I love these conversational lectures. :))) Plato in 2023 filming his philosophical dialogues talking alone on the phone: "Well, Socrates, that is indeed so."
Robin, I know you’re a literature student through and through, but as we know you’re also many other things. But in spite of being a literature student, I think you’ll still be able to agree that language can be limiting in finding the most accurate string of words to assign to our thoughts, experiences, beliefs, and emotions to. This doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try. To be able to communicate such complex and profound emotion in a way that serves the emotion or experience the justice it deserves is an immense accomplishment. I find this struggle most in trying to communicate strong feelings of happiness, sadness, or love for my partner. Sometimes language can’t capture the beauty of those two emotions at times. That’s why poetry and literature can have such a profound effect on us. To have such insurmountable and ambiguous emotionality demystified is so so so cathartic. To having that feeling of being understood. What I’M trying to use language to tell you is that I appreciate you a lot. I share a lot of your philosophies and sometimes they can be a bit anti-status quo so it brings me comfort to know I’m not alone in my thinking/feeling. I think about the function of philosophy a lot, and just learning in general. We say it a lot to where it becomes stale, the “We must learn!” just seems a bit vague. I’ve learned religion, history, philosophy, science are all one in the same in their goals at times. To make sense of the world, to eliminate further suffering. philosophy eases the mind, gives the mind new tools to help cope with how troubling existence can be at times. Existence can make some even question their will to want to stay on this earth, which is why we need philosophy. Not as a means to conversationally make others feel inferior, to make yourself feel big and powerful (by this definition this is basically a textbook bully😅) Anyway I work as a barista and it’s super late and I’m still trying to close up shop so I’ll end this comment. Please continue to make UA-cam videos for as long you feel inspired to because it brings me great comfort
I love the Video format. About the philsosophical terminology topic. The creation of these terminologies tries to fixate a certain complicated concept into a single word, so that it doesnt get even more convoluted. The issue oftentimes is, that (especially in Philosophy) these concepts have lead to more and more background knowledge needed about certain areas of Scientific/Artistic disciplines. I think this case can be descibed best by an analogy. Philosophy would be a tall building, that is getting larger and larger, as even more and more levels are getting added. For someone nowadays to explore that tower, it would take ages, because over the course of thousands of years, this building has been build. Oftentimes out of materials that we just cant comprehend at first (metaphorically and literally). If you enter this building you are surrounded by weird shapes, furniture and rooms from so many places and times, that you cant grasp it. This exact problem is present in philosophy, even moreso then other disciplines. The reason for that, is that Philosophy deals with questions, that just need a lot of concept and structure building. You are literally trying to explain fundamental questions, that try to integrate all other sciences at once, and have the claim to be used universally. Just imagine yourself a cake, which represents the reality (just take this word as it is, im not trying to play 4D-Chess with this Term). Every single piece of this cake, is a discipline. Biology, Physics, Sociology, Literature, Psychology etc. all are part of this whole cake. Each of them representing a small part in our vast reality, that they try to explore. Now a Philosophical theory, that wants to explain/answer a fundamental question, needs to basically be all of those cake pieces in one. Because if it doesnt, its not universally acceptable. As we know Life and the Universe are so complicated, that disciplines needs to heavily specialize, to even try to grasp all of the possible topics. So building such a theory, requires a vast ammount of knowledge in all these different disciplines. Not only that, you need to try to create new ones, or synthesize all of them. And well this Task is a task for not only a single lifetime, but a Task for the eternity of the human kind, thats why the Philosophical tower is a project, without an ending. This all sounds great, but like i said, the issue still persists. If you want to enter Philosophy, it get more and more complicated, because theories themselves get more and more complicated. As Humans get more knowledge about other parts of life and environment around us, these knowledges have to be involved in some way in Philosopical discourses. But for just a regular person, even a philosophy student nowadays, this all is just a convoluted jungle of different words, that have 50 meanings in different contexts, which are then synthesized again with other words and concepts that themselves have 50 meanings. To decipher all the semantic meanings is an impossible task. What Philosophy has to do, is not dumb down, thats not my point. But it needs to try to be clear in their wording. Thats why i love Wittgenstein. Yes he is difficult, and even thats an understatement. But what i have to say, is that i myself found it more enjoyable reading him, then Kant for example. Wittgenstein is soo precise in the things he is trying to say, that i personally believe Philosophy needs more clear wording, and precise meanings.
... I'm no philosopher but I legit do think faster than I talk 😂 it's a problem, sometimes I've been known to just leave out large chunks of sentences because I've forgotten that I haven't said that yet and I'm already thinking about the next thing
Hi robin , for someone who is interested in philoshphy and want to know more abt it in more or less profound way , wold you suggest a booklist or a roadmap to follow ? i am currently reading the story of philosophy by will durant and i dont know what to proceed next ..
As an obscurantisme terroriste myself I always like to say 'without enough hydrocoptic marzel vanes and a decent ambifacient lunar wane shaft you will get unwanted side fumbling'.
And they LOVE to quote everything, I remember having a conversation with a philosophy student, and they would quote a different philosopher in each sentence until I asked them; Yeah, but what do you think?
The mathematician Edward Kasner said that “Mathematics is the science which uses easy words for hard ideas” and based on this video and philosophy I’ve read I’d have to say that philosophy is like the humanities equivalent of this lol
Absolutely on point! This is a perfect form of video essay: like a socratic dialogue. Philosophy students do bring books to parties...(I do sometimes 🤫).
One of the most imaginative, cinematic and captivating pieces of digital content I've ever seen. Something so simplistic and so boring turned so profound (in both the French and the English denomination).
Loved watching this phone call haha... it would indeed be ideal if philosophers used ordinary language in their works, as we all should be able to contemplate the higher things in life together.
LOL - very good! "They like to travel back to the 20th century..." most of my life was in the 20th century. LOL Yes, indeed, it was very far away! LOL and the new term "Obscurantisme Terroriste." If you want some Obscurantisme Terroriste try taking accounting. I think the teachers like to get their rocks off by watching the students try to get their heads around the accounting definitions of words like "charge" and "credit" as we try to meld them with the lay definitions. I was half way through my term when I figured out that they were actually speaking a foreign language. The teachers won't clue you in. Well, it is sad that teachers are just as egotistical and tricky today as they were all the way back in the 20th century! LOL 😂
I just got into philosophy and I'm loving it so much, it's like opening a new door that combines everything from literature, science, religion, physics... etc
While my major was in chemistry, I'm a polymath by inclination. While taking a management of organizational behavior course, I was amused by how certain terms were used in a different context, like wondering what outer-shell electrons had to do with positive encouragement of employees (valences).
Nice idea/video but I think you're mixing up technical difficulty (such as French) with not actually having anything meaningful to say (such as Heidegger, Benjamin etc.).
I love these conversational lectures. :)))
Plato in 2023 filming his philosophical dialogues talking alone on the phone: "Well, Socrates, that is indeed so."
The camera is Plato. 😂
@@RCWaldun more like his cave.
Robin, I know you’re a literature student through and through, but as we know you’re also many other things. But in spite of being a literature student, I think you’ll still be able to agree that language can be limiting in finding the most accurate string of words to assign to our thoughts, experiences, beliefs, and emotions to. This doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try. To be able to communicate such complex and profound emotion in a way that serves the emotion or experience the justice it deserves is an immense accomplishment. I find this struggle most in trying to communicate strong feelings of happiness, sadness, or love for my partner. Sometimes language can’t capture the beauty of those two emotions at times. That’s why poetry and literature can have such a profound effect on us. To have such insurmountable and ambiguous emotionality demystified is so so so cathartic. To having that feeling of being understood. What I’M trying to use language to tell you is that I appreciate you a lot. I share a lot of your philosophies and sometimes they can be a bit anti-status quo so it brings me comfort to know I’m not alone in my thinking/feeling. I think about the function of philosophy a lot, and just learning in general. We say it a lot to where it becomes stale, the “We must learn!” just seems a bit vague. I’ve learned religion, history, philosophy, science are all one in the same in their goals at times. To make sense of the world, to eliminate further suffering. philosophy eases the mind, gives the mind new tools to help cope with how troubling existence can be at times. Existence can make some even question their will to want to stay on this earth, which is why we need philosophy. Not as a means to conversationally make others feel inferior, to make yourself feel big and powerful (by this definition this is basically a textbook bully😅) Anyway I work as a barista and it’s super late and I’m still trying to close up shop so I’ll end this comment. Please continue to make UA-cam videos for as long you feel inspired to because it brings me great comfort
You got it Zoey! So glad that my work is comforting to you. :)
What a beautiful comment!
Thank you for this comment! Great insights my friend
Your content is undeniably useful to the students of the world. Love you Robin!
I love the Video format.
About the philsosophical terminology topic. The creation of these terminologies tries to fixate a certain complicated concept into a single word, so that it doesnt get even more convoluted. The issue oftentimes is, that (especially in Philosophy) these concepts have lead to more and more background knowledge needed about certain areas of Scientific/Artistic disciplines.
I think this case can be descibed best by an analogy. Philosophy would be a tall building, that is getting larger and larger, as even more and more levels are getting added. For someone nowadays to explore that tower, it would take ages, because over the course of thousands of years, this building has been build. Oftentimes out of materials that we just cant comprehend at first (metaphorically and literally). If you enter this building you are surrounded by weird shapes, furniture and rooms from so many places and times, that you cant grasp it.
This exact problem is present in philosophy, even moreso then other disciplines. The reason for that, is that Philosophy deals with questions, that just need a lot of concept and structure building. You are literally trying to explain fundamental questions, that try to integrate all other sciences at once, and have the claim to be used universally. Just imagine yourself a cake, which represents the reality (just take this word as it is, im not trying to play 4D-Chess with this Term). Every single piece of this cake, is a discipline. Biology, Physics, Sociology, Literature, Psychology etc. all are part of this whole cake. Each of them representing a small part in our vast reality, that they try to explore.
Now a Philosophical theory, that wants to explain/answer a fundamental question, needs to basically be all of those cake pieces in one. Because if it doesnt, its not universally acceptable. As we know Life and the Universe are so complicated, that disciplines needs to heavily specialize, to even try to grasp all of the possible topics. So building such a theory, requires a vast ammount of knowledge in all these different disciplines. Not only that, you need to try to create new ones, or synthesize all of them. And well this Task is a task for not only a single lifetime, but a Task for the eternity of the human kind, thats why the Philosophical tower is a project, without an ending.
This all sounds great, but like i said, the issue still persists. If you want to enter Philosophy, it get more and more complicated, because theories themselves get more and more complicated. As Humans get more knowledge about other parts of life and environment around us, these knowledges have to be involved in some way in Philosopical discourses. But for just a regular person, even a philosophy student nowadays, this all is just a convoluted jungle of different words, that have 50 meanings in different contexts, which are then synthesized again with other words and concepts that themselves have 50 meanings. To decipher all the semantic meanings is an impossible task.
What Philosophy has to do, is not dumb down, thats not my point. But it needs to try to be clear in their wording. Thats why i love Wittgenstein. Yes he is difficult, and even thats an understatement. But what i have to say, is that i myself found it more enjoyable reading him, then Kant for example. Wittgenstein is soo precise in the things he is trying to say, that i personally believe Philosophy needs more clear wording, and precise meanings.
Yeah, but I hated the novel.
love your content, stay tuned on philosophy
... I'm no philosopher but I legit do think faster than I talk 😂 it's a problem, sometimes I've been known to just leave out large chunks of sentences because I've forgotten that I haven't said that yet and I'm already thinking about the next thing
Do this so much that it isn't even the least bit abnormal to me. Was telling my daughter the other day I can't help but argue with myself.
Hi robin , for someone who is interested in philoshphy and want to know more abt it in more or less profound way , wold you suggest a booklist or a roadmap to follow ? i am currently reading the story of philosophy by will durant and i dont know what to proceed next ..
As an obscurantisme terroriste myself I always like to say 'without enough hydrocoptic marzel vanes and a decent ambifacient lunar wane shaft you will get unwanted side fumbling'.
This is a great video. We will continue supporting you and your channel no matter what.
What's the name of the book in the thumbnail
I want to see the Jonathan side of this conversation.
"Number 2: They like to bring books to parties" - such precise prediction 😄
And they LOVE to quote everything, I remember having a conversation with a philosophy student, and they would quote a different philosopher in each sentence until I asked them; Yeah, but what do you think?
❤I really like your content.
The mathematician Edward Kasner said that “Mathematics is the science which uses easy words for hard ideas” and based on this video and philosophy I’ve read I’d have to say that philosophy is like the humanities equivalent of this lol
Kant is so obscure he "can't" be found.
loved the video! i’ll be patiently waiting for robin to call jonathan at 5 am
I'll definitely call him soon. Stay tuned for our whack conversation in the next episode.
Absolutely on point! This is a perfect form of video essay: like a socratic dialogue. Philosophy students do bring books to parties...(I do sometimes 🤫).
It’s literally a monologue. It’s not Socratic at all.
@@TheChocolateChikenmost people can understand what the other person is saying based off this. Ever listened into a conversation on the phone?
Been following you since a long time. Your content never disappoints❤
One of the most imaginative, cinematic and captivating pieces of digital content I've ever seen. Something so simplistic and so boring turned so profound (in both the French and the English denomination).
Loved watching this phone call haha... it would indeed be ideal if philosophers used ordinary language in their works, as we all should be able to contemplate the higher things in life together.
Oh! I can bring books to parties? Never thought of doing that!
I'm guessing that's not the lesson I should've learned from this. Ha!
LOL - very good! "They like to travel back to the 20th century..." most of my life was in the 20th century. LOL Yes, indeed, it was very far away! LOL and the new term "Obscurantisme Terroriste." If you want some Obscurantisme Terroriste try taking accounting. I think the teachers like to get their rocks off by watching the students try to get their heads around the accounting definitions of words like "charge" and "credit" as we try to meld them with the lay definitions. I was half way through my term when I figured out that they were actually speaking a foreign language. The teachers won't clue you in. Well, it is sad that teachers are just as egotistical and tricky today as they were all the way back in the 20th century! LOL 😂
Why did you roast both yourself and your entire audience base simultaneously? Egregious.
😸 you definitely have talent into creative manus scripts.
I just got into philosophy and I'm loving it so much, it's like opening a new door that combines everything from literature, science, religion, physics... etc
increíble!! gracias por tu contenido, nunca me pierdo ningún video 😸
I really love this video! It's so creative! Its omniscient viewer like quality made it much more interesting!!
yesss its cool 🎉
This video is particularly coming at a right time as I have just finished tackling René Descartes Meditations on First Philosophy.
Idealists are the most practical. The rest of the world just hasn’t caught on. 😊
idk why he reminds me of jughead from riverdale 😭 anyways love you robin🩷
I'm not a philosophy student but i still bring books to parties
I really liked this format Robin thank you!
ahahaha that's exactly how i was sitting. im cracking upp
I really liked this video format!!
This was such a fun format, great video :)
Felt like a stalker! Love the camera angle
I love this channel
Trouver quelqu'un comme vous obsédé par la philosophie l'art c'est un honneur merci
While my major was in chemistry, I'm a polymath by inclination. While taking a management of organizational behavior course, I was amused by how certain terms were used in a different context, like wondering what outer-shell electrons had to do with positive encouragement of employees (valences).
Nice idea/video but I think you're mixing up technical difficulty (such as French) with not actually having anything meaningful to say (such as Heidegger, Benjamin etc.).
It depends on the philosopher, and yes, unfortunately Benjamin and Heidegger both fall into the «not having a lot to say » camp.
🙄