Friedrich Nietzsche's Life and Philosophy

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  • Опубліковано 10 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 373

  • @ForksandFreaks
    @ForksandFreaks 3 роки тому +94

    For any wondering: the Greek word at 30:30 is σωφροσύνη (“sophrosyne”); the word was written on the board at the lecture, but that can’t be seen in the video, so I felt it nice to provide it here.

  • @bruceboome
    @bruceboome 8 років тому +54

    To me this lecture is like the holy grail for any teacher, in that it leads one to want to dig deeper into the subject. It could have been insanely boring, but I listened for the whole 71 minutes, and feel that I have a basic overview of Nietzsche's philosophy. Humour (sorry, English spelling....... damn, here I am with false humility ;-) ) is a great way to stimulate and maintain interest. Great lecture, loved it.

  • @Destructerator
    @Destructerator 10 років тому +149

    This professor sounds like a bro. I cannot stress the importance of this enough. At least for me, it provides a human element to my classes. I don't feel like I'm being extruded through the mold of a degree.

    • @NRSKristensen
      @NRSKristensen 3 роки тому

      Ethos?

    • @doitlive1279
      @doitlive1279 Рік тому +1

      A lot of babies like “omg if my teachers were bros I woulda been sumthin in life”

    • @ItsCronk
      @ItsCronk Рік тому +2

      @@doitlive1279 What?

    • @doitlive1279
      @doitlive1279 Рік тому

      @@ItsCronk idk

    • @Herry-y7e
      @Herry-y7e Рік тому

      Very true 👍

  • @topdog5252
    @topdog5252 Рік тому +2

    What a splended lecture! I am returning to relisten, again.

  • @lukedavis6711
    @lukedavis6711 2 роки тому +15

    This is the best lecture on Nietzsche ever. I'm 36 now and have been reading and studying him since I was 18.

    • @iforget6940
      @iforget6940 Рік тому

      How's your life going? I'm wondering if I should study him some more because I feel like I killed the dionesian side in me

    • @lukedavis6711
      @lukedavis6711 Рік тому +1

      @@iforget6940 not great lol. Def suggest studying Nietzsche but youre def not going to become more of a fun party bro doing it if thats your purpose

    • @iforget6940
      @iforget6940 Рік тому

      @lukedavis6711 no not the party type, I just live inside my mind to much, I want less fear more stepping into it and jumping off of cliffs and shit and like commanding my life instead of living in my house questioning the meaning of everything, don't get me wrong I like my mind at times and thinking of these things, I just want to more life affirming you know, because if I live in my house I will stay the last man I don't want to be the last man as that's who identify with the most currently.
      Also, Christian values I imbody it I don't like being that meek person amd im way to perfectionistic.
      Sorry, must be a lot to take in for my rant.

    • @iforget6940
      @iforget6940 Рік тому

      @lukedavis6711 but why is it not great what was your experience

    • @TylerDonald-b2x
      @TylerDonald-b2x Місяць тому

      Are you a slow reader or something? I reviewed Nietzsche after having read most of
      His books almost a decade ago . Took about a week to go through all his important ideas. There’s other philosophers you know. You would be better off.

  • @joaorodrigues5708
    @joaorodrigues5708 8 років тому +34

    I always like to start a lecture and then be blessed with the thought
    '''This guy seems to like what he's talking about, perhaps I have
    something to learn from him''' and now it has become so rare in college, but
    not with Cecil. Thank you

  • @algernondammassa8675
    @algernondammassa8675 9 років тому +110

    For what it's worth, in response to some of the discussion here, I think laughter during a lecture on Nietzsche is perfectly appropriate. The lecture did not seem to veer into clownish territory, but damn it, Nietzsche has an undeniably funny side.

    • @mementocatharsis9372
      @mementocatharsis9372 5 років тому +2

      I know! Just look at that molestach

    • @ishmaelforester9825
      @ishmaelforester9825 2 роки тому +2

      The whole of Zarathustra is darkly hilarious. In fact he insists Zarathustra's main characteristic or mode is laughter. Zarathustra is a dancer and in part a comedian. This is glorious and disturb ing at the same time. Tradition called Democritus (the hilarity is human folly) the laughing philosopher but if there ever really was one it was Nietzsche.

    • @cheri238
      @cheri238 11 місяців тому

      😊😂

    • @TylerDonald-b2x
      @TylerDonald-b2x Місяць тому

      @@ishmaelforester9825wrong. Nietzsche is funny because he’s a cringe edge lord .

  • @santacruz01pca
    @santacruz01pca 11 років тому +46

    What a fantastically exciting, gratifying, amusing, empowering lecture -- thanks so much, Dr Cecil!!!!

  • @OmarDelawar
    @OmarDelawar 4 роки тому +8

    So glad I found this channel. Dr. Wesley is one of those professors every student wishes he/she had and that applause at the end? How many professor's get applause at the end of their lecture? Not very many! Thoroughly enjoyed this lecture, I have "Thus Spoke Zarathustra" on my to-read list already! Thank you, Dr. Wesley!

  • @alexbaker9578
    @alexbaker9578 6 місяців тому +1

    I discovered this many years ago. Still return every so often. An amazing introduction.

  • @lexicongrrrl
    @lexicongrrrl 10 років тому +30

    Enjoyed this mainly because this professor delivered it in a simple yet informative manner. Clear understanding of the kind of world Nietzsche came into and how it may have formed him. Great perspective to consider.

  • @dinospumoni663
    @dinospumoni663 6 років тому +8

    Starting with your oldest lecture and working through them all. So much content I'm deeply interested in. Thanks for offering it all for free. The great humor and casualness of explanation really keeps it engaging.
    If anyone has done something similar, would appreciate any advice as to working through them all, what order to view them, etc.

  • @achimfischbach
    @achimfischbach 8 років тому +6

    Perhaps the best lecture on Nietzsche I have ever heard.

  • @Privacy-LOST
    @Privacy-LOST 6 років тому +2

    I am Baffled. The audio quality almost made me skip this lecture but after reading the comments I decided to give it a go and I had the chance to enjoy one of Nietzsche's most enjoyable and enthusiastic lectures ever made. Thank you so much for this. Did put many thinks into perspective. And made me wanna re-read some of his books

  • @nathonas
    @nathonas 9 років тому +97

    What a great lecture

    • @VidzMisc
      @VidzMisc 8 років тому +4

      yupppp

    • @HistoryChannel1776
      @HistoryChannel1776 6 років тому +1

      nathonas It sucked.

    • @simpleman7203
      @simpleman7203 4 роки тому

      @@HistoryChannel1776 what makes you think so?

    • @actualideas8078
      @actualideas8078 4 роки тому

      Simple Guy I just started the video, but I’ve found that most philosophy lectures are BS and we can’t even trust the writings, especially the ones that have been translated

    • @actualideas8078
      @actualideas8078 4 роки тому

      Simple Guy I mean, 2 minutes in and the guy bashes Napoleon really hard. I’m pretty sure Napoleon was trying to stop international bankers like Nathan Rothschild and lost... but then again he might have been in on it with them. But I heard that although he was a usurper, he also spent government money honestly, not with debt financing. This professor probably wont mention anything about that

  • @Havre_Chithra
    @Havre_Chithra 8 років тому +2

    I've been listening to this lecture repeatedly over the past few years. I finally got to write a paper on moral philosophy where this talk served me very well for understanding Hobbesian Contractarianism.
    Time to listen to it again before bed.
    Cheers!

    • @RenatusChristoph
      @RenatusChristoph 8 років тому

      +Ryan G Care to share it with me? I'd like to read it...

    • @gsch1818
      @gsch1818 5 років тому

      ive been listening to this lecture at least once a week. There is just something in the way he tells the story that is so uplifting

  • @illuuzian2212
    @illuuzian2212 9 років тому +3

    Thank you for sharing your lectures via youtube! I love your sense of humor and the format in which you present. Keep up the excellent work.

  • @billysaz1
    @billysaz1 7 років тому +1

    We also pay people to think for us... and many many other things. Ultimately, we, as individuals have to pick our battles, but we, as individuals, MUST engage life's struggles, lest we become cows in a pen.
    I love it! Thank you for downloading this. Battle on mien brethren.

  • @charbam9506
    @charbam9506 4 роки тому +2

    Truly brilliant, insightful and delivered with such passion and humor. You did Nietzsche a great service!

  • @enriquecaballero4688
    @enriquecaballero4688 9 років тому +17

    While I agreed with the lecturer in regards to Thus Spoke Zarathustra being the most important Nietzsche book to read, it is a VERY difficult book to read (with the exception of the prologue, which narrates as a simple story...) because it is incredibly poetic with tons of aphorisms. Those that are just getting into Nietzsche, without a solid understanding of what Nietzsche is all about, will have a tough time reading it. It is a book "for all and none" as Nietzsche points out, and it's quite easy to belong to the "none." I suggest reading Twilight of the Idols, at least, before embarking on Zarathustra's journey.

    • @algernondammassa8675
      @algernondammassa8675 9 років тому +1

      +Enrique Caballero I concur.This is not the book with which a beginner should start.

    • @JuliaHelen777
      @JuliaHelen777 6 років тому

      I'm reading & hearing it from a space of being my own Zarathustra.
      As Nietzsche wrote it from a space of its own Zarathustra. And is just a comprehensible space wherefrom to understand eachother.
      In one easy way, one can say:
      I've met Nietzsche at a Zarathustra Place. 😊

    • @brreezy421
      @brreezy421 4 місяці тому

      Fo sho. I got big into nietzche a few years ago but tried to start with Zarathustra and it was not jiving at all. Read a few of the others and came back and it clicked much better

    • @blondequijote
      @blondequijote 4 місяці тому

      Is there any better beginner book / primer than Beyond Good and Evil? That one at least keeps it short and simple by comparison to most of his work.

  • @cheri238
    @cheri238 Рік тому +1

    Twice I have listened to this about Nietzsche now and I have listened to others, and this exactly how I got him when reading Nietzsche for years is why I found humor in Nietzsche.
    And Professor Wess you are brilliant as a few others, as also with my papa and my younger brother. ❤️
    Get off the cross, we need the wood.
    Simple !!!
    You are correct on all points about Nietzsche. Thank you!!!!
    Bravo 👏 "Good luck with your life in the wilderness." Mmm
    Nietzsche's own sister? What a shame.

    • @TylerDonald-b2x
      @TylerDonald-b2x Місяць тому

      It took years for you to read Nietzsche? Are you aggressively low iq

  • @LightningBearer12
    @LightningBearer12 10 років тому +6

    This is a phenomenal - clear, comprehensive - introduction to Nietzsche.

  • @seanericanderson3666
    @seanericanderson3666 6 років тому +2

    Wes Cecil is a good philosopher!!!

  • @spencerwinston4334
    @spencerwinston4334 2 роки тому +2

    In your enlightening Nietzsche WTP video, you make effective use of the adaptive root system metaphor of a tree as it grows stronger and increases its expanse confronting underground obstacles. Descriptive, vivid, and organic are a perfect use of this metaphor. The quote "...that which does not destroy you makes you stronger.. " always conveys a hard, militaristic tone to Nietzsche which is certainly warranted for this elite Navy Seal esque, Spartan warrior philosopher that fought his way to the top with front line focus and OODA loop strikes against the cream puff "Marxist" collectivism academics to find a home at the Olympian rung next to Plato, Schopenhauer, and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Your root metaphor highlights the profound Emersonian influence of natural organic imagery that left a sublime impression on Nietzsche.
    Thank you for sharing your novel insights on this pioneer German philosopher leading us all away from the modern philosophic T.S. Eliot described wasteland. A wasteland terrain full of vapid, game show host like hollow men mixed in with the John Wick like assassins in the philosophy departments of the university tenure system where the truth goes to die as hollow men administrators pander to the lowest common denominator in the collective seal-like applause of virtue signaling and Orwellian levels of political correctness that have the universities and corporations fearing their own shadow.
    Nietzsche offers a way out of this wasteland to the leading edge with the best view of the vast horizons, blissful sunsets, and the pure austere air of the Swiss Alps. Up in the Alps where Nietzsche is found with his groundbreaking, paradigm-shifting writings, you also can experience the invigorating sensation of elite-level Navy Seal alpine mountain fighting. The mountain combat though is against Platonic shadows comprised of noisy self-confused ignorance, suffering, angst and forced fed propaganda faced in the shadows of our own mind that we all encounter on our own unique path and quest, propelled on by the relentless force of the will to power and illuminated by the brilliance of Nietzsche's light and profound truth instincts. As we take the philosophic Navy Seal hard path in our own internal root expansion, we will all find why this German savant philosopher, the heroic but "lonely" wanderer and his shadow, is fulfilling his "prophecy" in his writings reflective of the Rock of Ages prophets, to be as he foretold in these dark matrix times, "...the philosopher for the day after tomorrow."

  • @mayaugustin1457
    @mayaugustin1457 3 роки тому

    Professors mastery in art of teaching, educating is the gift which is grounded in so many aspects which uniquely are his. In regard to the word (sorfaraz/ sarfaraz) if I herd it correctly, I know this word in Farsy/ persian’s language. This word meaning, the act of achieving, accomplishing, succeeding, is followed with being SARFARAZ / SORFARAZ.

  • @KarlW1979
    @KarlW1979 8 років тому +1

    I can't express enough how much I am enjoying your lectures. It is also neat that you went to Fresno State. I am from Visalia.

  • @josephusrivero3533
    @josephusrivero3533 7 років тому

    This guy is really good at explaining difficult ideas. His lecture series is great

  • @ibrahimelhaddad7272
    @ibrahimelhaddad7272 10 років тому +3

    Great lecture and I appreciate you uploading it , Thank you.

  • @volantera
    @volantera 6 років тому +3

    Gotta love the herdly applause at the end.

  • @TheDAT573
    @TheDAT573 11 років тому +11

    Incredible that Nietzsche accurately predicted so many things so far removed
    from his world.

    • @vaNludO
      @vaNludO 10 років тому +2

      it's not hard to predict terribel things, they allways happen and get worse;-)

    • @Thedjsmokeybear
      @Thedjsmokeybear 10 років тому

      It makes you think If his time was any different than now and if we have changed

  • @selvmordspilot
    @selvmordspilot 10 років тому +11

    I enjoyed this lecture. But then again.. i enjoy everything of and about nietzsche.

  • @cheri238
    @cheri238 11 місяців тому +1

    Professor Wes Cecil. I love your lectures. Laughter is the best medicine in philosophy, history, and sciences.
    Walter Kaufman's book, "The Portable Nietzsche," I love the best. That collection of Nietzsche's body of writings is beyond words.
    Has anyone been to the Mardi Gras in New Orleans?
    I have many times. Lol 😊

  • @amesames1102
    @amesames1102 4 роки тому +1

    Ideas to reflect upon
    1.(Kant) There are no absolutes, in ideals/religions( can't be proven of disproved?) or reason (human capacity to perceive reality is physiologically proven to be skewed). Ultimate truth, if it exists, is inaccessible to us.
    2.Dionysus/Mankind as organic creatures.We must be set free. To feel, to observe, to contemplate, to express. To just be as we are ( hopefully after some reflection)
    How can you create great works (of art) if half of you is dead?
    3.Suffering and other states we try to deny are simply human - they should not be denied simply because of negative connotations. The only way out is through- we must process our internal states rather than live as false selves.
    4.Our sense of morality has history and is not absolute. To have blind faith could lead and has already led to great and unnecessary loss.
    -Slave Mentality/Coping Mechanism
    -Question your Morality and its history. Why should you believe in it?
    5.Sufrasnia?? ( to be edited )
    The quality of self-awareness. To be without would be the greatest sin one could commit to himself and his community.
    6.You have to liberate yourself.There is no morality that can save you. You have to suffer etc etc. There are no rules(poisonous to the mind- claiming to have an answer- the denial of ambiguity for the sake of relief? )
    You are in the wilderness. Good luck and deal with it.
    7.Aphoristic style- to avoild giving rules or steps.
    8.Agon ( greeks )
    Life is a struggle. Struggling made you whole. If you arn't suffering/trying/fight , you arn't living.
    Everybody competed their whole lives. Even if they knew loss was certain, they still willfully struggled.
    Accept that life is a struggle. We have to decide what we want to measure ourselves by/challenge our capacity.
    If you never face those challenges, you are simple left dim in a dim world. ( Herd people. Lost potential )
    9.thus spoke Zarathustra( spelling?)
    10. Slow poison of the mind and soul
    Prevents great art
    Become immune to true sympathy for another human being ( just an abstract - label as evil - no rules/ license to abuse)
    11. Judging the content of the human soul. Unless you are God, you cannot judge the quality of someone's character. ( means to power )
    12. Recommendations
    Aphorisms
    Human all to human
    Genealogy of morality( structured )
    Thus spoke Zarathustra
    Summary 01:06:00

  • @williamkoscielniak820
    @williamkoscielniak820 5 років тому +3

    Holy shit this is amazing! This is EXACTLY what I need to hear at this moment. I've been into Nietzsche for a very, very long time but what this professor is saying is just brilliant.

    • @koroglurustem1722
      @koroglurustem1722 3 роки тому

      Do you find Nietches views on Islam interesting ? Islam acknowledges animalistic sides (sex, eating, fighting, and so on) of human beings and puts them into their appropriate contexts. Islam combines justice and mercy beautifully, doesn't always promote turn the other cheek, except by your own choice. And when it comes to inheritance of the world, it says that the world will be inherited by the righteous people. The Arabic term is "saleeh" which means righteous, virtuous, constructive as opposed to destructive and corruptive.

  • @markhammond239
    @markhammond239 9 років тому +8

    Thanks so much, Dr. Cecil. I love that your lecture dispels some of the myths around this great thinker.

  • @aphraband
    @aphraband 8 років тому +19

    Thank you for uploading this! Such a passionate lecture!

    • @mecapoonslayer4245
      @mecapoonslayer4245 8 років тому +1

      Rebecca Way agreed this video was fucking beautiful.

  • @memecathar1263
    @memecathar1263 Рік тому +2

    Nietzsche fills me with joy. So neat how, if you try, you can see his ideas embedded in Jung ‘s work constantly. Jung’s work on the concept of the shadow and the first chapter of Beyond Good and Evil are so related it’s worth reading both at once.

    • @TylerDonald-b2x
      @TylerDonald-b2x Місяць тому

      They weren’t Nietzsche ideas. A lot of his ideas are references to the history of philosophy dum****s

  • @Existentialist-earthling52
    @Existentialist-earthling52 Рік тому +2

    Nietzsche is undeniably one the most unique thinkers ever. His prose puts motivational speakers to shame!

  • @villevanttinen908
    @villevanttinen908 3 роки тому +1

    The man himself, Nietzsche, I think, never received such a standing ovation, but it´s always that way, later coming people collects fruits, and pioneers who have pave the road for others, they die insane, without comfort and in deep pain...good lecture though.

    • @TylerDonald-b2x
      @TylerDonald-b2x Місяць тому +2

      Nietzsche got plenty of attention and respect while alive

    • @villevanttinen908
      @villevanttinen908 Місяць тому

      @TylerDonald-b2x
      Not as a philosopher.

    • @TylerDonald-b2x
      @TylerDonald-b2x Місяць тому +1

      @@villevanttinen908 he died before he was 40. He didn’t start pursuing philosophy until he was 25. Before he died he was getting recognized worldwide. Very common for academic work to take years to find fame. He obviously knew it was due to him just didn’t live long enough.

    • @villevanttinen908
      @villevanttinen908 Місяць тому

      @@TylerDonald-b2x
      He died at the age of 55.

  • @publicme
    @publicme 11 років тому +1

    Excellent lecture. I finally have a bit of a grasp on Nietzsche. Thanks!

  • @zibomaru
    @zibomaru 11 років тому +1

    great lecture .we need plenty more .

  • @lebenstraum666
    @lebenstraum666 10 років тому +9

    Zarathustra is not as Cecil claims in Three Parts (other than the Preface). There is an excellent Fourth Part which explains Nietzsche's stance on genuine science as opposed to the sickness of modern science. That Nietzsche is a philosopher only for 'arty types' is a grave popular error which Cecil does not address.

  • @sondaika12
    @sondaika12 4 роки тому

    Thank you very much for sharing professor Cecil. Wish you all the best.

  • @davidr4107
    @davidr4107 8 років тому +1

    Thank you for sharing the knowledge!

  • @nerdwolf5281
    @nerdwolf5281 8 років тому +1

    An insightful lecture. Thank you for posting.

  • @longcastle4863
    @longcastle4863 2 роки тому

    Nietzsche, Hume and Berkeley. The three philosophers I read for fun. But especially Nietzsche. The most brilliant entertaining thought provoking writer in all of philosophy. Imo.

  • @3p1d3m1crage
    @3p1d3m1crage 10 років тому +2

    Wonderful lecture, thoroughly enjoyed (: Thank you!

  • @jorgesantoine24
    @jorgesantoine24 8 років тому +1

    Thanks for posting - very interesting lecture

  • @davidmcguire4706
    @davidmcguire4706 5 років тому

    I wrote a long winded response and edited it. He speaks well and truly.

  • @arkantika3927
    @arkantika3927 10 років тому +2

    awesome lecture!!! amazing!

  • @googoo6077
    @googoo6077 8 років тому +1

    it's good to read about Philosophers.

  • @koekons
    @koekons 11 років тому

    Nietzsche seems like cool guy. kudos to the speaker. He's fun to listen to.

  • @sophitran
    @sophitran 3 роки тому

    You know it’s going to be another EPIC Philosophical breakdown!
    When at 19 minutes Dr. W.C. Uses “ going to raves” as a reference point to describe Nietzsche’s perspective of the Dionysius follower fan base.

  • @sutter-cane777
    @sutter-cane777 9 років тому +1

    Great lecture. Thankyou!

  • @monkeydotbizness
    @monkeydotbizness 5 років тому +1

    Powerful lecture
    Hats off

  • @arsenalreign
    @arsenalreign 3 роки тому

    Great lecture. Wish I was there! Found a book by Helen North called Sophrosyne..

  • @wiszaraskabir5814
    @wiszaraskabir5814 2 роки тому

    I can't express how much happy I am to have found this amazing professor, if I have my way I will buy you everything you need jus to have you around me everyday speak about these great insane consciousness, please speak on Buddha, George Gudjeff ,I think that last name is wrongly spell but he is a Russian mystic who taught about the fourth dimension, talk to us about D.H Lawrence, Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, Immanuel Kant, Dionysus and Pythagoras.
    Thanks you professor

  • @yasha12isreal
    @yasha12isreal 8 років тому +3

    Wes is so good at this, it's like I'm reading every book he summarizes smh. 👍 great job!

  • @Havre_Chithra
    @Havre_Chithra 6 років тому +1

    I think I've been listening to this for 5 years.

  • @LilItaly
    @LilItaly 8 років тому +5

    This guys living what he teaches; amazing

  • @GhadeerBaqer
    @GhadeerBaqer 2 роки тому

    Loved it! THANK YOU

  • @lejluu
    @lejluu 11 років тому

    Thanks for posting these great lectures :)

  • @thehoxx
    @thehoxx 11 років тому

    thanks for uploading. I really enjoyed listening to it.

  • @evafierro2010
    @evafierro2010 10 років тому +7

    This is a great lecture. :)

  • @crosstolerance
    @crosstolerance 9 років тому

    Thanks for this lecture, very entertaining!

  • @MisterCheekymonkee
    @MisterCheekymonkee 11 років тому

    "When we wish to correct with advantage and to show another that he errs, we must notice from what side he views the matter, for on that side it is usually true, and admit that truth to him, but reveal to him the side on which it is false. He is satisfied with that, for he sees that he was not mistaken and that he only failed to see all sides. Now, no one is offended at not seeing everything; but one does not like to be mistaken, and that perhaps arises from the fact that man naturally cannot

  • @susancard9562
    @susancard9562 11 років тому

    That was a wonderful lecture! Thank you

  • @clivemccowen2669
    @clivemccowen2669 8 років тому

    Brilliant lecturer

  • @SonTimba
    @SonTimba 10 років тому

    Mr. FarFromEquilibrium. Your statement is dead on! Very true indeed.

  • @memecathar1263
    @memecathar1263 Рік тому +1

    Somehow Hegel refuting Nietzsche’s discovery, however subtlety he did so, reminds me of the hate Marilyn Vos Savant got for being RIGHT when everyone else, to include literally hundreds of PhD professors from every school in the country said she was wrong about the Monty Hall problem.

  • @StudraGaming
    @StudraGaming 6 років тому

    wes cecil says Nietzsche was all about looking forward and not backwards yet Nietzsches thinking was influenced heavily by the past for example: greek, rome, napoleon, past philosophers etc..

    • @christopherhamilton3621
      @christopherhamilton3621 2 роки тому +1

      Look forward armed with a proper understanding of the past. Come on, man….

  • @LuisSilva-ph4or
    @LuisSilva-ph4or 10 років тому +1

    This was a really enjoyable lecture. Very funny.

  • @MisterCheekymonkee
    @MisterCheekymonkee 11 років тому

    Sophrosyne (Greek: σωφροσύνη) is a Greek philosophical term etymologically meaning healthy-mindedness and from there self-control or moderation guided by knowledge and balance.

  • @Rico-Suave_
    @Rico-Suave_ 2 місяці тому

    Great video, thank you very much , note to self(nts) watched …… 1:10:08

  • @Adam-ui3ot
    @Adam-ui3ot 5 років тому +1

    Love it.

  • @stuartb9528
    @stuartb9528 10 років тому +18

    Sophrosyne

  • @Knightcommander69
    @Knightcommander69 5 років тому

    Thank you Doctor. What a wonderful lecture. Nietzche's lessons were very profound on my own development. Without understanding the evil, you can't focus on the good.

  • @numbynumb
    @numbynumb 11 років тому

    "[Anything which] is a living and not a dying body... will have to be an incarnate will to power, it will strive to grow, spread, seize, become predominant - not from any morality or immorality but because it is living and because life simply is will to power... 'Exploitation'... belongs to the essence of what lives, as a basic organic function; it is a consequence of the will to power, which is after all the will to life."
    -Freddy

  • @stanislawhrouste
    @stanislawhrouste 9 років тому

    I am not going to read or re-read Nietzsche, and such lecture is not a bad substitute.

  • @ishmaelforester9825
    @ishmaelforester9825 2 роки тому

    Nietszhe also admires 'slave morality' (beyond good and evil, as it were). It is not to his taste but he admires it as a species of cunning and self-knowledge that has made us deeper, more reflective and profound

  • @goodoness
    @goodoness 8 років тому +2

    It would be really cool if you would do a lecture on Baudrillard or Deleuze

  • @7nealfreedman
    @7nealfreedman 9 років тому +1

    How does the lecturer comes to groups with the evident fact that the master critic of ressentiment spent his entire life (as a writer, at least) resenting the resenters?

  • @TroglodyteArgleBargl
    @TroglodyteArgleBargl 9 років тому

    Good lecture. Trying to reclaim my grade school Nietzche years. I would wager that Dr.Cecil has good relations with his female students...

  • @7nealfreedman
    @7nealfreedman 9 років тому

    If you were alone on a desert island, might you desire to walk a tightrope or something analogous? Is recognition by the other really secondary?

  • @MisterCheekymonkee
    @MisterCheekymonkee 11 років тому

    ... see everything, and that naturally he cannot err in the side he looks at, since the perceptions of our senses are always true.
    People are generally better persuaded by the reasons which they have themselves discovered than by those which have come into the mind of others.

  • @ilovepavement1
    @ilovepavement1 Рік тому

    45:00 on - Opening scene of The Wire season 1.

  • @topredtv3275
    @topredtv3275 4 роки тому

    These are great 👌

  • @stuartb9528
    @stuartb9528 8 років тому +2

    @Wes Cecil, I think you want the word "Parrhesia" instead of "sophrosyne".

    • @emile235
      @emile235 8 років тому

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophrosyne Yeah it looks like you're right.

    • @VidzMisc
      @VidzMisc 8 років тому

      well spotted

  • @justmadeit2
    @justmadeit2 10 років тому +5

    Is it true that nietzsche went crazy in the end ??

    • @allanlindsay8369
      @allanlindsay8369 10 років тому +2

      Yes. The real question though was he crazy in the beginning , , , , , , ,.

    • @justmadeit2
      @justmadeit2 10 років тому

      Ive done a few videos on my thoughts on life and death etc, check them out if you or anyone want to. cheers

    • @FrankiePanaia
      @FrankiePanaia 10 років тому +1

      Allan Lindsay No, that's your herd question. He was likely the sanest man in Europe in his time.
      A sane man surrounded by insanity, herds of morons who struggle each morning to pull their pants up properly. It isn't any wonder the man had a breakdown in Turin.

    • @allanlindsay8369
      @allanlindsay8369 10 років тому

      Frankie Panaia Hi FP - so he was likely the sanest man in Europe,- really? So you are intimately aware of everyone who lived in Europe during his lifetime? Well done! That being the case if he was the "sanest man In Europe" he would never have been able to be incarcerated into those insane asylums -, since they would have all been full to bursting and then some. In fact Europe would have been full of Insane Asylums. . . . .Herd question? I never posited a question.. .

    • @FrankiePanaia
      @FrankiePanaia 10 років тому +1

      Allan Lindsay Okay

  • @MisterCheekymonkee
    @MisterCheekymonkee 11 років тому

    Reached this hilarious comment. I think the nick: "hammertapping" is more than adequate. Excellent choice and most fitting, almost as eloquent as the language used. What "hammertapping" does not realize, is that comments of the sort reflect more about the person making them, than the lecturer himself; -who, fortunately, doesn't take things as seriously, and adheres to the Greek thought of: "Learning should be fun!" Meanwhile 'sophrosyne', is advocated also on comments .. but not everyone abides.

  • @AstroSquid
    @AstroSquid 8 років тому +1

    Some comedians carry themselves via a tone in their voice, where everything they are about to say is going to be hysterical, and it works as if they ques you to laugh regardless of how funny the joke is. This is a great lecture, but his tone is as if everything he's saying is surprisingly amazing. Don't get me wrong he's great at giving a lecture, I guess that's the way to do it.

    • @JustinMBailey
      @JustinMBailey 8 років тому

      Nothing is ever what you say but how you say it.

    • @Cheefrocco
      @Cheefrocco 8 років тому +1

      I wanted to post a similar comment, but thought why invite all the flaming replies that are sure to follow, lol, with most commenters here practically lining up to kiss the professor's ring. The professor has a very approachable, casual, down-to-earth, informal way of teaching and it's engrossing and interesting, especially for the segment of our population that has grown up on fast-moving sounds and images to keep their attention span alive.
      However, the point I want to make is that his intonation, on practically every sentence, where he is basically yelling: "Look how friggin' amazing this is!!!" can get very tedious and even stressful. After several minutes of listening to the lecture my stomach muscles, through no conscious effort of my own, are clenched so tight that I need to take a break.
      Otherwise, I really like his interpretation of Nietzsche's work. After all, there are no truths, only interpretations of it. :-)

  • @prashantchaudhary2569
    @prashantchaudhary2569 8 років тому

    Thanx !

  • @blairhakamies4132
    @blairhakamies4132 10 місяців тому

    Help, please. What is word Professor Wes Cecil mentions and the audience ask it? Around minutes 20 - 23. "soprosni?" 👀🙄

  • @MisterCheekymonkee
    @MisterCheekymonkee 11 років тому +1

    “You can knock on a deaf man's door forever.”

  • @bazookalucca4358
    @bazookalucca4358 2 роки тому

    Hey Wes Cecil - your Nietzsche lecture link doesn't work :(

  • @CrucifiedDionysus
    @CrucifiedDionysus 11 років тому

    As a grad student working on MA in Sociology, I must give you props for recognizing Nietzsche as a founder of Modern Sociology, else we're left with the over simplistic and dull Durkheim and ugh... Spencer. Oddly enough, there still seems to be resistance to allowing Nietzsche in, perhaps due to the resistance to thinkers he influenced such as Foucault and more so Derrida. Bataille is also not even recognized by the field despite his connection with Frankfurt School and College of Sociology.

  • @4ntifreez
    @4ntifreez 4 роки тому

    31:52 socrates' nose turned into a pickle, funniest thing

  • @adamnewton3387
    @adamnewton3387 8 років тому +3

    Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. You have resurrected my faith in humanity. My praise is not for this post alone, but for your whole collection of scholarly pursuit. My god (I don't actually think you are my god)! Thank you. :) ;) ;p... and other cave paintings.

  • @johncalligeros2108
    @johncalligeros2108 Рік тому

    Nietzsche's characterisation of the Greek 'genius' and Greek philosophy - which emphasises the pre_Socratics and downplays Plato and Aristotle - and which of course suits his own agenda, is more German than Greek.

  • @bbeaum1
    @bbeaum1 3 місяці тому

    The virtue or suffering is absolutely a new testament christian ideal, from both Jesus' and Paul's teachings, also "if they don't work, they don't eat," per St. Paul.
    Re Nietzsche's acceptance of the human and helpful nature of suffering, ~min 29.