Plato and Aristotle: Crash Course History of Science #3

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  • Опубліковано 15 кві 2018
  • Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing up at / crashcourse
    Last week, we met the Presocratics: despite having by any reasonable standard invented science in Europe, these thinkers are lumped together today as simply “not Socrates.”
    So who was this smarty pants? In this episode Hank talks to us about Socrates and his two important students, Plato and Aristotle.
    Thanks to the following Patrons for their generous monthly contributions that help keep Crash Course free for everyone forever:
    Mark Brouwer, Glenn Elliott, Justin Zingsheim, Jessica Wode, Eric Prestemon, Kathrin Benoit, Tom Trval, Jason Saslow, Nathan Taylor, Divonne Holmes à Court, Brian Thomas Gossett, Khaled El Shalakany, Indika Siriwardena, Robert Kunz, SR Foxley, Sam Ferguson, Yasenia Cruz, Eric Koslow, Caleb Weeks, Tim Curwick, Evren Türkmenoğlu, Alexander Tamas, D.A. Noe, Shawn Arnold, mark austin, Ruth Perez, Malcolm Callis, Ken Penttinen, Advait Shinde, Cody Carpenter, Annamaria Herrera, William McGraw, Bader AlGhamdi, Vaso, Melissa Briski, Joey Quek, Andrei Krishkevich, Rachel Bright, Alex S, Mayumi Maeda, Kathy & Tim Philip, Montather, Jirat, Eric Kitchen, Moritz Schmidt, Ian Dundore, Chris Peters, Sandra Aft, Steve Marshall
    --
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 636

  • @crashcourse
    @crashcourse  4 роки тому +282

    Hey all. We got messages that this video was having issues being viewed. We're working on fixing it but it's a bit of a mystery. Thanks for your patience.
    - Nick J.

    • @swastiksahu6889
      @swastiksahu6889 4 роки тому +2

      please fix it soon

    • @theNadeFace
      @theNadeFace 4 роки тому +16

      Since the video is not playing for us does it stop being a video?
      Does the content within or our acknowledgement of it's existence become merely a dream or a false fact within our brains since we do not have it available to prove to anyone that it did indeed ever exist?
      Will the video one day be released from the cave and gaze upon the fields of grass basking in the sun's warmth?

    • @dentoncrimescene
      @dentoncrimescene 4 роки тому +2

      Fixed for me, thanks.

    • @DerInDenWindPubst
      @DerInDenWindPubst 4 роки тому

      Thanks for the vide, but it was a bit long. Can´t you make a 3min video about Aristotle and Plato? Thank you

    • @MiguelMartinez-qi2in
      @MiguelMartinez-qi2in 4 роки тому +3

      Is the subtitles ok ?

  • @hexa3389
    @hexa3389 4 роки тому +252

    "Only Aristotle wrote more than Plato"
    Euclid: *laughs in the Elements*

    • @TroglodyteDiner
      @TroglodyteDiner 4 роки тому +18

      Not so fast. Much of what the pre-Socratics held, while on the right track, was not Socratic, including their 'atoms'. 'Things are composed of tiny atoms. Sounds good. Time for tea!' Imagine Socrates confronting one of these sophists (perhaps he did): 'tell me something about these atoms' who when for details would leave in disgrace. It took Western Civilization 2,200 years before it could begin to come up with answers that would begin satisfy Socrates.
      Conversely Aristotle idea, that things are mixtures of elements, actually anticipates Dalton and molecular theory.

    • @hexa3389
      @hexa3389 4 роки тому +25

      @@TroglodyteDiner dude I made a joke a about Euclid. I didn't say anything about sophists and what not.

  • @wesleyrm76
    @wesleyrm76 6 років тому +266

    Aristotle was pretty smart, but it’s crazy that it took 2000 years for someone (Galileo) to actually test his laws of Physics to see if they really worked.

  • @Painfoot
    @Painfoot 6 років тому +432

    Looks like Plato’s giving Aristotle a haircut in the thumbnail. Probably using Occam’s razor.

    • @grammarnazi1469
      @grammarnazi1469 5 років тому +11

      No long hair is allowed in the Academy, but as a loving teacher, instead of punishing Aristotle, Plato personally gives him a haircut.

    • @mxlazarus190
      @mxlazarus190 5 років тому +20

      Thumbs up for your very specific niche joke.

    • @lightwithoutheat3080
      @lightwithoutheat3080 5 років тому +3

      Nice dad joke.

    • @michaellangan4450
      @michaellangan4450 5 років тому +1

      I read that all the students walked into the Academy backwards.

  • @michaelwu7678
    @michaelwu7678 6 років тому +174

    I’ve read that most of Aristotle’s surviving works were not actually written down by him. Instead they’re lecture notes taken by his students and organized by topic.

    • @augustineferdinand8229
      @augustineferdinand8229 6 років тому +5

      and also from other countries including Africa ( Alexandria library) where Alenxander conquered. So basically, he plagiarized and stole alot of work and ideas.

    • @spencermcdaniel4109
      @spencermcdaniel4109 5 років тому +60

      You are half right; they are lecture notes, but they were written by Aristotle himself. Most of them are probably his own notes for what he was going to talk about for his lectures, not notes that his students wrote down after listening to his lectures. He did not originally intend for these writings to be published, which is why they are unpolished and lack deliberate literary appeal. Aristotle also wrote dialogues like Plato, which were intended for publication. These were finely-crafted literary masterpieces; ironically, none of Aristotle's dialogues have survived and all we have are his lecture notes.

  • @pietervoorhans
    @pietervoorhans 6 років тому +42

    This idea of the atoms (and molecules) having different shapes is remarkably accurate, as we can see in crystallization. The ice crystal for example, is shaped that way because of the shape of the H2O molecule and the way they fit/bond together.

  • @Conorp77
    @Conorp77 6 років тому +369

    I too have a vegitative soul

  • @herodotus945
    @herodotus945 6 років тому +191

    Aristotle, a philosopher so great that during the Middle Ages they only needed to say the Philosopher and everyone knew about which one they were talking, Thomas Aquinas called him the great teacher.

    • @allykat5899
      @allykat5899 5 років тому +8

      I don't know I think of Aristotle as that guy who was pretty much wrong about like everything from his idea that some people are weary of enslavement to his belief that woman were inferior he was wrong much more then he was right from, astrology, biology because you know any guy who thinks that women have less teeth then men must really be bad at biology though he did get the theory of Optics right so you know hey good for him.

    • @rodricensi5788
      @rodricensi5788 5 років тому +45

      easy to say that 2000+ years into the future, if you were alive by then you would statistically be a simple farmer that can barely count past a 100

    • @michaellangan4450
      @michaellangan4450 5 років тому +14

      @@allykat5899 Aristotle invented biology. And someone has been reading Russell without given him credit.

    • @allykat5899
      @allykat5899 5 років тому +2

      @@michaellangan4450 Aristotle also thought women had less teeth then for someone teeth then men basic autonomy which which is a fundamental part of biology and actually I've never Russel that was my own personal opinion

    • @michelsindaha
      @michelsindaha 4 роки тому +8

      Arab philosophers and scholars also called him the first teacher.

  • @a.j.kinney7991
    @a.j.kinney7991 6 років тому +50

    "Like a giant set of D&D dice."
    NERD!
    Seriously, that made my day.

  • @BrianHutzellMusic
    @BrianHutzellMusic 6 років тому +222

    Here’s a book recommendation to accompany this lesson: “The Cave and the Light: Plato Versus Aristotle, and the Struggle for the Soul of Western Civilization” by Arthur L. Herman. The book discusses the differences in the thinking of the two philosophers, and then traces their respective schools of thought through the ensuing history. Sometimes it’s tempting to think disciplines like philosophy, science, and history exist in separate silos, but they all influence each other.
    In other news: The plush Hanklerfish I ordered (like the one in the background set, only purple) arrived in the mail today, much to the confusion of my cat. DFTBA!

  • @tavongaishefaneti
    @tavongaishefaneti 4 роки тому +59

    5:43 so Plato created the Infinity Stones?

  • @rsr789
    @rsr789 4 роки тому +26

    "Socrates, himself, was permanently pissed; Yes, Socrates himself is particularly missed
    A lovely little thinker, but a bugger when he's pissed"
    ~Monty Python

  • @redkazero
    @redkazero 6 років тому +24

    Thankyou for talking about Socrates, that dude needs way more recognition among common people

  • @lisameskimen9296
    @lisameskimen9296 6 років тому +22

    These graphics and animations are so cute! I appreciate all the work that must go into these videos

  • @culwin
    @culwin 6 років тому +733

    I'm not a platist, I use bowls

    • @masvindu
      @masvindu 6 років тому +46

      I like mugs. I guess I'm a mugger.

    • @concesanamanamanavarro3089
      @concesanamanamanavarro3089 5 років тому

      Good one

    • @oniyoda
      @oniyoda 5 років тому +4

      You're clearly not a follower of diogenes work then.

    • @fsi2274
      @fsi2274 5 років тому

      🤣

    • @fsi2274
      @fsi2274 5 років тому +1

      @@masvindu nice

  • @ryan_of_marshall986
    @ryan_of_marshall986 4 роки тому +8

    I've been watching your channel for years. The fact that ya'll are dropping DnD references makes me love you all sooo much more.

  • @vanessawheeler7476
    @vanessawheeler7476 4 роки тому +32

    enjoying them so far . Thank you to the animators. I absolutely love their work. And of course thank you for the availability to study outside school.

  • @khalidnezami3660
    @khalidnezami3660 4 роки тому +17

    I am both a Platonist and an Aristotlean, they both were great thinkers.

  • @Bodknocks
    @Bodknocks 5 років тому +348

    "After Alexander died young, Aristotle went back to Athens..." This is incorrect. Aristotle had founded the Lyceum in Athens over a decade prior to Alexander dying in 323 BC. In fact, Alexander dying caused Aristotle to flee Athens due to growing anti-Macedonian sentiment.

    • @cesardachimp8172
      @cesardachimp8172 5 років тому +31

      NERD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @kingcamilo
      @kingcamilo 4 роки тому +21

      @@cesardachimp8172 What are you doing here? Go watch corporate music videos.

    • @cesardachimp8172
      @cesardachimp8172 4 роки тому +18

      @@kingcamilo just a joke im also a pretty big nerd

    • @fabulamcafee
      @fabulamcafee 4 роки тому +3

      Cesar DaChimp me too and next time we don’t justify

  • @marisp2588
    @marisp2588 6 років тому +23

    This series is literally the course I took last semester, and I wish i had it back then..

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 4 роки тому +338

    One thing is for certain: The ancient Greek philosophers had way too much time on their hands...

  • @GuitarRocker2008
    @GuitarRocker2008 6 років тому +361

    HEY! YOU GOT YOUR SCIENCE IN MY PHILOSOPHY!

  • @FreyaScarlett
    @FreyaScarlett 6 років тому +1

    amazing combo of great info and beautiful visuals

  • @victorgabrielbuena
    @victorgabrielbuena 6 років тому +18

    Considering everything about Platonism and Aristotlism -- and even the Socrates' work -- I like Plato's brutal definition of all life and that everything changes so you can't trust your preconcieved ideas about the world , and I also like Aristotles confidence in the senses and experience in learning and understand the universe -- But I really can't decide who I like the most...

  • @lghammer778
    @lghammer778 4 роки тому +3

    Really great episode, thanks !

  • @limitlesscuriosity5699
    @limitlesscuriosity5699 6 років тому +6

    Have been way out of the loop with Crash Course for a while and just stumbled onto this little gem of a video. Loved it, time to start catching up on some stuff. Keep up the great work guys!

  • @kevinyee9550
    @kevinyee9550 6 років тому +2

    Learning a lot of history through this series

  • @MPythonGirl
    @MPythonGirl 6 років тому +89

    Don't you kinda need both? There are kinda 2 tracks to a good theory. A) Math it then check against reality B) Notice something, Math it, then check it against reality.
    You kinda need both to truly understand.

    • @apostolospanagiotopoulos7858
      @apostolospanagiotopoulos7858 5 років тому +8

      Correct, this is how it works now days (e.g. theoretical physics and experimental physics). But this conflict was the beginning.

    • @sofalso
      @sofalso 5 років тому +3

      @@williamlowry3131 you can make observations detached from the physical e.g, noting prime numbers and their weirdness. Also we have our imagination, making assumptions, projecting, extrapolating, scenario-building, and other ingenious tools of the mind. A point could be made, though, that an observation, even if abstract, is still physical as in "there is a human engendering it and, even if it happens within their mind, it's still the physical realm".

    • @cam0987
      @cam0987 5 років тому

      Yes correct exactly what I was thinking

  • @coredumperror
    @coredumperror 6 років тому +1

    This is the best Crash Course series in a while!

  • @martinwettig8212
    @martinwettig8212 2 роки тому +1

    I love this channel. Thank you.

  • @Mila-hb1we
    @Mila-hb1we 5 років тому +3

    thank you so much for your videos! you are a wonderful genius god bless your soul

  • @raajrajan1956
    @raajrajan1956 5 років тому +1

    What a genius each of these!every one should learn their thoughtd

  • @G4mer_D4d
    @G4mer_D4d 5 років тому +2

    noice!

    • @michaellangan4450
      @michaellangan4450 5 років тому

      I was taught to read plato than Augustine, then Aristotle and St thomas.

  • @amiratlanta
    @amiratlanta 5 років тому +2

    I really appreciate the incorporation of Thought Bubble in these videos.

  • @alx9r
    @alx9r 4 роки тому +210

    I see the message “This video is unavailable on this device” on both iPhone and Apple TV. Could you please lift that restriction?

    • @NowAndZen1734
      @NowAndZen1734 4 роки тому +8

      same. is it an apple thing?!

    • @mohammedgharbiyah6566
      @mohammedgharbiyah6566 4 роки тому +5

      Me too! I thought something was wrong with my laptop until I saw this

    • @AngelTerri
      @AngelTerri 4 роки тому +2

      Booooo

    • @crowcalamity4842
      @crowcalamity4842 4 роки тому +2

      It worked for me when I opened it on Chrome instead of Safari, maybe you could try that? ^^

    • @LuisPerez-wg6fd
      @LuisPerez-wg6fd 4 роки тому

      @@NowAndZen1734 i8n

  • @bearcb
    @bearcb 4 роки тому +3

    If Plato was able to visit modern world, and learned that Tensor Calculus builds Relativity which explains how planets and stars behave, and that Schroedinger’s equation explains matter behavior, he would have shouted A-HA!!!

  • @josegonzaloditchingssvp
    @josegonzaloditchingssvp 5 років тому +4

    Ur such a great lecturer. U made difficult things easier to understand

  • @allangustavobs
    @allangustavobs 6 років тому +2

    I love this theme, tanks

  • @thejohnny0018
    @thejohnny0018 5 років тому +2

    Loved the video! ❤️

  • @Byron3189
    @Byron3189 6 років тому +1

    amazing!!! please do crash course Geological history, or just geology/palaeontology with a in depth timeline

  • @ghania5869
    @ghania5869 5 років тому +1

    This is extremely helpful

  • @RicardoT213
    @RicardoT213 5 років тому +7

    It would be cool to have some book recommendations for every video or series

  • @98bluecalisky
    @98bluecalisky 6 років тому +80

    I got distracted at the beginning by the fact that Hank has WALL-E on his desk.

  • @AKOVmusic
    @AKOVmusic 5 років тому

    Your channel is awesome!!

  • @toothnailgaming42
    @toothnailgaming42 5 років тому +4

    *Interesting Fact*
    Aristotle's relationship with Alexander the Great served him well as he would eventually have Alexander use his influence to gather tons of plant and animal species for Aristotle to examine. If it weren't for this aid, he wouldn't have made nearly as many important observations as he did, although maybe he would have had more time to strengthen his moral writings :P

  • @xerex21212
    @xerex21212 6 років тому +3

    My new favorite crash course.

  • @calebarah5005
    @calebarah5005 5 років тому +5

    Plato and Aristotle contributed immensely to the development of philosophy

  • @joryjones6808
    @joryjones6808 6 років тому +11

    I am a Socratic. I believe that both should be balanced like Popper said. I believe the unexamined life is not worth living.

  • @colonelkilling2425
    @colonelkilling2425 6 місяців тому

    Great video!

  • @MrYourcoffin
    @MrYourcoffin 5 років тому +2

    Im so glad you all learned how to color correct in your later videos.

  • @feynstein1004
    @feynstein1004 6 років тому +51

    Meh. Why choose when you can have it all? I'm an Aristotlean-Socrato-Platonist :P

    • @sofalso
      @sofalso 5 років тому +2

      They are mostly on the same page.

    • @tugboat2030
      @tugboat2030 4 роки тому +5

      Or a Socratic-Platist-Aristotelian

  • @moularaoul643
    @moularaoul643 Рік тому +1

    Thank you!

  • @jamesgeorge3082
    @jamesgeorge3082 4 роки тому +3

    Im a grad student and I still get more from crash course than I do assigned readings

  • @MrCharles960
    @MrCharles960 4 роки тому

    Enjoyed video.

  • @DrDress
    @DrDress 5 років тому +7

    4:14 .You mean: "Ruling over more area than anyone... Except of cause the Mongols"

  • @newbloomwon
    @newbloomwon 4 роки тому +5

    I learned that Aristotle’s “writings” come from his students’ notes, not directly from him.

    • @michaelrecine7626
      @michaelrecine7626 4 роки тому +2

      Almost, they aren't his students notes, they're his notes to his students. Most believe they were used at his school for teaching/lectures

  • @doogz28
    @doogz28 6 років тому +3

    This is awesome! Keep them coming please :-) As a high school philosophy teacher with a Masters in the History and Philosophy of Science, I find these accurate, informative, and entertaining...not to mention vitally important to the education of future STEM types. Thanks!!

  • @tombouie
    @tombouie 5 років тому +3

    Amazing, the best in a nutshell summary of classic western philosophy/science I've ever come across. Two points you good folks might find interesting/infuriating:

    *Note Aristotle describes our reality via our natural senses best of all (really least worst of all). Current hard-science describes our reality via our modern measurement instruments. Thus our reality is highly dependent on what/how we measure it with (ex: einstein's relativity & quantum mechanics).
    *Note hard-science works most independent of our state-of-mind (ex: most independent of our beliefs-of, disbeliefs-of, indifference-to, & ignorance-of our state-of-mind ; aka empiric). Wise folks value our states-of-mind (ex: desires, dreads, bliss, agony, etc) much more than any hard-science. Thus hard-science is best used as no-more than another means/tool towards our desires or away-from our dreads whether than vice versa (counter ex: nazi scientism).

  • @abhiprakash74999
    @abhiprakash74999 4 роки тому +25

    I love how John says Aristotle was a 100 % wrong a 100% of the time and refers to him as his old nemesis in his literature course on Oedipus , while hank tho recognising his faults does sorta love him.

  • @alexmonte6371
    @alexmonte6371 6 років тому +87

    It's interesting that Hank seems to think Aristotle was more of a common sense philosopher, even though anyone who has read Plato and Aristotle knows that Plato's dialogues are much better written and more easily digestible because Plato often writes in the guise of the Socratic style and because Aristotle only intended his works to be read as lecture notes to his students. However, if one considers Platonic idealism in the context of the Pareminedian and Pythagorean trends in Greek philosophy, particularly with regard to mathematics and the concept of "the one," then one can easily argue that while Aristotle's empirical observations on natural philosophy are now out of touch with reality, Plato's theories are much more relevant to, let's say, binary systems by which computer programs classify and distinguish things by a series of zeros and ones that express something within the context of a programming language. If we agree with Plato and Parmenides that reality is essentially an expression of being that is one, and can be expressed as one, whereas some form of non-reality or absence is something that is-not, and therefore can be represented with a zero, even though zero simply signifies the concept of nothingness or privation, then when we think about binary systems that attempt to represents real things through a code of zeros and ones in a particular order that has meaning, we will realize that anything could theoretically be represented in binary code depending on how its zeros and ones are arranged in a code that expresses the being of that thing accurately.
    People try to dismiss Plato's idealism, often because they have not comprehensively read Plato's works, and thus have not had the opportunity to experience how Plato's work was not merely idealistic in the sense of anti-pragmatism, but often expressed a desire for systematic knowledge of things so that people can have more knowledge about good and bad and be able to justify themselves to others. When one reads Plato's work and appreciates it, one sees how comprehensive his work actually was, and can get beyond the charge of idealism that is used by materialists to ad-hominem attack opponents who don't accept their harsh reduction of reality to physical matter. If we overcome this conceited materialism, we will be better able to do what was at the heart of Socratic and Platonic philosophy; inquiry into one's self, one's being, and concious examination of one's life.

    • @theophilus749
      @theophilus749 6 років тому +5

      Alex, I agree pretty well totally with this. Plato was not an Idealist in the modern sense of the term. Altogether this is a pretty uninformed introduction.

    • @6li7ch
      @6li7ch 6 років тому +10

      The notion of binary goes well beyond the Platonic, and is even reflected in Aristotle's Laws of Thought as The Law of Contradiction and The Law of Excluded Middle. Basically the void excluded by Aristotelian physics is that 'no nonexistent thing exists', which is a bit different from a vacuum, which, through the predicate of space, must exist.
      Perhaps the reason Aristotle's works are so dense and unreadable is due to his caution regarding Sophistical Elenchi, the false knowledge acquired through the equivalence of truth with beauty. Plato went to great lengths to make his work beautiful, even as it derided the Sophists. His form of beneficent dictatorship described so eloquently in The Republic was no doubt a rousing success as a justification for aristocracy, but it was not a scientific success. Science is, at its heart, a dense and unreadable truth.
      It wasn't quite clear in the video, but Aristotle didn't deny there are things in the universe outside of our material understanding, he just suggests that it's probably a good idea not to guess what they are based on what the observer themself wants to be true.

    • @theophilus749
      @theophilus749 6 років тому +2

      You give further good reasons not to rate this 'crash course' video very highly. Your last paragraph delivers the real killer blow to its authority.

    • @6li7ch
      @6li7ch 6 років тому +5

      It's actually pretty good for a quick video, the real mistake would be to expect the entire difference between the Platonic and Aristotelian theories of forms could be conveyed in 12 minutes. If all you're looking for is a working education in History of Science, or if you need a refresher, I'd rate this segment as meeting that goal thus far.

    • @kalidesu
      @kalidesu 5 років тому +2

      Plato was more of a mystic.

  • @tjdriver7098
    @tjdriver7098 6 років тому +50

    Shrek is my favourite anime

  • @lidiiabatig2595
    @lidiiabatig2595 4 роки тому +3

    I have fallen in love with philosophy after these videos! Amazing, thank you from all my heart!

  • @JohnSmith-io3ii
    @JohnSmith-io3ii 6 років тому +1

    This is my absolute favorite CrashCourse series, and I have watched most of them.

  • @SuperYogagirl
    @SuperYogagirl Рік тому

    Thanks!

  • @Jacno77
    @Jacno77 5 років тому +2

    Aristotle and Plato will do what good teachers do, they'll educate your heart and your mind and wake you up from that dream of sloth

  • @TheJesterInYellow
    @TheJesterInYellow 6 років тому +15

    I'd say I'm more of a Diogenetic. My favorite form of genetics!

  • @ybizapakemonow5646
    @ybizapakemonow5646 6 років тому

    Thanks

  • @kylejohnson3233
    @kylejohnson3233 6 років тому +3

    Can’t they have something like geology? I love to see Hank talk Science and history but let’s get some rocks up in here

  • @damedesuka77
    @damedesuka77 6 років тому +15

    His student playdough. Huh?
    Dammit brain.

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid 6 років тому +2

    Now I want a "five elements" dice set...

  • @moonball00n
    @moonball00n Рік тому +1

    wow i love hank green

  • @Doctor_Drew
    @Doctor_Drew 5 років тому +3

    Where can we find the sources used to make these videos? I'd love to read more about it

  • @xgozulx
    @xgozulx 6 років тому +6

    I actually have the 5 platonic solids in form.of dice :D

  • @BorisNVM
    @BorisNVM 11 місяців тому

    loved it

  • @beckymata6723
    @beckymata6723 5 років тому +2

    This guy has saved my GPA!!!

  • @mcc1789
    @mcc1789 6 років тому +6

    One can be both an idealist and empiricist. George Berkeley would be a famous example.

  • @saritar1000
    @saritar1000 5 років тому +12

    I legit thought you were saying Play-Doh instead of Plato, so it sounded like "Play-Doh has a big impact on thinking of thinking"

    • @sonlam1047
      @sonlam1047 4 роки тому +2

      It did! it empowered creativity, a power of the mind.

  • @ScienceCommunicator2001
    @ScienceCommunicator2001 6 років тому +1

    we need crash course astrophysics!!

  • @geoffreywinn4031
    @geoffreywinn4031 6 років тому

    Educational!

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Рік тому

    9:34 TRIPARTIDE SOUL!!!! From your philosophy course!

  • @strawberryrnilk
    @strawberryrnilk 6 років тому +1

    i have a test on these two philosopher's alone and it just so happened crash course uploaded a video on it 12 hrs earlier, papa bless

  • @dananewton6092
    @dananewton6092 4 роки тому +1

    these men were on one long trip

  • @rogertherik628
    @rogertherik628 6 років тому +1

    Down to the essential place, it's called[ put dramatic drumroll here] ENTROPY!

  • @h.ipekkeskin339
    @h.ipekkeskin339 6 місяців тому

    Teşekkürler.

  • @muhammedsillah3363
    @muhammedsillah3363 4 роки тому +5

    * Realising the word 'Socratic Seminar' comes from Socrates and asking questions *
    My mind: *Blown*

  • @boundbythecurve
    @boundbythecurve 6 років тому +7

    Please someone make those D&D dice for me!

  • @solovelynaturals
    @solovelynaturals 4 роки тому +23

    Aristotle wore 3 layers of clothes to look bigger. Only cared for materialistic reality. Plato cared more for answers to things that could not be seen heard or felt. Those answers would also transcend into physical reality. Socrates was a hardcore badass.

  • @toothnailgaming42
    @toothnailgaming42 5 років тому

    I like the way you talk

  • @hen2005
    @hen2005 5 років тому +16

    I actually laughed out loud when he said 'warm and wet BABIES'

  • @apostolospanagiotopoulos7858
    @apostolospanagiotopoulos7858 5 років тому +1

    Aristotle was not from Macedonia. His home place, Stagira, is part of the modern area of Macadamia. Although, when Aristotle was born, it was an independent city state, relatively close to the ancient Kingdom of Macedon. Stagira was occupied by Macedonians when Aristotle was already 36 years old, living in Athens and being a faculty member in the Academy.

  • @Tht1kidYouKnw
    @Tht1kidYouKnw 6 років тому +6

    i agree a lot more with aristotle. he actually made sense. although his thoughts and ideas were very raw but that is understandable. plato makes no sense (he does but not nearly as much as aristotle)

  • @dogmirian
    @dogmirian 6 років тому +22

    I think there is a fourth answer. (The Mongol Answer XP)
    As a consciousness we can only perceive (senses/Aristotle) and rationalize (mathematics/Plato) but we know that both are fallible and "inperceivable".
    Our senses can hallucinate, be deceived, and sometimes we just can't comprehend what it is we are seeing (or mis-comprehend).
    As for mathematics, while it is purely logical, it is also a human construct, there is no actual object that is one since all objects are atoms bouncing off each other, and it is just the coincidence that it takes a long time for atoms of similar densities to separate that causes the illusion of "oneness", on top of which all humans flaws are baked into our comprehension of mathematics, for example we "know" that there is at least another dimension of mathematics that we are currently only see the ripples of (hence we have "imaginary" number units (i))
    So rather than going with either having our mathematics reflect our senses, or our senses reflect our mathematics, or even worse do what Socrates was quasi suggesting and debate about a perfect universe not perceivable and inconceivable, but rather recognize the symbiotic reality of our senses and rationality that both are influenced and influence the other and construct an evolving resource of experiments and conjecture to try and correlate our entire senses and rationalizations.

  • @joryjones6808
    @joryjones6808 6 років тому

    Crash course Philosophy 2.0. Yeah!

  • @Kerfuffles92
    @Kerfuffles92 6 років тому +35

    Im so glad you are looking at india as well. I was worried this was going to be reeeeeally eurocentric. Im excited 😊

    • @oldasyouromens
      @oldasyouromens 6 років тому +6

      Coal Dust XIII I think what he meant by eurocentric is that until now, this series has ignored contributions to science made by people in Asia and Africa (an Egyptian scientist discovered gravity WAY before Newton), which by default implies European ideas are more important, which is wrong.

    • @oof-rr5nf
      @oof-rr5nf 6 років тому +3

      Coal Dust XIII Come on, dude. I don't think OP was launching an attack. Eurocetricism (I hope the spelling is correct) _is_ a reality for the history of education for many socieities and countries, especially former colonies. I'd know, I'm Indian. And our textbooks had heart-eyes for everything Western. It still makes me angry. So I do not see anything negative about someone hoping and expecting that the achievements in science of other societies is captured well in this Crash Course series.

    • @oof-rr5nf
      @oof-rr5nf 6 років тому +2

      Not to take anything away from the fascinating and impressive story of Western science and innovation. Plato and Aristotle are indeed rockstars. Tho I know them through political science, not science-science. Lol. Humanities students, represent! ✊

    • @bitthalsarangi5471
      @bitthalsarangi5471 6 років тому

      @Arunima Tiwari +1. That's Eurocetrizine(Pun intended, no offence) it seems. Both philosophers are indeed great. We could think upon the Peripatetic school type envisioned by Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore in Shantiniketan, could have been inspired from Aristotle and Gurukul system. Anyways, due to lack of Nation-States during ancient times, ideas could just transfer in convection throughout civilizations.

    • @theScapeX
      @theScapeX 6 років тому

      Yes I agree with you that this is rather "Eurocentric", but what can you really do? There wasn't much that was recorded from other cultures about their intellectuals and ideas. You can just google about all the philosophers and intellectuals that were recorded from other cultures (particularly Indian and Chinese) and you won't find much.This type of tradition of philosophy was actually a Greek idea, but it actually wasn't "Europeans" (Celto-Germanics) that adopted the tradition first. It was actually the Arabs and Persians that adopted it first and than it was transferred to the "Europeans" by them.

  • @nasrghebar8379
    @nasrghebar8379 6 років тому +1

    My faith follows them all, it isn’t always one or the other...

  • @crobbie86
    @crobbie86 4 роки тому +3

    Aristotle's model is perfect and true for the prisoners held in bondage only knowing shadows on the cave wall as reality. If you have turned your head and only caught a glimpse of light from beyond the cave, you would know Plato's model is a lot closer to the true nature of reality.

  • @owenkato956
    @owenkato956 4 роки тому +1

    Aristotle went back to Athens when Alexander was still alive. Alexander died in Babylon one year before Aristotle did in exile on a nearby island outside Athens. After Alexander died, Aristotle apparently left Athens, suggesting, that they turned their back on philosophy once (with Socrates) and he wouldn't take it a second time!*

  • @thewriterofideas9354
    @thewriterofideas9354 6 років тому +11

    Philosophy!!!!!

  • @joselitobeltran9107
    @joselitobeltran9107 4 роки тому +2

    "Alexander Maybe Not So Great" I ooof-

  • @Monki555
    @Monki555 6 років тому +1

    Love this :) I’d love crash course art history too