As someone who feels disconnected with a lot of the philosophical/political extremism of my generation, you two are currently a much needed voice of reason for me. I have especially experienced the friendship problems of conversational landmines when that shouldn't be the norm at all, I've felt a great deal of anxiety in this area. Thank you for this.
Let's hope he figured out that he and those who agree with him are the lone arbiters of what is and isn't art. He's within his right to not like De Koenig, just as those of us who enjoy DK's work are free to disagree with Scrunton and his ilk. If Conservatism means replacing Foucalt with Scrunton, let's not cry too many tears for his death and the death of the ideology he represented
I've been on a huge Scruton reading binge. He was a great asset to the world and is surely missed. I hope to pick up his mantle out of respect for him. I'm making it my goal to make the world more beautiful and to show the world beauty the way he did. RIP.
Once I would have turned to BBC R4 for great mind food like this interview but sadly those days are long gone so thankful for YT/AEI/ the great Christina and the insanely under stated and brilliant Sir Scruton
sorry to be pedantic but he's Sir Roger, not Sir Scruton, because that's how it works with a knighthood. To a British ear Sir Scruton sounds ridiculous :-) Nobody could quarrel with "insanely understated and brilliant" though
I attend Wimbledon college of art in London currently its painting Honours Degree is ranked second in the world and the statements made in this video regarding art in the contemporary world are wholly inaccurate. One of my colleagues is 19 years old and produces paintings that bare comparison with Rembrandt and the Dutch masters. Yes there are others who are of a more conceptual approach however what is not discussed in this video is the validity of examining the darker side of the human condition. Art is about celebrating the transcendental nature of life but it is equally valid for an artist to look at the opposite side of our species.
having recently graduated from architecture school, i could not agree more in regards to post-modernist literature being a secret language and completely lacking in clarity.
"The principles are deduced from the particulars and not the other way around." That quote, right there, may be the best part of intellectually responsible conservatism. I say this as a center-left person who greatly respects the best parts of conservatism. Roger Scruton is a treasure.
Camille Paglia speaking in Georgetown pointed out that these classical English Lit writers weren't any establishment or patriarchy. Rather, Dante and others were weirdos, depressives, insane, outcasts. They developed extraordinary skills and talents of expression that became recognized by The Masses and later perhaps acknowledged by elites. Van Gogh wasn't admired except by his brother or close friends until after his death. Shakespeare (as little as I know his works) mocked the royals, hubris, and wrote in common language and slang, for the people. ------- Paglia also brought up positives and negatives about Marx & Marxists with Peterson. ------- Aayan Hirsi Ali is a person who *should* be a hero of the Left, vs dogmatic Islamic fundamentalism, but since "conservatives" such as Dubya Bush and his cheering squad attacked Iraq and others in the Middle East - partly by leveraging Islamic crazies - that drives The Left to knee jerk automatically defend those brown/olive skin non-white victims, while ignoring or denying content and context.
I've loved Christina since The War Against Boys. It's nice to see she is just as sharp and lovely while interviewing as she is in print. Great listener and observer. I'm glad the UA-cam algorithm brought her interviews to me. I look forward to the rest.
Genius! This is the expression i will use a lot, from now on, when describing post-modernism, marxism, nihilism, materialism and so on: *crime against the human soul*
I'm very grateful to Sir Roger Scruton. Although I graduated from the universities of Leiden and Utrecht, I never had much liking for books about philosophy. The books of Sir Roger Scruton changed this. Many thanks and best wishes from the Netherlands.
Thank you very much for this interview. Being a self-taught person I keep fresh my sense of awe an need of thankfulness. Thank you again for the generosity of sharing your knowledge. From Buenos Aires , Argentina.
Thank you for this conversation. It's very soothing to hear ideas discussed reasonably and with perspective and humility, with humanity and kindness. Without histrionics, deafness, virtue signalling, censoriousness and outage. I am indeed edified. Thank you
I love this; much of the thoughts I've had myself, especially about architecture of today and the fools reiterating jargon... everything about education... It is so refreshing to listen to people who make the same realizations.
Tracy Emin's bed is BEAUTIFUL! It's honesty makes it beautiful; it is as beautiful as life itself. She is one of the great artists of our time. If you can't see that, then you're propably blinded by your own convictions.
Scruton’s wisdom focuses on the things we should celebrate, as well as the complaints that usually makeup these interviews. For this I find him particularly refreshing
24:27 - I just thought it was a given, what I thought when I entered uni: this place is full of PhDs and Profs, I know almost nothing, and I need to be open to learning and take greatest care over what I'm submitting to make sure I'm not wasting their time. The idea that I should come in and tell faculty what's appropriate for me and my selfhood to be learning. Urgh!
To both of you, Thank you for your work and generosity in sharing such an interesting and thoughtful conversation between yourselves, two first class scholars. I think this is required listening.
Thanks for the great interview Christina, Does anyone else feel a new loosely defined center forming around the loud polarization? My fingers are crossed that 2017 will go down as the year we develop online conversational ethics which is to say you don't get a pass from the golden rule just because someone can't punch you through the screen yet. I mean when is the last time you told someone at a bar GFKYS or drink bleach? HA. I'll look forward to reading Roger's book
Scruton has a wonderful way of discriminating knowledge and wisdom without being judgemental. Anyone offended by his words is lacking the open mind to receive them.
Thank you Christina Hoff Sommers, for this presentation of Sir Roger Scruton, I will enjoy his style And manners as a Gentleman of high Quality...! He is Inspiring ,soft spoken and very intuitive plus he could teach men to be better & absolutely not be just navel gazer especially our own...! I think that it becomes quite unhealthy & very dangerous to be so concentrate too much in our own self...!
at 17:30 the closed captions should say "like a precious doll from the playbox in the attic", not "like a precious stove from the playbooks in the attic"
When listening to them talk about architecture I wondered what Sir Roger Scruton would make of the architecture seen in science fiction films like "Blade Runner", "Ghost in the Shell", or the old SF movie "Metropolis".
I really love the quote because its very vindicative of today. "Artist going against their vocation". Where are the artist who take a stand say "this is my work and this is what my work intends." An Artist is a director of their vision and if you are not the artist, then you cannot direct that vision.
I would have enjoyed a conversation from these two great thinkers on the relation between income salary and the living cost. How can people find beauty if they are struggling to live?!
I'm really not sure that Sir Roger is a Conservative, small 'c' perhaps. He seems to me a Christian, and very much one of the Anglican/Catholic persuasion. His admiration for the transcendent divine reality is striking and he encourages me to ponder the intrinsic beauty of the human person, 'created in the image'. Nar laga Dhia thu.
If not Scruton, then who is a Conservative? He seems to be the only one actually claiming to be a Conservative, can you clarify what you mean with the upper and lower case, and provide an example to distinguish them?
The people Sir Roger is talking about (angry student activists and their elders lost in post-modernist LARPing and experimentation) would be outraged at how Sir Roger-- in their view-- mischaracterised their behaviour and central impetus. See, THEY don't feel they're mindlessly destroying that which they oppose. They don't feel they are only advertising what they dislike and not showing what they love. Quite the opposite. They feel they are passionately protecting all they love from the forces which threaten its beautiful bloom and progression (personal freedom, sexual revolution, experimenting with identity, socialism, half-baked belief in Utopia, equality, minority groups in their country who need advocacy, connection of people all over the globe, the environment etc). Anything that threatens THEIR version of conserving and nurturing the things which THEY value is deemed immediately to come from wrong side of history' and they fight it in order to conserve THEIR values and skewed world view. They don't see it that way of course and seeing every point from their point of view was such fun-- I was playing Devil's Advocate the whole way through this great interview as if my life depended on it. Great fun and I highly recommend people go 'undercover' and try and see how well they can stealthily merge with their ideological, philosophical or political adversaries and truly understand how they'd react or deal with things in debate. Thank you for this upload, much better than a crossword puzzle when it comes to mental exercise. :)
*English is not my native language. It is the fifth language I learned later in college. If you have noted another faux pas I will appreciate if you will deign to correct me.
Edmund Burke (/ˈbɜːrk/; 12 January [NS] 1729 - 9 July 1797) was an Anglo-Irish statesman and philosopher. Born in Dublin, Burke served as a member of parliament (MP) between 1766 and 1794 in the House of Commons
My favorite line re politics From the film 'A matter of life and death' David Niven saying over the radio From his Lancaster on fire 'Conservative by nature Labor by experience'
I agree that one of the main functions of art is to reconcile our tragic existence through the beauty of a new perspective. What I don't agree with Roger on is his assumption that its all antagonistic to tradition. There were a few mid-century movements like Gutai in Japan or the New York School (abstract expressionsts) which derive from a counter-culture perspective, but over the years just like most things: they have found their place within society. No longer are these recieved as something repulsive or disgraceful, rather, just like classical painting, a unique take on the same thing we call life
It is perfectly obvious that many students today are not suited to the intellectual environment a University fosters. The whole point is one is exposed to a wealth of ideas and thoughts that require effort to understand and meaningfully explain. All sorts of information is there to be sought, marshalled and utilised to help one understand the world we live in. Why do we think the way we do? How did we get here?! What do we know about our ancestors? What can we reliably now about them? What knowledge matters? What is knowledge? How has the past shaped our world today? Why does my society have certain rules? Do we need rules? Should we offend people? Do we have a duty to offend? Is offending people disgraceful? What matters in life? Who should we listen to? Etc etc etc. A mature person asks questions and listens to the answers and tries to understand what answers are important. Too many students have no concern for freedom of speech and are determined to be offended. They will learn if they adopt some humility.
Christina is a beautiful woman, it shines from inside. And I love the way Sir Roger articulates his thoughts and how he called what happened to art "the devil's work". The Royal Scottish Academy has recently put on their platform a chubby, pink haired "feminist" who's "art piece" was a to read out a diary of her perverse string on tinder one-night-stands in which she explicitly describes the "ass play" inflicted upon her victims in, for example, toilet for disabled. It was distasteful, to say the least. Disgusting. I felt sorry for the lost soul, but more so sorry for the state of the world we live in. Imagine a man on a platform reciting his degrading drunken sexual acts on women. He'd be arrested immediately. Modern art is criminal brainwash activity. It rejects anything that tries to articulate beauty for the sake of cultivating beauty. True art needs resurrection.
I just looked up Boston City Hall. That is one monstrously ugly building indeed. There are lots more like it. It's almost as though there is a camp of modern architects who are bitter, resentful people who delight in plopping these hideous buildings in the middle of beautiful spaces. EDIT: Upon further reading, I discovered it was designed in 1962. No surprise there. Just about every building designed and built in the 1960s and 1970s is a monument to ugliness that should be razed.
Wait a sec--the boomers were in their 20s, at the oldest, in the 1960s. The designers, architects, and producers of 60s hideosities were born in the first third of the 20th century, and had been at work for quite a while.
Boomers were not the designers of the 60s environment. That was the pre war generation. We were still too young. We were too busy trying to end the slaughter in Viet Namh, starting the green movement, women's movement, making great music, expanding our capacity for the appreciation of beauty, being the 1st generation in history to rage en masse against the insanity of war. Etc.
The entire modern world needs to be "Scrutonized" very closely!
As someone who feels disconnected with a lot of the philosophical/political extremism of my generation, you two are currently a much needed voice of reason for me. I have especially experienced the friendship problems of conversational landmines when that shouldn't be the norm at all, I've felt a great deal of anxiety in this area. Thank you for this.
A great man Roger Scruton has
left the field. Much Respect.
Rest in Peace, and thank you....
Let's hope he figured out that he and those who agree with him are the lone arbiters of what is and isn't art. He's within his right to not like De Koenig, just as those of us who enjoy DK's work are free to disagree with Scrunton and his ilk. If Conservatism means replacing Foucalt with Scrunton, let's not cry too many tears for his death and the death of the ideology he represented
@@MechaJutaro HAHAHA..😂😂🤣 What a cynical comment! How is life as an underdog?😭
I felt like I was sitting at the grown up table.
cambridge123456789 such a rare feeling these days
You were!
---at a retirement home for the terminally bitter maybe. D.A., NYC
I would not be invited to that table 🤔🙁
I had to look up the word 'mansard'. 🙈
I LOVE THAT TABLE ... otherwise , BETTER a la MacDonals .
I've been on a huge Scruton reading binge. He was a great asset to the world and is surely missed. I hope to pick up his mantle out of respect for him. I'm making it my goal to make the world more beautiful and to show the world beauty the way he did. RIP.
Scruton AND Hoff Sommers!!!! my god. what a day.
Anthony Zav
Roger Scruton is fairly old now. i actually have anxiety over him passing away. who can take his place?
Jordan Peterson? Niall Ferguson? Maybe not... Roger is the last Kenneth Clark
@@anthonyzav3769 fairly dead
Once I would have turned to BBC R4 for great mind food like this interview but sadly those days are long gone so thankful for YT/AEI/ the great Christina and the insanely under stated and brilliant Sir Scruton
"Mind food." Thank you so much for that phrase. I shan't forget it.
its great listening to self evident truths put over so concisely and of course listening to Christina Hoff Sommers soothing voice is always a pleasure
sorry to be pedantic but he's Sir Roger, not Sir Scruton, because that's how it works with a knighthood. To a British ear Sir Scruton sounds ridiculous :-)
Nobody could quarrel with "insanely understated and brilliant" though
I attend Wimbledon college of art in London currently its painting Honours Degree is ranked second in the world and the statements made in this video regarding art in the contemporary world are wholly inaccurate. One of my colleagues is 19 years old and produces paintings that bare comparison with Rembrandt and the Dutch masters. Yes there are others who are of a more conceptual approach however what is not discussed in this video is the validity of examining the darker side of the human condition. Art is about celebrating the transcendental nature of life but it is equally valid for an artist to look at the opposite side of our species.
Loved that you spoke directly to us millenials! Makes us want to participate in politics knowing people care.
having recently graduated from architecture school, i could not agree more in regards to post-modernist literature being a secret language and completely lacking in clarity.
perry K Its obscure.
totally dude
"The principles are deduced from the particulars and not the other way around."
That quote, right there, may be the best part of intellectually responsible conservatism. I say this as a center-left person who greatly respects the best parts of conservatism. Roger Scruton is a treasure.
I would love to see a conversation between Sir Roger and Camille Paglia
A stately ship on a storm-tossed sea, that.
Do you think he would manage to get a word in edgewise now and then?
Uh huh... ok...
Camille Paglia speaking in Georgetown pointed out that these classical English Lit writers weren't any establishment or patriarchy. Rather, Dante and others were weirdos, depressives, insane, outcasts. They developed extraordinary skills and talents of expression that became recognized by The Masses and later perhaps acknowledged by elites.
Van Gogh wasn't admired except by his brother or close friends until after his death.
Shakespeare (as little as I know his works) mocked the royals, hubris, and wrote in common language and slang, for the people.
-------
Paglia also brought up positives and negatives about Marx & Marxists with Peterson.
-------
Aayan Hirsi Ali is a person who *should* be a hero of the Left, vs dogmatic Islamic fundamentalism, but since "conservatives" such as Dubya Bush and his cheering squad attacked Iraq and others in the Middle East - partly by leveraging Islamic crazies - that drives The Left to knee jerk automatically defend those brown/olive skin non-white victims, while ignoring or denying content and context.
She's a bit too "manic" compared to Sir Rogers calm and thoughtful manner. I think it would be a disaster.
Wow! Two civilized people having an intelligent conversation...what a strange sight.
The fruits of 'mutual respect'~
Sir Roger, you are looking better than ever.
I've loved Christina since The War Against Boys. It's nice to see she is just as sharp and lovely while interviewing as she is in print. Great listener and observer. I'm glad the UA-cam algorithm brought her interviews to me. I look forward to the rest.
RIP to an intellectual giant.
"Love of the things that you've inherited." Sir Roger's perfect summation.
I miss this man. I keep coming back to the well. Thanks to all his videos and books.
Genius! This is the expression i will use a lot, from now on, when describing post-modernism, marxism, nihilism, materialism and so on: *crime against the human soul*
I enjoyed watching this video. Our world needs people like Roger Scruton who are deeply educated.
I'm very grateful to Sir Roger Scruton. Although I graduated from the universities of Leiden and Utrecht, I never had much liking for books about philosophy. The books of Sir Roger Scruton changed this. Many thanks and best wishes from the Netherlands.
2 of the most compelling people I listen to. Two heroes. What a combo. Love it particularly the bit about the modern architecture!
Thank you very much for this interview. Being a self-taught person I keep fresh my sense of awe an need of thankfulness. Thank you again for the generosity of sharing your knowledge.
From Buenos Aires , Argentina.
Thank you so much for this interview with Roger Scruton!
#BasedMom
Only criticism: too short of an interview.
@Gareth Lloyd - Boooooooooo!
Thank you for this conversation. It's very soothing to hear ideas discussed reasonably and with perspective and humility, with humanity and kindness. Without histrionics, deafness, virtue signalling, censoriousness and outage. I am indeed edified. Thank you
I love this; much of the thoughts I've had myself, especially about architecture of today and the fools reiterating jargon... everything about education... It is so refreshing to listen to people who make the same realizations.
Don't worry, you are never fully alone.
thanks based mom for introducing me to this man. I'm looking forward to learning more from him.
Tracy Emin's bed is BEAUTIFUL! It's honesty makes it beautiful; it is as beautiful as life itself. She is one of the great artists of our time. If you can't see that, then you're propably blinded by your own convictions.
Scruton’s wisdom focuses on the things we should celebrate, as well as the complaints that usually makeup these interviews. For this I find him particularly refreshing
Always heartwarming to hear Sir Roger speak.
“In the very depths of despair, there is beauty that redeems us!”
24:27 - I just thought it was a given, what I thought when I entered uni: this place is full of PhDs and Profs, I know almost nothing, and I need to be open to learning and take greatest care over what I'm submitting to make sure I'm not wasting their time. The idea that I should come in and tell faculty what's appropriate for me and my selfhood to be learning. Urgh!
Not sure how fast I can get the latest book but thank you for the conversation, it was uplifting.
Superb dialogue. Bravo. Two great minds! Thoughtful. Illuminating. Respectful. Listen, learn & emulate these wonderful individuals.
To both of you, Thank you for your work and generosity in sharing such an interesting and thoughtful conversation between yourselves, two first class scholars. I think this is required listening.
Been waiting weeks for this. Thanks very much
Conservatives that Liberals can understand. Thanks for reducing the polarization with this talk.
Thanks for the great interview Christina, Does anyone else feel a new loosely defined center forming around the loud polarization? My fingers are crossed that 2017 will go down as the year we develop online conversational ethics which is to say you don't get a pass from the golden rule just because someone can't punch you through the screen yet. I mean when is the last time you told someone at a bar GFKYS or drink bleach? HA. I'll look forward to reading Roger's book
I enjoyed listening to both of these people. Thanks for sharing.
Scruton has a wonderful way of discriminating knowledge and wisdom without being judgemental. Anyone offended by his words is lacking the open mind to receive them.
Thank You. You are Thee Guiding Light.
Love her hair!
Roger's is not bad, either; especially for a man of his age!
Stoffan2000 That's kinda sexist.
Isolation party Your hair is sexist.
Isolation party k
It's great, yeah. This is what UA-cam comment boards are all about
WOW, Love of the Actual, coming to the understanding of God's Love for us, is beautiful and part of our inheritance.
And the idiotic media in the UK have just got him sacked because he had the temerity to point out facts.
The Most important part of the interview was the last two minutes! I really wanted to know Sir Roger Scruton's view what can't be bought and sold.
Scrotum comes off as someone who is both sincere and genuine ; such personal integrity is in short supply these days...
Autocorrect is not your friend.
@@helmsscotta Given how wrinkly he is now, I disagree
@Wanterhand hilarious that you've used the word balls when the oc misnamed him Scrotum ha
Courageous & brilliant RIP sir....Dublin
Two intellectual titans. Wonderful conversation.
Thank you Christina Hoff Sommers, for this presentation of Sir Roger Scruton, I will enjoy his style And manners as a Gentleman of high Quality...! He is Inspiring ,soft spoken and very intuitive plus he could teach men to be better & absolutely not be just navel gazer especially our own...! I think that it becomes quite unhealthy & very dangerous to be so concentrate too much in our own self...!
This is excellent. Sir Roger is a very great thinker.
I would like to see a conversation between Sir Roger Scruton and Dr Jordan B Peterson .
Seems to be in the works :)
I like this interviewing. Christina is so nice!
at 17:30 the closed captions should say "like a precious doll from the playbox in the attic", not "like a precious stove from the playbooks in the attic"
she's absolutely right about Boston city hall.
*_Thirty-four minutes of Reason .....beautiful!_*
When listening to them talk about architecture I wondered what Sir Roger Scruton would make of the architecture seen in science fiction films like "Blade Runner", "Ghost in the Shell", or the old SF movie "Metropolis".
Guess!
This movies are dystopian, and the architecture matches in character.
Scruton 😊
How is it that UA-cam has managed to hide this guy from me for so long?!
Somewhere between an interview and a discussion, this was. No challenge or counterpoint, but I still enjoyed it.
I really love the quote because its very vindicative of today. "Artist going against their vocation". Where are the artist who take a stand say "this is my work and this is what my work intends." An Artist is a director of their vision and if you are not the artist, then you cannot direct that vision.
I would have enjoyed a conversation from these two great thinkers on the relation between income salary and the living cost. How can people find beauty if they are struggling to live?!
Another towering intellect to delve into. And I love his shoes! :)
I'm really not sure that Sir Roger is a Conservative, small 'c' perhaps. He seems to me a Christian, and very much one of the Anglican/Catholic persuasion. His admiration for the transcendent divine reality is striking and he encourages me to ponder the intrinsic beauty of the human person, 'created in the image'. Nar laga Dhia thu.
If not Scruton, then who is a Conservative? He seems to be the only one actually claiming to be a Conservative, can you clarify what you mean with the upper and lower case, and provide an example to distinguish them?
What a charming interview
Sir Roger, you are so sorely missed
I love Roger Scruton! "since you are so satisfied with yourself you don't need the university; here's the front door, out you go."
The people Sir Roger is talking about (angry student activists and their elders lost in post-modernist LARPing and experimentation) would be outraged at how Sir Roger-- in their view-- mischaracterised their behaviour and central impetus. See, THEY don't feel they're mindlessly destroying that which they oppose. They don't feel they are only advertising what they dislike and not showing what they love. Quite the opposite. They feel they are passionately protecting all they love from the forces which threaten its beautiful bloom and progression (personal freedom, sexual revolution, experimenting with identity, socialism, half-baked belief in Utopia, equality, minority groups in their country who need advocacy, connection of people all over the globe, the environment etc). Anything that threatens THEIR version of conserving and nurturing the things which THEY value is deemed immediately to come from wrong side of history' and they fight it in order to conserve THEIR values and skewed world view. They don't see it that way of course and seeing every point from their point of view was such fun-- I was playing Devil's Advocate the whole way through this great interview as if my life depended on it. Great fun and I highly recommend people go 'undercover' and try and see how well they can stealthily merge with their ideological, philosophical or political adversaries and truly understand how they'd react or deal with things in debate. Thank you for this upload, much better than a crossword puzzle when it comes to mental exercise. :)
*Christina Is about my age and I am head over heels in love with her*
P.S. Edited (Christina's name corrected) on Ms Emily Rosa's advice.
Your so in love with her that you don't even know her name.
Sorry, Ms Rose. I do get carried away. I will edit to correct. Thanks.
"On Ms Emily Rosa's advice" ROFL there we go again.
*English is not my native language. It is the fifth language I learned later in college. If you have noted another faux pas I will appreciate if you will deign to correct me.
Its fine, I even thought you did it on purpose to troll me ;)
Wow. Great discussion!
Please do a vid on nancy friday!
Thank you for this
My two favourite living philosophers in one video. Very nice.
Nicely lit.
I agree entirely with everything said.
Edmund Burke (/ˈbɜːrk/; 12 January [NS] 1729 - 9 July 1797) was an Anglo-Irish statesman and philosopher. Born in Dublin, Burke served as a member of parliament (MP) between 1766 and 1794 in the House of Commons
this is really good. very impressed.
Keep it up, Roger, the Scrutniy Man.
My favorite line re politics
From the film
'A matter of life and death'
David Niven saying over the radio
From his Lancaster on fire
'Conservative by nature
Labor by experience'
This is Great - thank you!
Unfortunately, the trend towards ugly modern architecture has gotten a lot worse in the last few years. We have NOT learned our lessons from the past.
💜 Mr Scrutin!
Thank you
I agree that one of the main functions of art is to reconcile our tragic existence through the beauty of a new perspective. What I don't agree with Roger on is his assumption that its all antagonistic to tradition. There were a few mid-century movements like Gutai in Japan or the New York School (abstract expressionsts) which derive from a counter-culture perspective, but over the years just like most things: they have found their place within society. No longer are these recieved as something repulsive or disgraceful, rather, just like classical painting, a unique take on the same thing we call life
>reconcile our tragic existence
Reconcile to what? Why,basically, tragic?
He went into the pit of communism and got out. Brave. Hell of a man.
What a piece of man !
"The Baby Boom generation grew into immaturity." How very well put! I was there: I was one of them. May succeeding generations forgive us!
As a millennial, I forgive the baby boomers. Forgive us as well, for we are not any better. Hopefully society doesn’t completely collapse.
It is perfectly obvious that many students today are not suited to the intellectual environment a University fosters. The whole point is one is exposed to a wealth of ideas and thoughts that require effort to understand and meaningfully explain. All sorts of information is there to be sought, marshalled and utilised to help one understand the world we live in. Why do we think the way we do? How did we get here?! What do we know about our ancestors? What can we reliably now about them? What knowledge matters? What is knowledge? How has the past shaped our world today? Why does my society have certain rules? Do we need rules? Should we offend people? Do we have a duty to offend? Is offending people disgraceful? What matters in life? Who should we listen to? Etc etc etc. A mature person asks questions and listens to the answers and tries to understand what answers are important. Too many students have no concern for freedom of speech and are determined to be offended. They will learn if they adopt some humility.
Great bit about architecture!
Christina is a beautiful woman, it shines from inside. And I love the way Sir Roger articulates his thoughts and how he called what happened to art "the devil's work".
The Royal Scottish Academy has recently put on their platform a chubby, pink haired "feminist" who's "art piece" was a to read out a diary of her perverse string on tinder one-night-stands in which she explicitly describes the "ass play" inflicted upon her victims in, for example, toilet for disabled. It was distasteful, to say the least. Disgusting. I felt sorry for the lost soul, but more so sorry for the state of the world we live in. Imagine a man on a platform reciting his degrading drunken sexual acts on women. He'd be arrested immediately.
Modern art is criminal brainwash activity. It rejects anything that tries to articulate beauty for the sake of cultivating beauty. True art needs resurrection.
could you please provide a link/reference/name of this "chubby, pink haired "feminist""?
@@Notyou010 I'm very happy to say I don't know who she was and I hope never to find out. Wasn't moved enough to want her credentials to be honest.
@@exysness where/when was this?
Christina's beautiful
I just looked up Boston City Hall. That is one monstrously ugly building indeed. There are lots more like it. It's almost as though there is a camp of modern architects who are bitter, resentful people who delight in plopping these hideous buildings in the middle of beautiful spaces. EDIT: Upon further reading, I discovered it was designed in 1962. No surprise there. Just about every building designed and built in the 1960s and 1970s is a monument to ugliness that should be razed.
I like the 70’s look 😂
Pickled sharks in tanks. Striking, yes, but redemptive art? Eh.
she's so cute why can't she be my mom
Blue Moon ok Freud
Deep question. Women are no-longer taught motherhood. People like Sommers, teach them to value everything except motherhood.
Wise words...
Christina is fucking gorgeous
Wait a sec--the boomers were in their 20s, at the oldest, in the 1960s. The designers, architects, and producers of 60s hideosities were born in the first third of the 20th century, and had been at work for quite a while.
Liberty, yo! FREEDOM!!!!
beautiful legs; and she knows it!
Boomers were not the designers of the 60s environment. That was the pre war generation. We were still too young. We were too busy trying to end the slaughter in Viet Namh, starting the green movement, women's movement, making great music, expanding our capacity for the appreciation of beauty, being the 1st generation in history to rage en masse against the insanity of war. Etc.