Noam Chomsky on Natural Law

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  • Опубліковано 4 вер 2020
  • Source: • Noam Chomsky: Science,...
    Subscribe to the Dare To Know! Podcast: / @daretoknow2020

КОМЕНТАРІ • 355

  • @safyan9442
    @safyan9442 3 роки тому +199

    The present day Aristotle we have here. Where have you been hiding that majestic beard all these days professor.

    • @forgerboy
      @forgerboy 3 роки тому +10

      I would argue he’s more present day Socrates

    • @andrewl14190
      @andrewl14190 3 роки тому +18

      @Nim they were two generations apart. Socrates was the teacher of Plato and Aristotle studied at Plato's academy.
      Chomsky reminds me of Socrates because Socrates was known as the "gadfly" of ancient Athens. A pain in the side of the powers that were...constantly questioning common beliefs, encouraging people to think for themselves and understand the illusions that society imposes on us. Not being afraid of criticizing the powerful elites. Fighting against sophistry (persuasion based on appealing to people's emotions aka propaganda), emphasising living a virtuous life while avoiding materialism. And underlying all that, striving for knowledge of many aspects of humanity and society while recognising the limits of our understanding.
      And of Aristotle for some of the same reasons, but Aristotle was more wide ranging and meticulous in his philosophical output. Socrates didn't write anything but his history is recorded in dialogues written by Plato (which actually could just be Plato expressing his ideas). Aristotle wrote a lot about a lot of things and laid the foundation of philosophy and science for the centuries that followed. For example he basically invented the study of logic, which is key to Chomsky's own academic studies. His works covers biology, politics, metaphysics, rhetoric etc. Chomsky's work is also at the forefront of many fields of study (linguistics, politics, philosophy, cognitive science etc.)
      They all share common characteristics. Maybe politically Socrates and Chomsky could be more similar and academically Aristotle and Chomsky.
      Someone else might have a better idea on that though!

    • @aerobique
      @aerobique 3 роки тому

      @@andrewl14190
      interesting, tY
      x

    • @SaeedThaPraLem
      @SaeedThaPraLem 3 роки тому +2

      @@andrewl14190 That's A Great Assessment.

    • @theblackdeath4398
      @theblackdeath4398 3 роки тому +3

      More of Socrates than an Aristotle, or a combination of both. The reason being is that it is widely considered that Socrates was the world's first prominent anarchist-he questioned everything and anything under the sun. It was this questioning that eventually got him ostracised from the main echelons of society and subsequentally executed. Noam Chomsky continues the same tradition-he calls himself an anarchist as well.

  • @rootstriker1618
    @rootstriker1618 Рік тому +83

    No one breaks down natural law better then mark passio

    • @herbertsacrament2520
      @herbertsacrament2520 Рік тому +17

      Chomsky should visit Marks school first before elaborating on anarchy and natural law.

    • @jhdd9341
      @jhdd9341 Рік тому +21

      Passio's work is great!

    • @mysterybotts
      @mysterybotts Рік тому +15

      Passio is a freakin beast.

    • @unbroken1010
      @unbroken1010 11 місяців тому +10

      He talks a lot and doesn't actually break down a thing😂

    • @heartandmindovercome3214
      @heartandmindovercome3214 11 місяців тому

      👍🔥

  • @thehari75
    @thehari75 3 роки тому +118

    Chomsky we need more vids from u before u leave us please :(

    • @logia7
      @logia7 Рік тому +3

      Leave us?

    • @hex2637
      @hex2637 Рік тому +7

      @@logia7 he's 93.

    • @dankhelmet9973
      @dankhelmet9973 Рік тому +7

      there are hundreds if not thousands. Y u need more? Don’t u have a mind of ur own?

    • @BrownEyePinch
      @BrownEyePinch Рік тому +9

      He's tired. Hes watched nothing change for 92 years.

    • @alchemybyangela
      @alchemybyangela Рік тому

      It's a big club as George Carlin said, and Chomsky is certainly in it, but we're all not. He was controlled opposition all along.

  • @varunchauhan456
    @varunchauhan456 3 роки тому +35

    Please keep uploading new videos. These are great and help people understand the world better. You are doing us a great favor. Thank You.

    • @oppothumbs1
      @oppothumbs1 Рік тому +6

      Chomsky has declared himself a libertarian and anarchist but has defended some of the most authoritarian and murderous regimes in human history. His political philosophy is purportedly based on empowering the oppressed and toiling masses but he has contempt for ordinary people who he regards as ignorant dupes of the privileged and the powerful. He has defined the responsibility of the intellectual as the pursuit of truth and the exposure of lies but has supported the regimes he admires by suppressing the truth and perpetrating falsehoods. He has endorsed universal moral principles but has only applied them to Western liberal democracies while continuing to rationalize the crimes of his own political favorites. When caught out making culpably irresponsible misjudgments he has never admitted he was wrong.
      Today, Chomsky’s hypocrisy stands as the most revealing measure of the sorry depths to which the left-wing political activism he has done so much to propagate has now sunk.

  • @nino_lama
    @nino_lama 3 роки тому +6

    Mr. Chomsky is a living legend...

  • @AtibaVV
    @AtibaVV 3 роки тому +13

    Bruh this nigga is genius I've known of Noam chomsky for a while now but I never listened to him speak. It's crazy that he is arguably one of the smartest and most well verse philosophers of our time. Living legend for sure

  • @maxzjj
    @maxzjj 3 роки тому +72

    Mr. Chomsky, you're a great inspiration. Not quite sure if you read the posts of this 'tribute' channel, but I want to thank you for all the information you've put out there in an easily accessible way. It's akin to being given a map whenever you're starting to get lost.

    • @stormsurge1
      @stormsurge1 3 роки тому +5

      Gnome Chumpksy isn't the one running this channel

    • @jesusislukeskywalker4294
      @jesusislukeskywalker4294 3 роки тому +9

      we must be kind to one and other, and also educate ourselves .

    • @anurawimalasiri7110
      @anurawimalasiri7110 3 роки тому

      Appreciate it if we can have subtitles, please.

    • @SyncrisisVideos
      @SyncrisisVideos 3 роки тому +1

      @@anurawimalasiri7110 I just watched it with subtitles!

    • @maxzjj
      @maxzjj 3 роки тому +4

      @@stormsurge1 I called it a 'tribute' channel did I not?

  • @atik.3011
    @atik.3011 3 роки тому +25

    Matthias Mahlmann
    "Elemente einer ethischen Grundrechtstheorie"
    "Konkrete Gerechtigkeit"

    • @jemandoondame2581
      @jemandoondame2581 3 роки тому

      Is that what Chomsky refers to?

    • @atik.3011
      @atik.3011 3 роки тому

      @@jemandoondame2581 yes

    • @jemandoondame2581
      @jemandoondame2581 3 роки тому

      @@atik.3011 It seems like he is pursuing some moral realism. Do you know more about the literature.

  • @Discovery_and_Change
    @Discovery_and_Change 9 місяців тому +5

    0:46 (natural law) is what our nature tells us
    0:56 (even) infants have such a concept
    1:10 one of the first things children understand is "that's not fair"
    1:35 there is a concept of fairness and justice -- that's as close as we can get to "natural" law
    2:00 how do we know we have the correct concept (of what's "right" and "fair" [God's law may be different])
    2:46 the same questions arrive in epistemology

    • @VitorMadeira
      @VitorMadeira 9 місяців тому +1

      Excellent work. Thank you.

    • @Cecile33369
      @Cecile33369 7 місяців тому +1

      Great thanks. 3 minutes more meaningful than 10 hrs of Mark passio

  • @bodhiswatabiswas3822
    @bodhiswatabiswas3822 3 роки тому +49

    Can I add subtitle to this video? Because his voice has become muffled..

    • @richtusser
      @richtusser 3 роки тому +4

      plz yes

    • @MattLuceen
      @MattLuceen 3 роки тому +8

      The auto-generated subtitles are good! Try them

    • @jaw0608
      @jaw0608 3 роки тому +1

      Yeah... it's really difficult to hear Professor Chomsky these days. However, I will continue to try.

    • @cilla5277
      @cilla5277 3 роки тому +1

      His voice has always been low, or gentle.

    • @angelaseise3
      @angelaseise3 2 місяці тому

      Definitely. Have always had a hard time listening to Chomsky's voice though haha

  • @edreynolds2819
    @edreynolds2819 3 роки тому +5

    This is a nice, concise encounter with the question of origins.
    Notice that, at the outset, Professor Chomsky asks where natural law comes from. He proposes that it may come from God, then in the same breath rules that out as unacceptable.
    Within 2 minutes, he concludes that, “all” things considered, the question is probably “impenetrable”.
    Purely as a matter of intellectual rigour, and With great respect for Professor Chomsky, is it not painfully obvious that one should reconsider the existence of a creator that created us with his qualities, including justice?

  • @profsherifsalem8597
    @profsherifsalem8597 3 роки тому +2

    You have great impact on me the great the movement of internalism.

  • @pontevedra660
    @pontevedra660 3 роки тому +26

    Much respect to you Sir Chomsky. Yes, children understand the concept of fairness.

    • @myhatmygandhi6217
      @myhatmygandhi6217 2 роки тому +3

      Not any of the children I've seen. Kids actually need to be taught fairness and guided by good parenting.

    • @Codex7777
      @Codex7777 Рік тому +4

      They have A concept of fairness but it's not really fairness, in any real sense. It's 'fairness' in the sense of 'I want", "give me", 'that's mine's. It has more to do with a self-control, selfish view of the World. Even older children and teens, when saying 'that's not fair!' frequently mean 'it's not fair that I can't have exactly what I want, regardless of consequences to others, or myself" :)

    • @myhatmygandhi6217
      @myhatmygandhi6217 Рік тому +1

      @@Codex7777 Exactly!

    • @christopherstein2024
      @christopherstein2024 Рік тому

      @@Codex7777 I disagree. I very much remember having the perception of unfairness before I could articulate it. I remember that on a summers day something unfortunate happened to me in the living room that I can't remember. What I do remember is that I was looking to my mother in hope that she would comfort be me but she seemed to think that the mishap was insignificant so she wasn't empathatic but amused. I thought that this was very unfair. I thought it was unfair because she was my mother and supposed to help me, I thought it was unfair because I was very small and she was very big and very powerfull and while I struggled with my situation, it would have been effortless for her to give me a bit of support. I thought it is unfair to be happy about someone else being sad even more in their presence. I wasn't angry at her, I was a bit hurt and dissapointed and I mostly wanted her to stop making me feeling bullied. I couldn't explain to her that I felt bullied wich made me feel even more powerless. I thought that we knew what was the right thing to do in that situation and when it didn't happen felt like some kind of treason. I couldn't imagine that my mother would be mean to me on purpose so I also felt insecure about my expectations.
      This is just one particular memory wich I think happened before I could run.
      Another thing I remember is that my older sibling would pick fights with me to get me in trouble sometimes and that getting scolded for defending myself felt unfair while being scolded for something that I started didn't. Why would kids have trouble understanding that?

    • @unbroken1010
      @unbroken1010 11 місяців тому

      Ñoam was for mandates and friends with Epstein

  • @harrisonthorpe7970
    @harrisonthorpe7970 3 роки тому +3

    He's looking like some wise sage with that beard hahaha

  • @Undisciplined
    @Undisciplined Рік тому

    It is so great to see Chomsky talk about legal theory! Thanks for this. On my channel I deal a lot with the problem of anarchism and positive law.

  • @khalidalsulaimi1821
    @khalidalsulaimi1821 3 роки тому +105

    He is the greatest intellectual man on the earth, this man has huge impact on me

    • @IAmHereForeve
      @IAmHereForeve 3 роки тому +2

      The biggest impact ftom a person has been my dad and David Goggins.

    • @khalidalsulaimi1821
      @khalidalsulaimi1821 3 роки тому +2

      @@IAmHereForeve David Goggins is a great teacher

    • @TasteMyStinkholeAndLikeIt
      @TasteMyStinkholeAndLikeIt 3 роки тому +9

      Then you've missed a diaper load of much better intellects, particularly if you have the slightest interest in what the hail YOU are, what consciousness, awareness, and reality are. There are no bigger questions, and they've been solidly answered by numerous greater minds.

    • @xavieryates9782
      @xavieryates9782 3 роки тому +2

      I agree. He is one of only two people (the other one being Zlavoj Zizek) I personally regard as currently representing the two best exponents of intellectualism. It is a shame that, with 8 billion of us on the planet, there should be only 2 left. I also regard [the late] Harold Bloom as another member of that tiny group; too bad he is no longer with us. Of course there are other interesting people (Yanis Varoufakis comes to mind), but they are just not anywhere near the same intellectual level. I don't see anyone who can take over, and it saddens me no end.

    • @Jozaaaa
      @Jozaaaa 3 роки тому +6

      Xavier Yates dude 3 of the names you dropped are public intellectuals who are popular on UA-cam. There are not only 3 smart guys alive today😂 please just look up a university faculty or something 😂

  • @subsonic9854
    @subsonic9854 3 роки тому +6

    Noah Chomsky? Step out onto the deck of the Ark once in a while @_@

    • @subsonic9854
      @subsonic9854 3 роки тому

      @Jane Doe Lol you do you, friend.

  • @silviuconstantinmihaila7946
    @silviuconstantinmihaila7946 2 роки тому

    Hello there! Could someone tell me who is mentioned at minute 1:00 by Noam Chomsky. He mentions a person, but I couldnt understand. Could someone write down his name? Thanks a lot!

  • @k.p.8955
    @k.p.8955 3 роки тому +23

    I love listening to Chomsky but now it's always so difficult to hear what he's saying.

    • @94josema
      @94josema 3 роки тому +1

      Automatic subtitles

    • @k.p.8955
      @k.p.8955 3 роки тому +1

      @@94josema my point is his age but thanks for the suggestion

    • @k.p.8955
      @k.p.8955 3 роки тому +6

      @Pappy Chulo You're wrong that I'm classless. You're wrong that I was trying to cheap shot Chomsky. You're wrong that I was trying to use a facade because I clarified the misunderstanding. I am realize with age should come more knowledge. I'm glad that you value Chomsky's voice as do I. Be well ( :

  • @joshc1394
    @joshc1394 3 роки тому +2

    I cant get over how over caffeinated Fabian is in this 😂 Great questions, great video.

  • @thelucksboutique1768
    @thelucksboutique1768 2 роки тому +1

    A perfect example, I speak English fluently and decide to then drop out of English as a major course of study. This can happen...or I speak Spanish so I will pursue Spanish for that perfect grade. Or I'm American and decide that obviously French is closer to English than to Spanish..whom comes up with these theories..I know they're shallow but they're quite significant when we consider that grammar rules are not natural they are rather learned rules. The perfect example is to ask an English speaker about English speaking grammar they never learned at school but speak perfectly enough English or better yet switch their vernacular in NYC to relearn their regionalism or identify as they completely and utterly switch to a different dialect. You may say the rules didn't change enough, you're right, but I also didn't understand a thing a foreigner might reply or someone whom is unfamiliar with the area and manners of speech.

  • @Llllltryytcc
    @Llllltryytcc 3 роки тому +20

    92 and he is still sharp as a tack. One of my great heroes. Thank you dearly to they who run this channel.

    • @unbroken1010
      @unbroken1010 11 місяців тому +3

      The dude was for mandates and friends with Epstein 😂

    • @ZacharyBittner
      @ZacharyBittner 4 місяці тому +1

      The guy was actually asking a question about Aquintas' natural law. He didn't know what natural law was so he just guessed.

  • @felipemontecino769
    @felipemontecino769 Рік тому +5

    Morality is Objective and that is the standard to live under natural law.

    • @rootstriker1618
      @rootstriker1618 Рік тому +2

      Correct ! Morality is objective and truth is singular!

    • @Lizardwizard2112
      @Lizardwizard2112 3 місяці тому

      Do what thou Wilt shall be the whole Law. Love is the Law. Love under will

    • @someonenotnoone
      @someonenotnoone 2 місяці тому

      Can't understand what you mean by "morality is objective" because in my mind objectively true things can be objectively proven. E.g. Eddington proved that gravitational lensing occurs, verifying some of Einstein's predictions.
      How is morality objective like that? What are the units of morality?

  • @victormanuelfonsecasanchez9610

    you (and by 'you' I mean those who are managing the channel) should think about translating these valuable documents for the Hispanic-American public. Not many important philosophers of the last century are left alive, the lucidity that this man maintains at his age is impressive, he reminds me of Plato who also lived a long life

  • @garyjust.johnson1436
    @garyjust.johnson1436 Рік тому +2

    The audio quality is all over the place. Very difficult to hear him speak even at full volume.

  • @me3said2aweyah68
    @me3said2aweyah68 3 роки тому +1

    Omg he's alive

  • @quaoar213
    @quaoar213 3 роки тому

    Professor Chomsky, what is your opinion on the theories of Jacque Fresco, creator of the Venus Project ?

    • @YoungO-un8ul
      @YoungO-un8ul 3 роки тому

      Utopias cannot exist based on the nature of human desire.

  • @izharfatima5295
    @izharfatima5295 3 роки тому

    2. We can learn from history of our own specie from the rise and fall of different civilizations.

  • @mikethebloodthirsty
    @mikethebloodthirsty 2 роки тому +2

    Steptoes let himself go

  • @ChicagoTurtle1
    @ChicagoTurtle1 2 роки тому

    Dear Chomsky’s Philosophy, is there an email where you can be reached? It’s about subtitling.

  • @sabrisaad8858
    @sabrisaad8858 3 роки тому +1

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @sonsofthewestredwhiteblue5317
    @sonsofthewestredwhiteblue5317 Рік тому +2

    I’d never even heard of ‘positive law’ I just had to look it up.
    What a misnomer. 🤨

    • @Jzscrstsprstr
      @Jzscrstsprstr Рік тому +1

      Yeah, from ius positum, a law that is posited, man-made (within a State) basically, but it makes you think like it's all sunshine and butterflies by definition. Legal positivism can be used to legitimize the status quo. Some legal positivists say natural law is non-sense. They point out that every valid positive law derives from the validity of a higher ranked positive law that establishes it etc. to the Constitution which derives from the first Constitution. Here we face a problem because some law has to give validity to that first constitution (because no law can be derived from a fact (Hume, was it?) and we take that as a big problem... ). The thing is that law has to lay beyond the State (and the Positive Law). So they say, well, we must imagine that there exists such a basic law (Hans Kelsen) and move on. We don't know anything about this presumed law, about it's contents and we don't care. And here comes the "genius" part. Some say since we don't know the nature of the basic law then... it could be anything!... and any law system (no matter how rotten) is therefore valid since it derives from a made-up basic norm that can be anything in nature. The only thing, they also say, necessary for a valid law system is its effectiveness - the Fact (ironic?) that it's observed more that it is violated. If, say, the slaves can't win their freedom, that means the legal system is valid and they not only must obey their more powerful masters (common sense), but they are also legally required do so. And If the slaves don't revolt (knowing they are underpowered) - well, that means they accept the legal system and are fine with how things are. Moral principles and values, of course, have no place in the discussion of the validity of law - only detached from reality logical operations and power relations do.

    • @BEENIECRIS
      @BEENIECRIS Рік тому +1

      💯

  • @Terminal-Thought-Experiment
    @Terminal-Thought-Experiment 2 роки тому +1

    Noam. How do you feel about the Frankfurt school of thought?

  • @pudznerath6532
    @pudznerath6532 3 роки тому +2

    the thumbnail looks like the healthcare pls wojak.

  • @robertpirsig5011
    @robertpirsig5011 3 роки тому +26

    You can literally ask this man anything and he will give you an educated answer. The sheer breath of his knowledge is incredible.

    • @ManalapanHomeForSale
      @ManalapanHomeForSale Рік тому +4

      The world is a worse place since he's been alive. He's all talk no action and has been protecting his in MIT Masters for years.

    • @lucverheijden2005
      @lucverheijden2005 Рік тому +2

      @@ManalapanHomeForSale do you have beef with this old man?

    • @AK4SHGaming
      @AK4SHGaming Рік тому +1

      ​@@ManalapanHomeForSale true that

    • @michaelmiller7160
      @michaelmiller7160 Рік тому +7

      @@lucverheijden2005 And old dangerous perhaps well-intentioned man. Chomsky has declared himself a libertarian and anarchist but has defended some of the most authoritarian and murderous regimes in human history. Do you have a beef with this? His political philosophy is purportedly based on empowering the oppressed and toiling masses but he has contempt for ordinary people who he regards as ignorant dupes of the privileged and the powerful. He has defined the responsibility of the intellectual as the pursuit of truth and the exposure of lies but has supported the regimes he admires by suppressing the truth and perpetrating falsehoods. He has endorsed universal moral principles but has only applied them to Western liberal democracies while continuing to rationalize the crimes of his own political favorites. When caught out making culpably irresponsible misjudgments he has never admitted he was wrong.
      Today, Chomsky’s hypocrisy stands as the most revealing measure of the sorry depths to which the left-wing political activism he has done so much to propagate has now sunk.

    • @unbroken1010
      @unbroken1010 11 місяців тому

      Ask him about illegal mandates and Epstein island 😂

  • @williamfrazier3572
    @williamfrazier3572 2 роки тому +1

    I joined the IWW in 1965 while working in the SDS national office. Even then it bothered me that workers had so little right to benefit from the means of production hard won from shared human experience.

  • @svipdagx7291
    @svipdagx7291 Рік тому

    Mr
    Chomsky,did you make yourself,have you any recollection or other proof of that in other words,do you consider your mind or any human mind the most high in all of the cosmos?With certainty?

  • @zantecarroll4448
    @zantecarroll4448 3 роки тому +6

    What was the name of the infant psychologist ? I couldn't hear the name

    • @jorrendykstra4194
      @jorrendykstra4194 3 роки тому +8

      I think he's referring to Lila R. Gleitman: Her studies in developmental psycholinguistics in the late '60s provided early support for Chomsky's epistemic nativism. See esp. Shipley, Smith & Gleitman in Language, 45 (2), Part 1, 1969 (a study of how well-formedness of utterances affects responses to commands among telegraphic & holophrastic speaker-hearers).

    • @stepananokhin693
      @stepananokhin693 3 роки тому

      Yeah, me either. May be Lightman? Can't find it...

    • @deplaneetegmont
      @deplaneetegmont 3 роки тому +11

      According to the subtitles it's Dr. Twilight Lightning. What a name!

    • @monietz
      @monietz 3 роки тому

      @@jorrendykstra4194 thank you

    • @niclasrachow
      @niclasrachow 3 роки тому +1

      @@deplaneetegmont XD

  • @pauldow1648
    @pauldow1648 3 роки тому

    Can you Mic up NC better. Can't hear very well.

  • @gamingwithslacker
    @gamingwithslacker 3 роки тому +2

    At 0:56 Chomsky references a child psychologist (presumably well-known) who says that children become aware of "fairness" at a very young age.
    I cant make out her name.
    I've tried 'violet lytton', and some variants, to no effect.
    Can somebody help me out? I'd like to read what she has to say about it.

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 3 роки тому

      You don’t need to study child psychology to figure out that children have an innate sense of fairness. Just observe them. Or reflect back to when you were a child and your own sense of fairness. But while people do have an innate sense of fairness, they are loath to apply it when their own selfish interests are at stake. This no one can be a fair judge in his own cause. That’s why we have a judges and juries comprised of people with no stake in the cause being tried.

    • @gamingwithslacker
      @gamingwithslacker 3 роки тому +1

      @@syourke3 I don't deny that people have an innate sense of fairness.
      I want to find the academic responsibile for the research because I think it is of potentially large benefit to our conceptions of how society is organised

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 3 роки тому +3

      Gabriel Ward Capitalism is obviously unfair. A tiny handful of people who do no productive labor at all own and control all the world’s wealth, and the political system. They keep the wars going because they profit from them. They have no conscience at all. The world is run by psychopaths.

    • @gamingwithslacker
      @gamingwithslacker 3 роки тому +2

      @@syourke3 I pretty much agree with you. But there are large numbers of people who do not. I want to try and convince them of the decensies of socialism and the miseries of capitalism.
      This is better done with sources and evidence which counters the capitalist "we are all selfish" narrative.
      This psychologists research appears to do that.
      Therefore, I am interested in reading and understanding it.

    • @davegreene8588
      @davegreene8588 3 роки тому

      @@syourke3
      - Though _others'_ judgements aren't necessarily fairer than one's own.

  • @detoneamatrix9373
    @detoneamatrix9373 3 роки тому +1

    O importante é Cada um detonar a sua própria Matrix.💣💥💣💥💣

  • @celts3760
    @celts3760 3 роки тому

    1:52
    ... ... ... From that raises more serious questions.... Who or what determines if a concept is *correctly* considered fair / unfair? Is/Are it/they correct?
    The problem with the term _correct_ is that is subjective, it is determined by many factors, and it is not universal across different societies / cultures.
    Conclusion: a positive law in one culture/society might be a negative law in another.

    • @brothergod6633
      @brothergod6633 2 роки тому

      Emotions are a important factor in the structure of Moral Law but the Ability to Reason Logically is the most important. Natural Law as explained by Mark Passio uses the rules of Aristotelian Logic to deduce that we are all important as human beings and we all have different tastes/culture etc. Therefore the only rule we need to follow is adjacent to the Golden Rule…to NOT impose physical harm, duress, or coercion onto anyone. Emotional harm is given a smaller role because of our differences.
      Natural Law is spiritually based but it also stands on the firmest Logic and Truthful ground I’ve ever heard. Noam should check it out, but I doubt he has the moral compass to accept it.

  • @smokindauberdoo4208
    @smokindauberdoo4208 3 роки тому +1

    🙏✌

  • @austin426512
    @austin426512 2 роки тому +1

    He should be in icu

  • @slimanebou1478
    @slimanebou1478 3 роки тому

    I need Chomsky Email contact to take his opinion about something in the theory of language aquisition.

  • @libertarianmarketsocialist3836

    Can you make one about his genocide denial?

  • @Red-ki4tk
    @Red-ki4tk 8 місяців тому +4

    Chomsky why were you linked to Epstein 😭😭😭

    • @Vincent_Sallow
      @Vincent_Sallow 7 місяців тому +1

      what?

    • @Somereasonstolive
      @Somereasonstolive 5 місяців тому +2

      ​@@Vincent_Sallowwhat's worse is he hates talking about it and avoids the question in the most suspicious way possible

    • @omnirath
      @omnirath 17 днів тому

      He is a world renowned scientist of course he probably got in touch with epstein at some point like hundreds of people who never harmed any childrens, epstein was a criminal and his network of other unconvinced criminals is wide af but Noam wasn’t r*ping kids on epstein island because he had a few appointments with him

    • @constantlychangin
      @constantlychangin 10 днів тому

      He wasn't he just teaches at MIT

  • @isabelvaldivieso702
    @isabelvaldivieso702 3 роки тому +1

    Títulos por favor en español

  • @KendraAndTheLaw
    @KendraAndTheLaw 3 роки тому

    Aristotle, Aristotle, was a bugger for the bottle

  • @tombaugh7638
    @tombaugh7638 2 роки тому +4

    Natural law, and the idea of moral, and ethical ideals which make up right and wrong, without influence of theology, I would guess, are spawned from the deep, complex, intangible, albeit, very human conception of empathy. Which it appears that we begin to develop from a very young age. The ability to be able to understand, that pain, both physical and emotional; grievance, loss, concern, and liability caused by (a) person(s) to a third party, determines what is perceived to be the difference between right and wrong either by an individual, a group, or a populace.
    However, I would argue that, whether an individual would intentionally and knowingly break the said natural law of a populace for personal gain or gratification, would depend, not necessarily the individual’s willingness to admit to his abidance to the natural law, but rather the individual’s personal moral code and ability to break the natural law depends much on the individual’s ability to conceive of empathy. Not 100% empathy, although. The remaining factor being fear of reprisals from peers.
    Empathy - understanding that hurting someone, in some way, isn’t nice. We understand emotions, and they give us our moral compasses.
    Kebab and chips.

    • @brothergod6633
      @brothergod6633 2 роки тому +4

      Emotions are a important factor in the structure of Moral Law but the Ability to Reason Logically is the most important. Natural Law as explained by Mark Passio uses the rules of Aristotelian Logic to deduce that we are all important as human beings and we all have different tastes/culture etc. Therefore the only rule we need to follow is adjacent to the Golden Rule…to NOT impose physical harm, duress, or coercion onto anyone. Emotional harm is given a smaller role because of our differences.
      Natural Law is spiritually based but it also stands on the firmest Logic and Truthful ground I’ve ever heard. Noam should check it out, but I doubt he has the moral compass to accept it.

    • @ManalapanHomeForSale
      @ManalapanHomeForSale Рік тому +2

      @@brothergod6633 Noam is a created distraction who is paid to watch the gate.

  • @subhaysinghpooniya4662
    @subhaysinghpooniya4662 3 роки тому

    I hate a group from bottom of my heart and I have concrete region for that and each passing day I hate more and more is it any psychological problem

  • @pillowstone
    @pillowstone Рік тому

    ''In accordance with nature'' seems pretty straight forward to some, it's got F all to do with scientism btw

  • @alexbadash4718
    @alexbadash4718 9 місяців тому

    The greatest yudenrat out there ! Thank you נועם חומסקי for betrayal of your own kind.

  • @Milly5216
    @Milly5216 3 роки тому

    Sounds a lot like plato, your brain contains these concepts of fairness and justice from birth but you remember them over your lifetime

  • @izharfatima5295
    @izharfatima5295 3 роки тому

    It is true to question if there is a universal system of justice, there are two ways,
    1. Aquire the knowledge of your world and see if it works on the basis of definite laws. This humans have achieved when the laws were discovered and humans went outside their planet if those laws were unjust i. e. Changing from time to time then it would have been possible for all to access whenever and wherever they are. So that means there is a universal system of justice but can we figure it out the answer is no. Those laws which are standards for our society to follow we can't figure them out the way we can for the world around us.

    • @justgivemethetruth
      @justgivemethetruth 3 роки тому

      I can't hear Chonsky, but I can't understand you? ;-)

    • @ishmaelforester9825
      @ishmaelforester9825 3 роки тому +1

      The principles of reciprocal morality are not found without so much as within. Just ask yourself with utmost sincerity what you consider a wrong should it be done to you, and positively refrain from doing it to others. And do unto others as you would be done by. This is entirely natural and intuitive. It is conscience which is undeveloped or atrophied in most human beings unfortunately.

    • @ishmaelforester9825
      @ishmaelforester9825 3 роки тому +1

      All effective principles and attitudes of right and wrong action are developed out of that insight and practice. It is ultimately a very heavy discipline for the ego though which is why people scorn or avoid it despite it being in the best interest of everybody. The discipline is not effectively taught to our children by enough of our parents which is why there is an ongoing moral catastrophe in our world.

    • @ishmaelforester9825
      @ishmaelforester9825 3 роки тому +1

      Professor Chomsky is correct that children understand basic morals intuitively, like they beam again the sunlight from their eyes. The fundamental problem is we are miseducating them against their better selves instead of inspiring and encouraging them. Often it is too late when an ego is already calcified and there is nothing you can do to restore or reorientate the original illumination. It is going to take an immense effort to turn things around for us at this point, and it begins with parents and little ones.

    • @brothergod6633
      @brothergod6633 2 роки тому

      Emotions are a important factor in the structure of Moral Law but the Ability to Reason Logically is the most important. Natural Law as explained by Mark Passio uses the rules of Aristotelian Logic to deduce that we are all important as human beings and we all have different tastes/culture etc. Therefore the only rule we need to follow is adjacent to the Golden Rule…to NOT impose physical harm, duress, or coercion onto anyone. Emotional harm is given a smaller role because of our differences.
      Natural Law is spiritually based but it also stands on the firmest Logic and Truthful ground I’ve ever heard. Noam should check it out, but I doubt he has the moral compass to accept it.

  • @brothergod6633
    @brothergod6633 2 роки тому +2

    Emotions are a important factor in the structure of Moral Law but the Ability to Reason Logically is the most important. Natural Law as explained by Mark Passio uses the rules of Aristotelian Logic to deduce that we are all important as human beings and we all have different tastes/culture etc. Therefore the only rule we need to follow is adjacent to the Golden Rule…to NOT impose physical harm, duress, or coercion onto anyone. Emotional harm is given a smaller role because of our differences.
    Natural Law is spiritually based but it also stands on the firmest Logic and Truthful ground I’ve ever heard. Noam should check it out, but I doubt he has the moral compass to accept it. It definitely takes some perseverance.

  • @DevonPhoenix
    @DevonPhoenix Місяць тому

    its just a man telling you reality

  • @ghidfg
    @ghidfg 3 роки тому

    1:20 who did he mention here? Jack Kroll?

  • @looking8030
    @looking8030 2 роки тому +1

    Honestly would love to hear what he has to say about trumps legacy and Biden’s win of the election and how he has dealt with country since trump

  • @edwardhunia6315
    @edwardhunia6315 3 роки тому +2

    You say natural law is impenetrable but is it Noam? The USA constitution reflects aspects of natural law. We all know that human rights also reflect natural law. No, I disagree, we can do more than penetrate it, and precisely define it. We can amend human rights so that it reflects our current understanding of the human *condition* and our present technology.

    • @YoungO-un8ul
      @YoungO-un8ul 3 роки тому

      You can amend it, true. But eventually it will catch back up to you. It's like anything natural that you amend; natural order, natural health, natural breasts ...ect

    • @edwardhunia6315
      @edwardhunia6315 3 роки тому

      @@YoungO-un8ul I think your is overly pessimistic.

    • @brothergod6633
      @brothergod6633 2 роки тому

      Emotions are a important factor in the structure of Moral Law but the Ability to Reason Logically is the most important. Natural Law as explained by Mark Passio uses the rules of Aristotelian Logic to deduce that we are all important as human beings and we all have different tastes/culture etc. Therefore the only rule we need to follow is adjacent to the Golden Rule…to NOT impose physical harm, duress, or coercion onto anyone. Emotional harm is given a smaller role because of our differences.
      Natural Law is spiritually based but it also stands on the firmest Logic and Truthful ground I’ve ever heard. Noam should check it out, but I doubt he has the moral compass to accept it.

  • @herbertsacrament2520
    @herbertsacrament2520 Рік тому

    Natural law is respecting the rights of others. Chomskys concept of fairness could mislead to redistribution.

  • @sarmientoenricomiguelv.562
    @sarmientoenricomiguelv.562 3 роки тому +6

    Damn, he grew a beard. Yet he still has the great mind.

    • @KISEwun
      @KISEwun Рік тому

      What point could you possibly trying to make?

    • @sarmientoenricomiguelv.562
      @sarmientoenricomiguelv.562 Рік тому

      @@KISEwun is there a problem or something?
      I'm complimenting the simple fact that time has caught up to him yet never lost his intellectual sharpness.

    • @KISEwun
      @KISEwun Рік тому

      @@sarmientoenricomiguelv.562 Oh, I was thinking about how young men could grow beards as well.

  • @Yourfavolitelefty
    @Yourfavolitelefty Місяць тому

    What happened to Noam?

  • @nosson77
    @nosson77 3 роки тому +5

    It's interesting that no one is talking about what Chomsky is actually saying. I don't think they understand it. I suspect people think he is saying that we can't be sure our morality is correct.
    But if you listen again you will notice that he says inbuilt universal concept of fairness. Now it sounds a bit odd. If it's inbuilt and universal, why is he saying that we can't know if it's correct? Being inbuilt and universal sound like an argument for it being correct.
    He is comparing natural law to natural epistemology, which is basically the kind of things we can be most certain of. I.e. scientific facts. Or for that matter what we experience in our daily lives. What he is saying is that because we are limited we can not be certain about anything but to the degree that we can be certain about something science and our daily experience we can also be certain about our inbuilt universal fairness or natural law.
    So why is Chomsky saying it in such a cryptic way?
    Well the short answer is that it's a bit of passive aggressive behaviour because he is getting frustrated with the postmodernists.
    He is also avoiding confrontation with the not very smart post modernist because they won't understand what he is saying and at the same time he is giving his message across to people who do understand what he is saying. (And if someone is a postmodernist and does understand what he is saying it's not worth it for them to address it)
    It's almost like a call for help.

    • @smileyface702
      @smileyface702 3 роки тому +2

      To be purposefully cryptic so that the people you disagree with don't understand what you're saying seems intellectually dishonest to me. I hate passive aggressiveness in relationships let alone academic discourse. If he thought he had the stronger argument, why not just state it more clearly?

    • @nosson77
      @nosson77 3 роки тому +1

      @@smileyface702
      Personally I don't judge I'm just explaining what I think is going on.

    • @danialasadolahi
      @danialasadolahi 3 роки тому +1

      Thank you for this reply! I kept scrolling down through the other comments until I found one discussing what Chomsky was actually talking about!

    • @mcrotty
      @mcrotty 3 роки тому

      Is human nature and natural law really mysterious or impenetrable as Chomsky cryptically says, or even non-existent as the postmodernist would assert?
      Natural law states that something is correct/right by it following from its nature. The correctness of a thing outside of our own cognitive and moral structure is identifiable in infants in "fairness," or good proportions of a thing, as obvious as it is for any form to fit its function. For example, your legs are used for walking and its obvious when they are used incorrectly, like walking with your knees; This exists outside of your perception, because its natural law, and its could only be the correct concept if it identifies what works in the natural world. I think you could come up with numerous examples of what works in nature and what doesn't, even if they depend on your limited concepts, not just infants perceiving something is right or wrong for them. Like the concept of a wing or a flipper instead of a leg.
      Aristotle was a teleologist and said that everything in nature is done according to purpose and function (nature does nothing in vain), like logic done for the function of right conclusions, or any type of theatrical performance, or a biological form realizing its form in the world, using its parts by natural law, determined by intellect, or grasping the thing/realizing it's entelechia. If someone says something doesn't have a purpose/end, that's like saying it is non-existent or eternal (unmoved).
      In the human mind, realizing a thing's nature is done as passive intellect (positive law), and in the divine mind (nous), this is done as active intellect (natural law). Imagine a law that didn't have a goal and mind, and would that really be a law? Aristotle said that the active intellect was unmixed/separable with the body, and did not function out of a bodily/corporeal source, being the highest aspect of the soul which separates man from other forms of life. (De Anima III. 4-5).
      "Others, however, think that this active intellect is Aristotle's God, the unmoved mover of Metaphysics Lambda, or another entity outside of the human soul."
      philpapers.org/browse/aristotle-activepassive-intellect
      "Nature does nothing in vain. Therefore, it is imperative for persons to act in accordance with their nature and develop their latent talents, in order to be content and complete."
      ― Aristotle

    • @brothergod6633
      @brothergod6633 2 роки тому

      Emotions are a important factor in the structure of Moral Law but the Ability to Reason Logically is the most important. Natural Law as explained by Mark Passio uses the rules of Aristotelian Logic to deduce that we are all important as human beings and we all have different tastes/culture etc. Therefore the only rule we need to follow is adjacent to the Golden Rule…to NOT impose physical harm, duress, or coercion onto anyone. Emotional harm is given a smaller role because of our differences.
      Natural Law is spiritually based but it also stands on the firmest Logic and Truthful ground I’ve ever heard. Noam should check it out, but I doubt he has the moral compass to accept it. It definitely takes some perseverance.

  • @tomh383
    @tomh383 2 роки тому +4

    Does this host know that he doesn't have to gesture a nod of approval every time Chomsky says something?

    • @omnirath
      @omnirath 17 днів тому

      Yes but with meeting your idol that’s a normal reaction, I think I would do the same without even realizing

  • @imdoc7872
    @imdoc7872 9 місяців тому

    Wow. Ive never knew this. We have the concept of fairness and justice at such an early age. I wonder what the ultra religious would think about that

  • @Solaire_of_Astora13
    @Solaire_of_Astora13 3 роки тому +1

    Damn, he looks so old 😢

  • @GamerLife777
    @GamerLife777 Рік тому

    👍

  • @abdullahbuzut484
    @abdullahbuzut484 3 роки тому

    Türkçe veya Kürtçe altyazı ekleyebilir misiniz :(

    • @sibeltorun4902
      @sibeltorun4902 3 роки тому

      Soru: Doğal Kanuna Karşı Pozitif Kanun. Yasallık kavramını nasıl anlamalıyız? Anarşist bir toplumda doğal hukuk ve pozitif hukuk hakkındaki ayrım hakkında nasıl düşünüyorsunuz?
      Chomsky'nin cevabı: Pozitif hukuku oldukça iyi anlıyoruz. Pozitif hukuk. Onu geliştirir ve inşa ederiz. Doğa kanunu. Bu ne? Bu kafa kariştirici. Tanrı tarafından mı verilir? Hayır, bunu kabul edebileceğimizi sanmıyorum. Doğamızın bize söylediği bu. Doğal hukuk kavramlarımızı inceleyebilirsiniz. Bebeklerin böyle bir konsepti var. Ana bebek araştırmacılarından biri, bunun çok erken yaşta çocukların anladığı ilk şeylerden biri olduğuna işaret etti. "Bu adil değil" kavramı. Bunu hemen biliyorlar. Her çocuk kendini ifade etmeye başlamadan önce bile bunu anlar. Öyleyse, bazı adalet ve adalet kavramları var. Böylece ne olduğunu anlamaya çalışabiliriz. Doğal hukuk kavramına olabildiğince yakın olduğunu düşünüyorum. O zaman şimdi, pozitif hukuk muhtemelen uygulamaya çalışmalıdır. Şimdi bu ciddi bir soruyu gündeme getiriyor. Neden doğal yasanın doğru olduğunu varsayıyoruz? Öyleyse, doğru konsepte sahip olduğumuzu nasıl bileceğiz? Adalet ve adalet kavramı? Evrensel olarak sahip olduğumuz ve yerleşik olanı olabilir. Ama onu doğru yapan nedir? Bu da bizi şu soruna götürür ... Kendi bilişsel ve ahlaki yapılarımızın dışında bir doğruluk kavramı var mı? Ve eğer varsa, o nedir? Matias Mahlmann adında çok iyi bir genç Alman filozof var. Bu konuda çok ilginç çalışmalar yaptı. Temelde aynı soruların epistemolojide de ortaya çıktığını savundu. Öyleyse, en iyi teoriye ulaşmanın yöntemlerini bulursak, tamam deriz, bunlar şimdi doğallaştırılmış epistemoloji olarak adlandırılan, en iyi yöntemler olduklarını söyleyen şeyde kullandığımız yöntemler. Temelde aynı soru. Bu yüzden muhtemelen giremeyeceğimiz şeylerden biri olduğunu düşünüyorum.

    • @abdullahbuzut484
      @abdullahbuzut484 3 роки тому

      @@sibeltorun4902 çok teşekkür ederim 😊😊

  • @rootstriker1618
    @rootstriker1618 Рік тому +5

    Anything that robs someone of there free will is inherently wrong under natural law , and all wrong doings are a form of theft in one way or another . Example killing someone is Robbin them of life, raping someone is robbing them of there choice who to sleep with, hurting someone physically is robbing them of there well-being / health, lien or with holding information from someone is robbing them of the ability to make an informed choice , you can go on an on an on . All wrong doings are a form of theft.

  • @alchemybyangela
    @alchemybyangela Рік тому

    He's a controlled asset of the nwo, friends. He speaks many truths but none will truly ever set you free. Only entrap you further. Know thyself. This is necessity. Once you do, all else will fall in place.

  • @mooncholate
    @mooncholate 2 роки тому +4

    I don't think Chomsky know what natural law is

  • @jesusislukeskywalker4294
    @jesusislukeskywalker4294 3 роки тому +3

    oh the joke about us all suposedly being descended from monkees. it's a shocker. 😂

  • @splinterbyrd
    @splinterbyrd 3 роки тому +1

    Agreed, and his influence is I think vastly greater than politicians and pundits acknowledge.
    I see and hear his influence across the academe and university campuses. Despite or perhaps because of this media never mention his name.

  • @user-ol4kq1rk1k
    @user-ol4kq1rk1k Рік тому +1

    dude stop nodding every second

    • @BEENIECRIS
      @BEENIECRIS Рік тому

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @joshvendryes7945
    @joshvendryes7945 8 місяців тому

    Check out what on Earth is happening for the one and only mark passio

  • @callumbush1
    @callumbush1 Рік тому +2

    You get your payout from big pharma?

  • @chickadeeacres3864
    @chickadeeacres3864 8 місяців тому

    He reminds me of another wise person… Margaret Atwood.

  • @izharfatima5295
    @izharfatima5295 3 роки тому

    Infants don't understand anything naturally , no infant learns to speak even if not in the environment of it. Do ferrell children have any understanding of "it's not fair"?
    Even if so what about "everything is fair in love and war" is it natural?

    • @Panta8472
      @Panta8472 3 роки тому

      'all is fair in love and war' doesn't mean anything, it is just some dumb old timey saying. obviously it's still wrong to murder someone out of love, war crimes still exist. It's like 'it never rains but it pours'. It doesn't mean anything, its isjust something people like to say

    • @jonathand8585
      @jonathand8585 3 роки тому +3

      Much of Chomsky's research in on how children have an innate ability for language. Just because an interaction with the environment is required to bring out an ability doesn't mean it isn't natural. If you raise a child in the dark, it's eyes won't properly develop and it will be blind as an adult, but that doesn't mean the eye is not a natural characteristic. No child's eye will ever develop to see ultraviolet or infrared, no matter how much you expose it to them as infants.

    • @HarryS77
      @HarryS77 3 роки тому +1

      @@jonathand8585 I agree with your point, but some humans can see ultraviolet as a result of congenital defect, damage to or surgical removal of the lens of the eye, a condition called aphakia. The painter Claude Monet is thought to've had it.

  • @ricodog3652
    @ricodog3652 Рік тому

    Do these guys know how to party or what

  • @BalaChennai
    @BalaChennai 2 роки тому

    #CooperativeSocialism is the way to go, worldwide for a moneyless world. How to start small and make it big is the challenge? We need to start with one industry and make it successfull , and then move on to another industry... Just imagine Electric vehicle / Electric bike - Assume the scientists and experts unite and create an EV ecosystem to deliver affordable Electric bike (say for less than $500 dollars that can give a minimum range of 300 kms per 1 hour of charging. This will become a hit worldwide and it can capture 95% market, while the rest of the manufacturers will get 5% market.. Thats how we can eliminate money from the society, by eventually making the ebike available for Free, as all essential products and services will be a basic human right, guaranteed in the World Constitution.. Sounds simple, right ?

  • @thelucksboutique1768
    @thelucksboutique1768 2 роки тому

    This is what we're dealing with today, beyond law: Covid 19 new test for Negative only results...created in Asia...Embossing Negative Covid 19 for those insecure souls that think they're the badass and boss of everyone...you get a negative everytime.

  • @cocainum508
    @cocainum508 2 роки тому

    Can this noam guy speak a bit louder cos I can't hear shit

  • @thelucksboutique1768
    @thelucksboutique1768 2 роки тому

    Its not more natural for me to prefer "well" over "good"....notice mostly those grammar syntax/semantics that are less natural are mostly used...and the natural correct grammar becomes archaic. In other words, grammar can become nongramatically correct and become a pigeon in suburban areas where they perceive their identity to be more natural over and above the natural rules of grammar. This is the reason why California perhaps abandonned English Achievement Testing like the SAT...because they saw it as natural....and thus they're not natural. That being the case, the non natural would naturally not pass the natural test of nature nor natural grammar? So yah, revolt and rebellion will always use grammar and law to attempt to prove they are more natural by turning into paranoid beasts of unnatural grammar. Yes, they failed to meet the standards and failed to get the point but are licensed by the state to practice professionally even at law. The university was not a complete and utter failure, but it did perhaps fail law and jurisprudence. English, Arabec nor Chinese are natural languages and a natural preference is not natural.

  • @Madasin_Paine
    @Madasin_Paine Рік тому

    On Earth
    Action & Consequences
    Gravity
    Birth
    Death
    Copying
    Remix
    Passing
    Being
    Sun
    Moon
    Earth
    Good
    Genesis
    Knowing
    Feeling
    Dreaming
    Doing
    _Ol' Hank KNEW!_
    Can anybody name a well-known old society with exceptional power that does no bad and all Good?
    Any living leading person
    and free?
    There's character
    and there is a public reputation.
    What is and what seems so.
    Hank Williams Said IT best.
    He said IT long ago.
    Unless YOU have made
    NO mistakes in your life,
    be careful of stones
    that you
    throw
    °
    -•-
    Hank Williams Said It Best
    By Guy Clark
    [Verse 1]
    One man's hawk is another man's dove
    One man's hug is another man's shove
    One man's rock is man's sand
    One man's fist is another man's hand
    One man's tool is another man's toy
    One man's grief is another man's joy
    One man's squawk is another man's sing
    One man's crutch is another man's wing
    One man's pride is another man's humble
    One man's step is another man's stumble
    One man's pleasure is another man's pain
    One man's loss is another man's gain
    One man's can is another man's grail
    One man's anchor is another man's sail
    One man's right is another man's wrong
    One man's curse is another man's song
    [Chorus]
    For every father's daughter, for every mother's son
    The only thing the same is that it ain't for anyone
    Hank Williams said it best, he said it a long time ago-
    Unless you have made no mistakes in your life, be careful of stones that you throw
    [Verse 2]
    One man's deuce is another man's ace
    One man's back is another man's face
    One man's reason is another man's rhyme
    One man's dollar is another man's dime
    One man's tree is another man's post
    One man's angel is another man's ghost
    One man's rain is another man's drought
    One man's hope is another man's doubt
    One man's false is another man's fair
    One man's toupee is another man's hair
    One man's hand is another man's stub
    One man's feast is another man's grub
    One man's dread is another man's dream
    One man's sigh is another man's scream
    One man's water is another man's wine
    One man's daughter leave another man crying
    For every father's daughter, for every mother's son
    The only thing the same is that it ain't for anyone
    Hank Williams said it best, he said it a long time ago-
    Unless you have made no mistakes in your life, be careful of stones that you throw.
    [Verse 3]
    One man's famine is another man's feast
    One man's pet is another man's beast
    One man's bat is another man's ball
    One man's art is another man's scrawl
    One man's friend is another man's foe
    One man's Joseph is another man's Joe
    One man's hammer is another man's nail
    One man's freedom is another man's jail
    One man's road is another man's rut
    One man's if is another man's but
    One man's treasure is another man's trash
    One man's landing is another man's crash
    One man's word, another man's lie
    One man's dirt, another man's sky
    One man's skin is another man's color
    One man's killer is another man's brother
    [Chorus]
    For every father's daughter, for every mother's son
    The only thing the same is that it ain't for anyone
    Hank Williams said it best, he said it a long time ago-
    Unless you have made no mistakes in your life, be careful of stones that you throw.
    ☣️⚡💲🌐🕳️💩🏴‍☠️💲⚡☢️
    VS
    🌒🌎😍
    Feel ~ Free‽™
    OR
    Freely loving and living.
    *_NATUR🌏ALLY_*
    WE THE PEOPLE
    MAN
    Naturally
    Making
    Americas
    Nicer
    _NATUR❤ALLY_
    AND
    We spell THAT
    M
    A
    Natur😍∆lly
    No federal taxes on the first 300K inc tx per human
    Reaquire NO LESS THAN HALF defrauded double dealing pelf starting with the wealthiest most culpable families of crooks and liars these past 3 years.
    No killing.
    No lying to the public under oath
    Lying kills
    Be nice.
    Don't make a mess for others or your health.
    For Goodness Sake.
    Naturally.
    Bring oneself together like a splash of cream and black coffee.
    1+1 is 1 thousand fold
    Synergy.
    Genesis.
    G is NOT Genocidal
    OGs KNOW BEST

  • @moderneurope
    @moderneurope Рік тому

    In the article "The politics of genocide: Rwanda & DR Congo" by Martin Shaw, the author criticizes a revisionist reading of the Rwandan genocide of 1994 that has been endorsed by Noam Chomsky. Shaw argues that this revisionist interpretation demonstrates the moral blindness of the "denialist left." Shaw contends that Chomsky and other left-wing intellectuals who support this revisionist view downplay the severity and scale of the Rwandan genocide. They argue that the responsibility for the genocide is not solely on the Hutu-led government of Rwanda at the time but also on the Tutsi-led Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) and Western powers. According to Shaw, this perspective minimizes the deliberate, systematic extermination of Tutsis and moderate Hutus and shifts the blame away from the primary perpetrators.
    Shaw asserts that this revisionist approach is morally problematic and reflects a broader issue within the left-wing intellectual community, which he labels the "denialist left." This group, Shaw argues, is more concerned with critiquing Western foreign policy and the mainstream media's portrayal of conflicts than with acknowledging and condemning the atrocities committed in genocides like the one in Rwanda. In doing so, Shaw believes that the denialist left is failing to take a morally responsible stance on these critical issues.

  • @tommyodonovan3883
    @tommyodonovan3883 3 роки тому +2

    Will he never die?

    • @davegreene8588
      @davegreene8588 3 роки тому +5

      He'll hopefully live, in good health, for much longer!

  • @thelucksboutique1768
    @thelucksboutique1768 2 роки тому

    I think Natural Learning is quite disfunctional and unnatural. In other words, once we're born there is nothing natural about the learning process, its actually antisocial after breaking the womb bond. From there on, we'd like to call it bonding since there's definitely a distance and one must reconnect. So I do think language learning is far from natural while I do think it may be innate but that's a different theory Nature vs Nurture...and nature is not natural its far from natural and in fact its antisocial, so we then talk about combing and polishing and perfecting as we grow and become older. Yes, we are a natural being in a natural world but the rules of grammar are never natural hence the science of motherese and cross comparisons between languages etc and even sign language. Some, think to provide a head start with speech if they skip the adult talking for the first year of life and then instead teach sign language, while some devote their lifetime to paren'these.

  • @KennethStricklandAKAKenster
    @KennethStricklandAKAKenster 2 роки тому

    Perdre Noam serait une énorme perte pour tout le monde, et moi

  • @matjazmazi8405
    @matjazmazi8405 3 роки тому

    That's not Fair... also not legal ... ; yes, it happens very often in Republika Slovenia's legal courts "v imenu ljudstva" ( : legal fraudes, fascistoides trampings of human rights such as discriminations of fisical invalides in legal procedures , etc. ) - sic !... P.S.: ne obvladam tako zelo dobro angleškega jezika kakor slovenski jezik, zato bom nadaljeval v slovenščini ... Šele danes sem pogledal par videov Noam-a Chomsky-a in sem resnično prijetno presenečen ... popreje sem sicer vedel, da je svetovno znan intelektualec, publicist, ..., nisem pa vedel, da je Anarhist - in ravno zato sem si sedaj ogledal par njegovih videov in se tudi naročil na ta njegov youtube kanal ... Doslej namreč nisem občutil kakšnega večjega zanimanja, da bi se bil pobliže seznanil z njegovimi mislimi in predavanji ... še posebno zato ne, ker sem pred parimi leti izvedel, da je prejel častni doktorat Univerze v Ljubljani ... kajti vse, dobesedno vse, kar je v zvezi s to "mojo" državo RS ( Republiko Slovenijo ) in njenimi državnimi ter paradržavnimi institucijami, me organsko odbija ... ... hočem reči: če bi gospod prof. Noam Chomsky vedel kaj več o dotični POLICIJSKI, KRIVOSODNI ( glej pomenke: pravosodje - krivosodje v RS ) in FAŠISTIČNI ( !! ) državi Republiki Sloveniji ( fonetično pravilno izgovorljivo: Republiki ZLOveniji ), potem verjamem oziroma sem prepričan, da bi zavrnil vsakršno odlikovanje s strani te in pa takšne "države", kjer se SISTEMSKO in SISTEMATIČNO ter NEDOTAKLJIVO teptajo človekove pravice posameznikov, ki so tako in/ali drugače padli v nemilost "demokratičnih" oblastnikov ali njihovih skorumpiranih prijateljev ( oligarhov, univ. "baronov", itd., ipd. .. ) ali se jim kakorkoli zamerili, ker so iz njihove strani zahtevali korektnost in poštenost !... Naj na tem mestu tukaj zelo na kratko opišem le svoj lastni, osebni primer žvižgača ( 'whistleblower'-ja ) iz RS zdravstva ... zaposlen sem bil kot zdravnik ( Matjaž Mazi,dr.med. ) v RS zdravstvu - in tukaj sem v letih 1993 in 1994 večkrat opozarjal na nepravilnosti, na strokovne medicinske napake, tudi na kraje denarja zavarovancev-pacientov s strani zdravstvene zavarovalnice, in tako dalje ... potem pa, sem zaradi operacije na kolenu postal jatrogeni invalid, nesposoben za sedeče delo zaradi obsežne globoke venske tromboze ( to je potem potrdilo tudi sodno izvedensko mnenje Medicinske fakultete iz Ljubljane ) ... in na podlagi tega sodnega izvedenskega mnenja sem potem pravnomočno na Delovnem sodišču RS tudi zmagal ( leta 2006 ) in je bila tako nezakonita in mobbingaška ( KRIMINALNA !! ) odločba mojega fašistoidnega direktorja iz ZD Koper o prenehanju mojega delovnega razmerja ( iz leta 1996 ) zaradi bolezni tudi razveljavljena. Ker pa mi je bil tako po desetih letih ( 1996 - 2006 ) vključno z zakonskimi zamudnimi obrestmi delodajalec ( poleg ponovne zakonite vzpostavitve delovnega razmerja !... ) dolžan še ogromno denarja, so sodniški kriminalci ( !! ) na Vrhovnem sodišču RS leta 2007 priskočili na pomoč delodajalcu, to pravnomočno sodbo razveljavili ( berite: ZGOLJUFALI !!! ) ter spremenili tako, da je mobbingaški delodajalec postal pravno-formalno ( berite: fravdulentno !!! ) nedolžen in diskulpiran, kriv pa po njihovih kriminalnih zapisanih besedah kar jaz, ker se kljubtemu, da sem bil ( medicinsko sodnoizvedensko dokazano !!... ) bolan in za delo nesposoben, v "kritičnih dneh" nisem javil na delo !... Zahteval sem revizijo, popravo krivic, vrnitev pokradenega mi denarja vsled sodniških ( PREVERLJIVIH in DOKAZLJIVIH !!! ) goljufij ter sankcioniranje vseh sodniških kriminalcev iz Vrhovnega sodišča RS, ki so bili vpleteni v to krivosodno delovnopravno GOLJUFIJO v mojo škodo - in zaradi tega potem dne 16.05.2017 pričel tudi z javno ter uradno ( na Gregorčičevo 20 v Ljubljani z uradnim TELEKOM telegramom !... ) napovedano gladovno stavko. V svoji privat hiši in v svoji lastni spalnici !!... Dne 26.05.2017 pa je fašistična policija Republike Slovenija razbila vhodna vrata v moji hiši, me izvlekla iz postelje, kjer sem ( 11 dni !... ) gladovno stavkal, me zabila z glavo ob zid, mi zvila roke na hrbtu ( še enkrat: na mojem lastnem domu in v mojih privatnih prostorih, v gatah in kanotijeri - torej v spodnjem perilu, direkt iz postelje in na moji privatni posesti v RS !!..... ) in me vklenila ( dva fašistična "robocoopa" !!... ) v policijsko-vojaške ZATEGLJIVE LISICE ( zaradi česar sem imel potem še dva tedna vidne podpludbe in pa odrgnine na zapestjih !... "HALLELUJAH" !..... : ( 'MESSAGE IN THE BOTTLE'.press ) Matjaž Mazi,dr.med.

    • @matjazmazi8405
      @matjazmazi8405 3 роки тому

      P.S.: imobiliziranega ( z PROTIPRAVNO odvzeto svobodo, torej !!... ) ter z ranami na zapestjih pa so me takoj zatem ( v kontekstu dotične fašistične policijske ter oblastniške protipravne akcije ) transportirali v PBI ( psihiatrična bolnišnica !!... ) in kjer so me izpustili šele zatem, ko sem jim s fotokopijami mojih telegramov na Gregorčičevo 20 Ljubljana ( katere je tjakaj na moje zaprosilo in naročilo prinesel moj sin, ki živi v sosednji občini ) dokončno in pa neizpodbitno dokazal, da sem dejansko gladovno stavkal iz konkretnega ter realnega ( socialnega !!... ) razloga in ne pa zavračal hrane iz kakšnega psihičnega, depresivnega ali psihiatričnega motiva, torej zaradi kakšnega psihiatričnega obolenja ( s kakršnim "izgovorom", "napotno diagnozo", ... pa so me fašistični hlapci na psihiatrijo dejansko tudi deportirali !!... ) Skratka: fašistični oblastniki v Republiki Sloveniji so si privoščili celo to, da so na zaprti oddelek psihiatrične bolnišnice "zlifrali" psihično povsem normalnega človeka - njim pa očitno zelo nevarnega zdravnika ( !! ), ki so ga tako želeli degradirati ter difamirati, na vsak način v javnosti odvzeti verodostojnost. ( One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest / Michel Foucault.press )

  • @justiceforall6135
    @justiceforall6135 3 роки тому +2

    Godlessness=lawlessness=anachy=war

    • @carterdotn3083
      @carterdotn3083 3 роки тому +3

      Smooth brain

    • @omnirath
      @omnirath 17 днів тому

      God is often the best justification for war from looking at the last 3000 years

  • @RapidBlindfolds
    @RapidBlindfolds 3 роки тому +4

    how do people listen to chomsky clips like this and actually understand what he's saying, deadass 😐 i can only hear 30% of what he's saying

  • @PhillyStackz
    @PhillyStackz Рік тому +2

    Anyone interested in natural law look up Mark Passio natural law seminar.

  • @duality5503
    @duality5503 3 роки тому +1

    Noam the sage has an impressive book collection there.

  • @kevinmcmanus6466
    @kevinmcmanus6466 Рік тому +1

    I love Noam but this said a whole lot of nothing.

  • @SalimShaikh-xc8gw
    @SalimShaikh-xc8gw 3 роки тому +1

    Respected Sir, I am inviting you to know Islam. It will explain the natural law. How does a child knows what is right and what is wrong. The criteria of right and wrong is planted by the Creator of everything that we know exists and that we don’t know exists. ‘Read’ .

    • @rootstriker1618
      @rootstriker1618 Рік тому

      Anything that violates another persons free will is inherently wrong, and all forms of wrong doing are a form of theft in one way or another .

  • @deborahmirabel6131
    @deborahmirabel6131 3 роки тому +2

    Noam Chomsky, While there's time, could you please, please train several young people to follow in your footsteps and carry on your work for many years to come?

  • @opokuandrew5716
    @opokuandrew5716 3 роки тому

    He will be realised and celebrated in the next generations. Such people are not taken seriously in their times. He forever remains my god.

  • @ThomasBoyd-tx1yt
    @ThomasBoyd-tx1yt 3 місяці тому

    When independent England London Great Britain 1910 Thomas got everything politically economicallyThomas England London Britain. Italy your nation Thomas. Barqi Italy yes I am Italian nurse. Italy make deal 1945 yes with USA.

  • @BadWolf-
    @BadWolf- 2 роки тому

    Would the practice of the concept of respect for the autonomy of the individual, the community and even the country ruled by the people not be the truest definition of law?

    • @vincentwroblewski3805
      @vincentwroblewski3805 2 роки тому

      No , what you have stated has NOTHING to do with law. Laws are causalities. Cause and effect A causes D. A, B. C causes D. Laws are amoral . Biology is amoral. Chemistry is amoral. Physics is amoral . Economics is amoral