meant it to be in the book.

  • @l.5679
    @l.5679 3 роки тому +6

    Found your channel through reddit and wow, brilliant video!!!! Excited to go through all of your channel. Ivan Karamazov is one of my all time favorite characters and I cherish every chapter he's in in Karamazov brothers greatly, he's so interesting.

  • @Ricky-es9vg
    @Ricky-es9vg 3 роки тому +7

    Great video! The Brothers Karamazov is one of my favorite books I have read. Rebellion is disturbing for sure.

  • @caseyharrington4947
    @caseyharrington4947 3 роки тому +22

    I found the opposite tone reading this chapter. I didn’t get a sense of Ivan being sad and weary of the idea that everyone can be forgiven and that there being harmony but rather I felt this undercurrent of resentfulness from Ivan. To me it seemed more that Ivan was ridiculing this vision and wilfully torturing his brother with them while masquerading as a melancholic benevolent figure

    • @fakeemail4005
      @fakeemail4005 3 роки тому +3

      I got the same impression too. I though Ivan was full of energy and angry even, while he was talking to Alyosha, who he knew had pretty much the opposite beliefs as him

    • @misscanada18
      @misscanada18 Рік тому +4

      I know this is a year old, but I just finished reading the chapter myself & I absolutely agree. I always envision these kinds of long monologues as if I were acting them out on stage to really feel the character or what I would think they feel & it was very frantic & desperate like a search for an answer he knows he’ll never receive & if he ever did, it wouldn’t suffice to calm him.

    • @caseyharrington4947
      @caseyharrington4947 Рік тому +1

      @@misscanada18 Out of curiosity, when you get to it, please tell is what you think of chapter 9

    • @misscanada18
      @misscanada18 Рік тому +2

      @@caseyharrington4947 can you name the chapter? My copy is from 1950 & it’s broken up differently. Are you referring to “The Preliminary Investigation”?

    • @caseyharrington4947
      @caseyharrington4947 Рік тому +1

      @@misscanada18 "The Devil"

  • @demotsit1290
    @demotsit1290 10 місяців тому +2

    Историята на българина предадена чрез Иван е абсолютно вярна и аргумента за създаването на дявола от хората е логичната връзка. Което означава, че тази връзка поражда и необходимостта от Бог. Страхотно видео.

  • @tww1671
    @tww1671 3 роки тому +4

    Reading The Rebel from Camus I'm at the chapter where he makes reference to Ivan Karamazov. It sill need to read The Brothers Karamazov and so your video helped give context to Camus' thoughts. Thanks !

  • @Ahmad-nf9ez
    @Ahmad-nf9ez 4 роки тому +11

    This was an amazing passage from the book. I recently finished reading it! I agree with Ivan.

    • @dannyperez1604
      @dannyperez1604 3 роки тому +14

      If you finished reading it then you know Dostoevsky responds by what happens to Ivan at the end of the book. The argument he correctly makes is that when "God is dead" and religion ceases to exist, men would have to create their own values but they are incapable of doing so. It is a theme in many of his books that man must have some form of a God in order to keep order in the world, otherwise everything is permissible. In other words, even atheists act like a God exists. Dostoevsky correctly predicted what Communism would become in the absence of religious structure.

    • @thetinmaamfromozthemagicdragon
      @thetinmaamfromozthemagicdragon 3 роки тому +1

      Probs why the next chapter grand inquisitor juxtaposes this one so poignantly

  • @yedidyalevy2896
    @yedidyalevy2896 4 роки тому +4

    Hysterical opening to the video! Great content!

  • @F.M.Dostoyevsky
    @F.M.Dostoyevsky Рік тому +16

    'It isn't God I don't accept, Alyosha, it's just his ticket that I most respectfully return to him.'
    Most badass line ever written!🙌

    • @CatholicWisdom
      @CatholicWisdom Рік тому +1

      Very similar to the lines by Capaneus, one of the main characters in Dante’s Inferno.

  • @MrKingss
    @MrKingss 2 роки тому +8

    I just finished reading this chapter. Preparing myself for The Grand Inquisitor. I admire how Ivan lets reality hit him. He does not turn his eyes away from it, no matter how painful it may be.
    I wonder if this has anything to do with some sort of self-laceration on his side.

    • @NART211
      @NART211 Рік тому +3

      I would say it's because he'd rather see the truth for what it is. He's a realist.
      From Dostoevsky's Notes From The Underground: "Which is better - cheap happiness or exalted sufferings?"
      Rather than cheap lies, Ivan is choosing exalted suffering - exalted because it is the truth.
      In the same conversation between Alyosha and Ivan, Ivan asks if he should stop and if he's making Alyosha suffer. Alyosha responds with something like: "Oh, I want to suffer."
      I believe Ivan sees how people turn a blind eye to those sufferings and chooses to look at them directly. This takes courage to do. I remember at the meeting with Father Zossima, Ivan was a passive listener, not intervening even when the priests discussed his articles (my memory might not be accurate here). This could be because he thought people were living a lie, especially that of Christianity, and hence refused to involve himself in their lies and stuck to his knowledge and lofty suffering.
      Alyosha, however, is able to take that burden of suffering and maintain his faith in humanity. I believe this is one of the reasons why Dostoevsky wrote him as the hero.
      In the words of Viktor Frankl: "For tears bore witness that a man had the greatest of courage, the courage to suffer."
      I believe this is the type of courage encompassesd by Dostoevsky and the Karamazov. Hurrah for Karamazov!

    • @dalejames486
      @dalejames486 Рік тому +1

      @@NART211 "..'I'm a realist,' I'll say, 'not a materialist,' heh, heh!" -The Devil in Ivan's nightmare

    • @NART211
      @NART211 Рік тому +2

      @@dalejames486 It's always worthwhile speaking to a clever man.

  • @petervysohlid4878
    @petervysohlid4878 3 роки тому +8

    You look like you are on the verge of crying: Great video by the way. I am currently on page 452

  • @alexandrianova6298
    @alexandrianova6298 2 роки тому +9

    It still baffles me that essentially the book states children are abused simply because the delectable defenselessness is too tantalizing to pass up. Or disgusts me, anyway. Excellent video.

  • @dinaklarisse
    @dinaklarisse 3 роки тому +5

    In the middle of the Rebellion chapter right now, can't wait to be stopped on the street to be asked what the most disturbing chapter of Brothers is

  • @amrmoneer5881
    @amrmoneer5881 4 роки тому +2

    I've recently finished this novel. Thanks for the video

  • @oscarhaydenperditionbound1195
    @oscarhaydenperditionbound1195 2 роки тому +4

    I went out onto the street and asked random people “what is the most disturbing chapter in The Brothers Karamazov?”
    No one knew what I was talking about.

  • @thePot_
    @thePot_ 10 місяців тому +2

    The rivalry, the battle is obvious through out the whole book. It’s clear, that those were fighting in Dostoevsky as well, but he finds the way out through the God, without a clear win for any side. The line in the beginning is also quite fascinating, where Fjodor Pavlovich talks to Alyosha, and he almost cries, calling Alyosha such a good boy. And then he adds : Fyodor was sentimental. Sentimental AND ANGRY. So even at this moment Devil is not leaving him. He is angry to himself, but Alyosha makes him fight the evil. It’s so many senses and sidelines in this book, that it really gives you no chance, then to agree to Jordan Peterson, that it’s probably the greatest book ever written.

  • @ghostwraith119
    @ghostwraith119 10 місяців тому +1

    Zosima was not the part of monastery brethren. He is a hermit type of monk.

  • @shiangjeoushyu8586
    @shiangjeoushyu8586 3 роки тому +1

    This is great; thank you so much for sharing.

  • @agentsmith9851
    @agentsmith9851 4 роки тому +12

    Looks like this book blew your mind, Einstein loved Dostoyevsky, and many great novelist admired his work. Read MuMu by Dostoyevsky, short book and great read. Bulgakov is another spectacular writer, Master and Margarita is a masterpiece I think.

    • @thetinmaamfromozthemagicdragon
      @thetinmaamfromozthemagicdragon 3 роки тому

      Read Einstein’s dreams by Alan Lightman!!! From what you’re saying, I’m sure you’d love it
      Unless you already have, which I think is more probable

    • @thesenseii9479
      @thesenseii9479 3 роки тому +1

      My friend also recommended the Master and Margarita! I’m definitely gonna read it now. thanks for that

  • @danielbertoldivivan3333
    @danielbertoldivivan3333 11 місяців тому +1

    It is really difficult to read it, I really do not know how I could move my eyes along the pages.

  • @roberttan2464
    @roberttan2464 3 роки тому +7

    Obviously the “Rebellion” chapter is emotionally disturbing to the vlogger, as to almost all who read it, including myself.
    One of the most disturbing for me was Katerina Ivanovna’s revelation during Dimitri’s hearing about her mental and psychological sufferings.

  • @oleggorky906
    @oleggorky906 2 роки тому +7

    Most random people in the street would have probably never even read the book. Sadly, I have only ever met one person who has that I know of. It’s a shame because it’s one of the greatest books in world literature.
    As for Ivan, he was the world’s first poe! 😂
    He tried to act as if he didn’t believe in a God, but he did really. That’s why he told Alyosha that he ‘returns the ticket’ (rejects the offer of salvation.) He had a view of God, sitting on a cloud, not intervening to help when his people suffered.
    Edit: some of the story about the Turks was later rehashed to be the Germans in World War One, such as the bayoneting of babies. The Germans never did that in the First World War, even though under Hitler unspeakable atrocities were committed.

    • @fuiscklam4087
      @fuiscklam4087 Рік тому

      Yet the story of the Turks is factually true.

    • @ElonMuskrat-my8jy
      @ElonMuskrat-my8jy 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@@oleggorky906I doubt they did the bayonetting in WWII. But the Soviets certainly did it.

  • @anne-gaelletitaut8441
    @anne-gaelletitaut8441 2 роки тому +3

    I read this book 25 yes ago and was deeply moved. I’ve just re read it and it’s still if not more disturbing. I don’t know how to place this passage and the others of equal emotional charge given what happened in the 20th century and even today in Ukraine. I feel the search for universal values is a dead end pursuit. Perhaps we need a definition of human nature and of an “ideal” man to help us fix an anchor in this world where “god is dead”. I’d be interested to know your thoughts. ??

  • @Lvsl_iftdv
    @Lvsl_iftdv 2 місяці тому

    Great video! Thank you for making it.
    19:22 : the "sch" in "eschatological' is pronounced "sk" 😊

  • @goafricatoursltd
    @goafricatoursltd 4 роки тому +1

    Great content, thank you! I'm about to start reading the book

  • @mightstealyourvinyl3378
    @mightstealyourvinyl3378 Рік тому +1

    I've only just completed my first read. I would love to be a part of this conversation but I think I shoulf only do so when I re read it

  • @seanging4068
    @seanging4068 3 роки тому +2

    Brilliant analysis

  • @udarpavarota396
    @udarpavarota396 4 роки тому +5

    The father acts irrationally for the sake of it.

  • @ryanoneiljohnson8743
    @ryanoneiljohnson8743 3 роки тому +9

    The Grand Inquisitor is the most disturbing chapter so far to me. A poem that not so called poem because it is tremendously long. Ivan such a weirdo.
    I agree his belief that he trusts the god existence but he don't trust the teachings that forgive every people who have sinned on you as in the chapter Rebellion. He has a point on this statement. He uses kids as his motive explaining his belief that gives me grief and sympathy for those kids.
    Dostoevsky has ability to hide himself in the character as representative. The author was the mind, the characters is the speaker of the mind.

    • @tyronemidzi2457
      @tyronemidzi2457 3 роки тому +1

      In my opinion the grand inquisitor abs rebellion are on the same level.

  • @thesenseii9479
    @thesenseii9479 3 роки тому +4

    I’m reading the McDuff translation, and it’s called “Mutiny” instead of Rebellion. Don’t know if it’s a better translation or not but it’s interesting!

  • @katrinamurphy7124
    @katrinamurphy7124 3 роки тому +2

    I am so glad this guy is good looking…I’d have a hard time paying attention. Thank you.

  • @henrymunn5116
    @henrymunn5116 3 роки тому +1

    I love this video, I think you nailed it

  • @tyronemidzi2457
    @tyronemidzi2457 3 роки тому +3

    I think the grand inquisitor and rebellion are just one chapter !!

  • @marcosraudez2241
    @marcosraudez2241 Рік тому +1

    Ivan was just applying what he was learning in law school 😅

  • @earlemorgan5068
    @earlemorgan5068 2 роки тому +4

    Thanks for your thoughts on said chapter. Dostoevsky is the best.

  • @hdcbpxsytahdcbpx
    @hdcbpxsytahdcbpx 3 місяці тому

    brilliant! thank you

  • @ifz5680
    @ifz5680 7 місяців тому

    I loved the chapter where Grushenka & Katerina meet for the first time!

  • @dakotataylor4696
    @dakotataylor4696 3 роки тому +7

    Every monk knows that all mankind deserves death but that's why Jesus is so crucial. That evil that alyoshas brother describes is within the heart of every single man. If it were not for Christ we would all be worthy of death.

  • @raphaelna1
    @raphaelna1 20 днів тому

    Ivan has lost faith. A part of him, deep down, wants Alyosha to help him restore his faith. Not even his high intelligence can give him the answers to these questions about life and God, thus giving him peace.

  • @dakotataylor4696
    @dakotataylor4696 3 роки тому +2

    Alyosha is the one who actually follows the suffering servant. I believe you might be mistaken.

  • @providence9856
    @providence9856 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you so much for this review. I just finished the book and so many ideas and emotions were clashing in my head but your "review' of this chapter was so educational in my attempt to understand Ivan's character and his ideas about God. Question: Why did Smerdyakov commit suicide, and Ivan feel guilt for his perceived role in his father's murder, if they both didn't believe in God and "everything is permitted"?

    • @CatholicWisdom
      @CatholicWisdom Рік тому +4

      The guilt they both felt is because God is real. S. was too weak to bear it. Ivan was stronger.

    • @kathrynstiles3509
      @kathrynstiles3509 Рік тому +2

      exactly @@CatholicWisdom

    • @fuiscklam4087
      @fuiscklam4087 Рік тому +1

      Ivan was never the kind of atheist, that don't believe in God. As he says it himself: "I just humbly return the ticket"

  • @thebenevolentsun6575
    @thebenevolentsun6575 Рік тому

    Great review, cheers

  • @sebolddaniel
    @sebolddaniel 2 роки тому +1

    The grand inquisitor chapter

  • @WrongWayRomanGabe
    @WrongWayRomanGabe 9 місяців тому

    sorry but I can't stop thinking ab the 1st statement you made 'if you were to go out in the street and ask any person...'
    I'm either deeply confused ab the ordinary person one may come across day to day OR I live in an extemly sheltered and obtuse environment because....

  • @benquinneyiii7941
    @benquinneyiii7941 Рік тому +1

    Inhuman suffering

  • @gggusc11
    @gggusc11 4 місяці тому

    Nice analysis

  • @dogacetin8548
    @dogacetin8548 3 роки тому +2

    Great video!

  • @menaclaura
    @menaclaura 9 місяців тому

    Thank you!

  • @lesterballard3310
    @lesterballard3310 8 місяців тому

    The Grand Inquisitor is my favorite

  • @coreylapinas1000
    @coreylapinas1000 Місяць тому

    I tried it, 90% of them said what is Brother's Kramersoft?

  • @tompribyl2884
    @tompribyl2884 5 місяців тому

    The notion that certain persons of great spiritual strength could attain a worthy position with God, whereas the common person cannot, is based on the notion that our works save us. I read that God is no respector of persons and that all our righteousness is as filthy rags. The so-called "good news" is that all persons have equal access to God through the substitutionary death of the Christ and his resurrection. I am really enjoying my first reading of this great novel and just read this chapter.

  • @amdavad
    @amdavad 2 місяці тому

    nice channel subbed

  • @jamessheffield4173
    @jamessheffield4173 3 роки тому +2

    What do you think of Nikolai Berdyaev?

    • @ami1649
      @ami1649  3 роки тому

      I'm not familiar. Do you recommend him?

    • @jamessheffield4173
      @jamessheffield4173 3 роки тому +1

      @@ami1649 Nikolai Alexandrovich Berdyaev was a Russian political and Christian religious philosopher who emphasized the existential spiritual significance of human freedom and the human person.

    • @jamessheffield4173
      @jamessheffield4173 3 роки тому +2

      @@ami1649 I think Berdyaev's philosophy is close to Dostoyevsky's.

    • @JaxBespoked
      @JaxBespoked 2 роки тому +3

      @@ami1649 He wrote a book/collection of essays on Dostoevsky that I highly recommend. In this early 20th century work, he was one of the first thinkers to seriously compare and contrast Dostoevsky and Nietzsche.

  • @Tolstoy111
    @Tolstoy111 3 роки тому

    Actually It's towards the end of first third of the text.

  • @aijofqiouasfjhioasfjak
    @aijofqiouasfjhioasfjak 2 місяці тому

    are there any spoilers in this video for anything past rebellion?

  • @netobumselu
    @netobumselu 7 місяців тому +1

    Gold mines?

  • @JoeChrisMorris
    @JoeChrisMorris 2 роки тому +1

    Rebellion is good!

  • @asherpeter2371
    @asherpeter2371 2 місяці тому

    Ivan really felt like a contradiction at times due to his intelligence that as rakitins explanation of the karamazov nature being at 2 extremes at all times felt very true here with ivan he spoke of being a socialist and for the downtrodden for those suffering etc. yet ignored his fathers silent cry for redemption constantly judging him he looked down on smerdyakov and i believe even feared him for having an intelligence comparable to ivans yet he was servant a valet and even when he first met the drunk man in the snow he behaved in a way at first that was very antagonistic. I believe ivan is someone who is very similar to the underground man he is someone who is self conscious to a fault and overthinks every little possible thing while he is capable of great good which he shows throughout the book his nature often causes him to resent those moments like his conversation and growing closer with alyosha becoming a moment of inner turmoil for ivan and his feverish search for clues that prove dmitri didnt kill fyodr all while he resents him and thinks of him as a monster

  • @MantisFootball
    @MantisFootball Рік тому

    The entire purpose of this video is to distract you from another chapter that is far more disturbing.

  • @haleighsturman2239
    @haleighsturman2239 10 місяців тому +2

    I honestly found ivans arguments to be very superficial. Everyone always talks about him like hes such a genius so i expected more when i read the book but it wasnt very impressive to me

  • @thetinmaamfromozthemagicdragon
    @thetinmaamfromozthemagicdragon 3 роки тому

    Same

  • @dakotataylor4696
    @dakotataylor4696 3 роки тому +2

    Also from the Christian Perspective even Children Are Not Innocent. Grace comes through Christ Alone. It is a free gift, not one that Is earned, and not one that is lost.

  • @Jazzgin
    @Jazzgin 3 роки тому +2

    Ivan sounds like ee-von, not like I-vën. Why do English speakers englishify everything?

    • @ZenityStudios
      @ZenityStudios 2 роки тому +7

      Maybe because they’re English……………………

  • @shankarthiyagaraajan1147
    @shankarthiyagaraajan1147 4 роки тому

    While talk, please look at the camera.
    Its anoying

    • @ami1649
      @ami1649  4 роки тому

      I'll try my best!

    • @shankarthiyagaraajan1147
      @shankarthiyagaraajan1147 4 роки тому +1

      @@ami1649 🌼🌼🌼👍🏼

    • @uggggggghhhhh
      @uggggggghhhhh 4 роки тому +23

      it isnt annoying at all

    • @elb1914
      @elb1914 3 роки тому +7

      It really isn’t

    • @vickielberfeld2014
      @vickielberfeld2014 Рік тому +2

      Unless a person is reading off cue cards or has memorized in advance what he‘ll say, gazing at the camera 100% is impossible. I much appreciate and prefer this speaker‘s more natural approach.