TEDxTalpiot - Oren Harman - The Evolution of Altruism

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 26 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 8

  • @stubdo16
    @stubdo16 3 роки тому +4

    Interesting lecture. George Price. 'Helping' strangers to an excessive sort of degree. A psychological trait to do with underlying guilt and trying to ease a troubled conscience.. i.e. abandoning family and continually running away from life/jobs? I've done it myself. Also, giving food and money to alcoholics .. could be construed as enabling action. Fine line between helping and aiding in someone's destruction

  • @judithjecmen8316
    @judithjecmen8316 Рік тому +1

    Fascinating, clear, thorough, even profound

  • @Bartolomeus002
    @Bartolomeus002 10 років тому

    Good job Sir.

  • @GreatAuntMarian
    @GreatAuntMarian 11 років тому

    Great!

  • @ARCTERYXSWEATSHOP
    @ARCTERYXSWEATSHOP 10 років тому +1

    hm

  • @mitzycoreano2297
    @mitzycoreano2297 8 років тому

    Very true here we see that as it has been stated here nature does cry out against brutality and anti-social capitalism and even then their are so many people blinded to the benefits of altruism.

  • @James-ll3jb
    @James-ll3jb 3 місяці тому

    Naive....😂
    “What I relate is the history of the next two centuries. I describe what is coming, what can no longer come differently: the advent of nihilism!
    Nihilism stands at the door: whence comes this uncanniest of all guests?
    1. Point of departure: it is an error to consider 'social distress' or 'physiological degeneration' or, worse, corruption, as the cause of nihilism. Ours is the most decent and compassionate age. Distress, whether of the soul, body, or intellect, cannot of itself give birth to nihilism (i.e., the radical repudiation of value, meaning, and desirability). Such distress always permits a variety of interpretations. Rather: it is in one particular interpretation, the Christian-moral one, that nihilism is rooted.
    2. The end of Christianity-at the hands of its own morality (which cannot be replaced), which turns against the Christian God (the sense of truthfulness, developed highly by Christianity, is nauseated by the falseness and mendaciousness of all Christian interpretations of the world and of history; rebound from 'God is truth' to the fanatical faith 'All is false'; a Buddhism of inaction).
    3. Skepticism regarding morality is what is decisive. The end of the moral interpretation of the world, which no longer has any sanction after it has tried to escape into some beyond, leads to nihilism. 'Everything lacks meaning' (the untenability of one interpretation of the world, upon which a tremendous amount of energy has been lavished, awakens the suspicion that all interpretations of the world are false). Buddhistic tendency, a kind of yearning for Nothing. (Indian Buddhism is not the culmination of a thoroughly moralistic development; its nihilism is therefore full of morality that is not overcome: existence as punishment, existence construed as error, error thus as a punishment- is a moral valuation.)
    4. Philosophical attempts to overcome the 'moral God' (Hegel, pantheism).
    Overcoming popular ideals: the sage; the saint; the poet.
    The antagonism of 'true' and 'beautiful' and 'good'."
    ~ Friedrich Nietzsche (1888)