What Led Dostoevsky to Despise Intellectuals?

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  • čas přidán 1. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @Fiction_Beast
    @Fiction_Beast  Před 3 měsíci +62

    My book on Dostoevsky: ko-fi.com/s/d6ca4e2115

    • @alexanderwhite298
      @alexanderwhite298 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Your definition of intellectual and philosopher.are wrong, you can literally look them up.

    • @patriciofernandez6500
      @patriciofernandez6500 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@alexanderwhite298that's what an intellectual would say...

    • @alexanderwhite298
      @alexanderwhite298 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@patriciofernandez6500 being called an intellectual is not an insult.

    • @patriciofernandez6500
      @patriciofernandez6500 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@alexanderwhite298 I can't agree more

    • @KAZVorpal
      @KAZVorpal Před 2 měsíci +4

      Technically, intellectual is somebody whose profession involves mental activity instead of practical productivity. They don't generate any goods or services, in the classic sense.

  • @gaffgarion7049
    @gaffgarion7049 Před 2 měsíci +869

    The problem with intellectuals is people assume you have to be intelligent to be one.

    • @slaw1448
      @slaw1448 Před 2 měsíci +37

      I mean, why don't we just call them pseudointellectuals lol.

    • @LemonThyme1933
      @LemonThyme1933 Před 2 měsíci +18

      ​@@slaw1448I have always called them pseudo intellectuals.

    • @gaffgarion7049
      @gaffgarion7049 Před 2 měsíci +34

      @@slaw1448 Because one of the biggest advocates of the term "Pseudo intellectuals are psuedo intellectuals."

    • @joecummings1260
      @joecummings1260 Před 2 měsíci

      Now every twit with a two year degree and a two digit IQ thinks they are an intellectual.

    • @dmitryisakov8769
      @dmitryisakov8769 Před 2 měsíci +31

      No, the problem is that people don't know the difference between knowledgeable and intelligent 😂

  • @christopherlees1134
    @christopherlees1134 Před 3 měsíci +2064

    An intellectual is just a narcissist who is in love with their mind, rather than their looks.

    • @jaspernewcombe7502
      @jaspernewcombe7502 Před 3 měsíci +29

      Who wrote the books

    • @BygoneT
      @BygoneT Před 3 měsíci +154

      Modern hubris of the average person in a single comment. Lovely stuff.

    • @frowned6539
      @frowned6539 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@BygoneTThe hubris of the intellectual so dwarfs that of the common man that the chasm between becomes immeasurable. Unconcerned with practical reality, intellectual hubris is boundless, directly responsible for political philosophies that have lead to the deaths of hundreds of millions of people and the subjugation of hundreds of millions more. Untempered intellectualism is an aloof evil.

    • @RobsonSolomon
      @RobsonSolomon Před 2 měsíci +31

      I love you, God bless you, this is how I always felt about intellectuals

    • @bonafide9931
      @bonafide9931 Před 2 měsíci +35

      Resentment?

  • @edmond0073
    @edmond0073 Před 3 měsíci +1138

    “ don’t consume too many ideas to the deterioration of your mental well being and soul “ thank you brother . I really needed that .

    • @postmodernmining
      @postmodernmining Před 3 měsíci +5

      Hahahaha. James Lindsay is screwed.

    • @danielpintard7382
      @danielpintard7382 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Needed this lmao

    • @untitled2235
      @untitled2235 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@postmodernmining and all goes to your liberal intellects lol. Why are ya'll so obsessed with Marxism when all it had done is the annihilation of hundreds and millions people in order to grasp "true socialism"???

    • @novinceinhosic3531
      @novinceinhosic3531 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@untitled2235what do you mean by annihilation

    • @untitled2235
      @untitled2235 Před 2 měsíci

      @@novinceinhosic3531 yeah yt had already shadowed my comment, so I can't answer your question

  • @shawnbottom4769
    @shawnbottom4769 Před 3 měsíci +797

    There is a fine line between seeking truth through introspection and what amounts to pointless mental masturbation.

    • @ronaldmcdonald3965
      @ronaldmcdonald3965 Před 2 měsíci +18

      sounds like some of the papers I'v read

    • @stevenyafet
      @stevenyafet Před 2 měsíci +6

      And we can be one side of the line or the other in quick succession. For all the traps, conflicts, tensions, double meanings in Shakespeare, the dangers for intellectual error do not figure at all. A new and growing problem somewhat later. Tempting to blame the French 18th C of course. Could Shakespeare imagine our time? a Donald Trump? It will get worse Sam Altman notwithstanding.

    • @jhl8203
      @jhl8203 Před 2 měsíci +3

      ​@@stevenyafetSorry I don't understand what you're trying to say.

    • @holyphainesthai286
      @holyphainesthai286 Před 2 měsíci

      Fine?

    • @andreagroves8917
      @andreagroves8917 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Yes, it is hard to tell the difference between truth seeking and empty rationalization. Don’t know how others can differentiate, but my observation is that productive thinking sucks energy (as does men…mast……..), but there is also a felt sense of mild expansion, a steady hum of positive energy that endures over time, that sticks in the mind until the thought comes to a close (which also can be detected via felt sense).

  • @Damascene749
    @Damascene749 Před 2 měsíci +649

    Always remember it’s important to bring up Dostoyevsky’s Orthodox Faith.
    The Fathers of the Orthodox Church have always taught that the intellectual man, the man of worldly wisdom, is more susceptible to pride and haughtiness, therefore making it harder for him to humble his heart and even more his intellect.

  • @MrMattirving
    @MrMattirving Před 3 měsíci +943

    I wonder what he would make of modern day academia. I went back to school late in life to get a degree and was struck by the amount of rampant pseudo-intellectualism throughout the faculties. I was also amazed at how prickly people were when their ideas were challenged.
    Always good to hear you talk Dostoyevsky!

    • @not_emerald
      @not_emerald Před 3 měsíci

      He'd hate even oldschool academia. Nowadays any person can hate academia since it's so obviously corrupt

    • @ludlowaloysius
      @ludlowaloysius Před 3 měsíci +16

      maybe you just said obviously stupid things

    • @RobSoskop
      @RobSoskop Před 3 měsíci +118

      Verily, I have probably never seen as many stupid people together as at university. It was disappointing and also rather unsettling.

    • @SC-gw8np
      @SC-gw8np Před 3 měsíci +126

      Academics are trained years in sophistry to ignore what is right in front of them...they are stuck in Plato's cave.

    • @mikeycondry1493
      @mikeycondry1493 Před 3 měsíci

      there is nothing more pitiable than the state of academia today.
      no intellectual rigor, no integrity, no interest in new ideas. mostly incapable students and complacent professors

  • @yum8666
    @yum8666 Před 2 měsíci +184

    I remember when I first read C&P I felt so called out. I had finally found something I was good at, and that was thinking. I ended up riding that skill for my ego and it ended up isolating me from everyone else I was almost convinced I was better than everyone. And then Crime and punishment held up a miror to what i was becoming, and I never felt more alone and sad after that.

    • @moralfortitude...2217
      @moralfortitude...2217 Před 2 měsíci +15

      @ you recognized that & it was you not them. some never do recognize & continue blame others...that is the difference. kudos

    • @jjr1728
      @jjr1728 Před 2 měsíci

      That book was terrible. Reminded me of Catcher in the Rye. A stupid boy whining about various situations he gets himself in due to his own stupidity. The kind of book you place next to a sleeping hobo addict and plant a knife on him so the police think he's nuts when they search him

    • @slaw1448
      @slaw1448 Před 2 měsíci +6

      A lot really depends on how you define "better than everyone". More valuable in the grand scheme of things? Absolutely not. More valuable to society? Maybe. More valuable to yourself? We're all egotistical on that one. More justified to take another person's life? Depends on a lot of factors if you're a consequentialist.

    • @jennifs6868
      @jennifs6868 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I think it comes down to whether you would be willing to kill your pets and eat them in times of famine, or whether you would prefer to die. Just you. Not talking about feeding your children. The thing is, i think almost no one knows until it happens.

    • @_tamashii_
      @_tamashii_ Před 2 měsíci +1

      It is admirable that you are self-aware at all. Most would prefer to deny it, as their ego couldn't handle and would rather lie to themselves instead.

  • @FortBaker2011
    @FortBaker2011 Před 2 měsíci +185

    “Followed French philosophers on Twitter” 😂 On a serious note, thank you for this! Now I understand the respect people have for D. It’s not the poor who start bloody homicidal revolutions, it’s the oversupply of college educated yet ignorant masses.

    • @Kannot2023
      @Kannot2023 Před 2 měsíci

      If you read the history of Russia you will see that incompetent leadership mixed with conservatorism that ruined the economy and weakened the leadership and allowed the Bolsheviks to take control over the hungry massed. Peace,bread and land was the slogan of Bolsheviks. The foot soldiers of red Army didn't read Marx, but they needed peace and bread

    • @ambermoon719
      @ambermoon719 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Is this Jordan Peterson? You said bloody. 😂

    • @olafweyer859
      @olafweyer859 Před 2 měsíci +16

      I wish I remembered the author/study which "found" that civilization's collapse is caused/accompanied by an over production of elites. In this case it's intellectual elites. Watching what's happening around us and who is influental in politics, media, NGOs etc. etc... well the study seems accurate.

    • @Sos_tenuto
      @Sos_tenuto Před 2 měsíci +7

      I'm glad he didn't say "X" instead of the period correct "Twitter."

    • @acroamaticeeore
      @acroamaticeeore Před 2 měsíci +5

      Only that the soviet revolution was not a collapse. It collapsed a previous anachronistic system. The soviet system lasted for years, driven not by intellectuals mind you. Intellectuals were persecuted under the soviet regime.
      So your comment does not make much sense aside sounding cool and profound.

  • @kevinmccabe33
    @kevinmccabe33 Před 2 měsíci +87

    Those last words about overthinking to the detriment of your well being gave me shivers. Dostoyevsky is truly the pinnacle representation of the thinking man that goes so deep that he arrives back where he started, and finds love for the simple pure ways of humanity.
    Great video. ❤

  • @tadroid3858
    @tadroid3858 Před 2 měsíci +105

    There's much truth to this. I experienced this when I was an agricultural inspector for the county over 5.5 years. I learned to listen to the farmers, and I gained a huge respect for what they do, how they do it, and the BS they get from government entities.

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Před 2 měsíci +3

      My Dad had a fourth grade education, Yet when he left the farm and went into the oil business he become the superintendent of a small drilling company and without any sort of degree a petroleum engineer. Drilled hundreds of wells across the Southwest including the East Texas field, A contractor for Shell he trained dozens of college graduates, teaching them how little they had learned in school. At the same time he picked their brains of useable knowledge. At the same time he was working with drillers and roughnecks, men whose great skills were often canceling by bad personal habits. At one time he was employing more than 100 at a time. He himself was the hardest working man I have ever known.

    • @tadroid3858
      @tadroid3858 Před 2 měsíci

      @@johnschuh8616 Awesome story! Thanks.

    • @jeremyj427
      @jeremyj427 Před 2 měsíci

      @@johnschuh8616what a great testament to your dad. I’m from Corsicana and grew up there and in Longview. The men in my family were same. They knew how to do EVERYTHING for themselves. Money went in a can just in case you ever needed it. No elec or running water until the 60’s.

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Před 2 měsíci

      @@jeremyj427 I can say more about my Dad. He became quite well-to-do but when the company bought some production, his boss, who was the money guy, set up a corporation and entered into partnership with some other men in Dallas. My Dad was excluded but was offered a permanent position as Supereintendent and some royalty instead of a partnership. Then in 1940, he became ill, and he had always been healthy, got blood poisoning from a tick bite suffered in a hunting trip. It then affect his hip and he spent a lot of time off in the hospital. This was before antibiotics and he did thing like go to Hot Springs. Arkansas. But he got word and worse and came very close to death when I was about 9. And at that same time, his boss whom he had know for 20 years suddenly died, leaving half the company to his wife, who was totally ignorant of business. Luckily, his boss had written his will put the rest in the trust of the a Bank. My Dad was left out and despite the gravity of his situation no provision was made for us. in the event of his death. The Bank. however, did and continued his salary because of the implicit gentlemen’s agreement. Trouble came when the Bosses wife, whom was runaway that because of the Boss’.s alcoholic binges which often too him out of the picture for weeks at the item, actually tried to get him fired. A compromise left my dad with a Job but at half pay. plus house and maintence. He was left crippled by a hip fusion but continued full management of the wells and production with the help of just his boss’s, a disabled wwI war veteran and one other employee. Dispitemy Dad’s disability he remained very active through now in his fifties, and always active. When on still on crutches he dig a hole under the house and with my help put in a fruit cellar. and laid a sidewalk in the back yard. Already during the war he started a food garden on the side of the House.He and I worked on the house. He would do everything have to do with a six room house. Gas, electricity and rude carpentry.Replaced the wallpaper on the House. He taught me a lot but I know a tenth of what he had learned to do since his days on the farms and through his many years in the oil, business., If only he had learned the finance end of the thing. and while he was a great saver, his savings were largely savaged by his four years of illness. I could go on. And yes, he belonged to a now large vanished breed of men. Thank you for agreeing with me.

  • @roberttimofte791
    @roberttimofte791 Před 2 měsíci +26

    “Experience life out in the world not in your head.” The advice that I need to remind myself. Thank you!

  • @ishmaelforester9825
    @ishmaelforester9825 Před 3 měsíci +38

    Dostoyevsky is ultimately more emotionally and aesthetically driven. He is a great artist of profound feeling. Therefore he dislikes modern 'intellectuals' because they have no deep emotion or aesthetic vibe and they confute that skeleton coldness with wisdom or insight.

  • @thefourthbrotherkaramazov245
    @thefourthbrotherkaramazov245 Před 3 měsíci +168

    The Brothers Karamzov take on intellectuals was an amazing wrap up by Dostoevsky. In his final work, he portrays intellectualism as an illness in Ivan. Someone who is suffering from it but nonetheless redeemable.

    • @african_forum
      @african_forum Před 2 měsíci +4

      Except, intellectuals are NOT redeemable 😂

    • @filippians413
      @filippians413 Před 2 měsíci +8

      What an amazing book. I plan to read it again one day. After I finish the Bible, but that might be a couple years lmao

    • @thefourthbrotherkaramazov245
      @thefourthbrotherkaramazov245 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @filippians413 That's great, and it will be such an excellent complement to the Bible.

    • @mimszanadunstedt441
      @mimszanadunstedt441 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Rationalization is a psychological defense mechanism.

    • @slaw1448
      @slaw1448 Před 2 měsíci +7

      It's kind of hilarious that people read about Ivan and Raskolnikov and then try to apply insanity to any man driven by rationality. Dostoevsky's works are a warning about alienation from your own ideas as you try to cross your human nature in the process of achieving them, it's about the weight of the means to accomplish a goal if you overestimate yourself. The analysis in the video is more or less accurate, but none of that is a dogma against rationality - more so it is about the dangers of it if you are a reckless and detached human being. Dostoevsky didn't hate consequentialism, he hated a blind and detached form of consequentialism.

  • @user-vb3lf4lf2p
    @user-vb3lf4lf2p Před 2 měsíci +48

    “Why did he hate intellectuals?!?!”
    Have you looked at them?

  • @elforeigner3260
    @elforeigner3260 Před 2 měsíci +17

    You don’t have to be a Dostoevsky to despise intellectuals

  • @cSTEPHEN855
    @cSTEPHEN855 Před 2 měsíci +100

    This was great. Some self criticism I was able to derive with the help of this video is that I myself am a hypocrite, and seek to separate myself from others, not because they are truly less than me but because I fear the parts of myself I see in them, and that I lack their integrity in their ability to live their truth openly.

    • @andreagroves8917
      @andreagroves8917 Před 2 měsíci +5

      We are all hypocrites! That is the human condition. Such a painful admission. Nothing great is ever born without struggle over time. It is this creative lashing about that eventually births new and better life…May your conflicts be bearable and productive…

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Před 2 měsíci

      Amen.

  • @Ymirson999
    @Ymirson999 Před 2 měsíci +19

    This clip reminded me of Eric Hoffer's maxim "Scratch an intellectual and underneath you'll find an aristocrat who despises the sight and sound of the common man." But while a very good exposition, there are more than a few reasons that people retreat from the world. There's a lot of hostility in human company, a lot of maliciousness, for largely no reason at all. People are often just unkind, especially to people who are not confident in themselves and even those with strong personalities often weary of dealing with others. I do advocate not spending too much time in front of a computer, but I'm not sure other people are the answer to our problems. As often as not, they're the source.

    • @carlosminotaur
      @carlosminotaur Před 2 měsíci +3

      The hostility in human company is almost always misunderstandings, misconceptions or they are simply caught in their own movie , so that no real conversation can occur…

    • @Ymirson999
      @Ymirson999 Před 2 měsíci

      Certainly, and sometimes you can work your way through them, but that itself can be overly laborious and often not worth the effort. So while some human company is necessary, it's for good reason that real friends are few and far between.@@carlosminotaur

  • @lucasley20
    @lucasley20 Před 2 měsíci +37

    A great presentation and reminder that NOTHING has changed!

  • @alwaysgreatusa223
    @alwaysgreatusa223 Před 2 měsíci +29

    If one sees only a principle of fraternity, and not also a principle of individuality, he is looking only out his left eye. If one sees only a principle of individuality, and not also a principle of fraternity, he is looking only out his right eye. But the clearest vision of reality is only attained by one keeping both eyes open. So, open both your eyes, and then you will see both principles everywhere in constant operation and incessant competition -- it's called the human condition. This is because neither principle on its own suffices for human progress and survival.

  • @imadivergentandantinormiep7877
    @imadivergentandantinormiep7877 Před 3 měsíci +175

    Arthur Schopenhauer didn't like people in general, but if he had to choose between the company of an intellectual man and an ordinary peasant, Schopenhauer would have chosen the intellectual man

    • @majidbineshgar7156
      @majidbineshgar7156 Před 3 měsíci +77

      Schopenhauer one of the greatest philosophers of all times , loved genuine intellectuals he liked intellectuals whom hardly anyone ( specially those who claim to admire Schopenhauer )has heard of ( e.g marquis de Vauvenargues, Chamfort , Baltasar Gracián ,... ) however he loathed the " pseudo-intellectual charlatans regardless of their being famous and adored by the masses (e.g. Hegel in his time ) .

    • @imadivergentandantinormiep7877
      @imadivergentandantinormiep7877 Před 3 měsíci +20

      @@lancejohnson127 The thing is that once "the extraordinary peasant" becomes famous, he stopped being peasant and poor and stay away from ordinary peasants, that's the truth

    • @Prophecynut
      @Prophecynut Před 3 měsíci +3

      ​@@imadivergentandantinormiep7877was Jesus Christ extraordinary?

    • @mikeycondry1493
      @mikeycondry1493 Před 3 měsíci +12

      @@majidbineshgar7156hegel was a pseudo intellectual?

    • @majidbineshgar7156
      @majidbineshgar7156 Před 3 měsíci +23

      @@mikeycondry1493 According to Schopenhauer he was .

  • @giulianademedici691
    @giulianademedici691 Před 3 měsíci +14

    Thank you so much for your work''s good quality.I admire the commitment you put in it. As an addicted Dostoevsky's reader I find your contributes useful and sometimes lightening the shadowed sides in some Dostoevsky novels .Keep up the good work

  • @vdanger7669
    @vdanger7669 Před 2 měsíci +33

    This is eerily similar to the situation in America today. One party champions the "underclass" but lives in its gated community, progressive Tech bubble."

    • @daebong50
      @daebong50 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Yes, and the other party tricks the underclass and uses them to support the party leaders and their friends in their elite power and money bubbles and that includes more than anyone else the "leader" of that party.

    • @bruvva2160
      @bruvva2160 Před 2 měsíci +7

      @@daebong50 let me guess, oRanGe mAn bAD.

    • @daebong50
      @daebong50 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@bruvva2160 Just balancing out what vdanger wrote. Bad/good not the point. You and I aren’t starving. Maybe we’re in a bubble compared to those that are. Really. Best wishes to you.

    • @wtice4632
      @wtice4632 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@daebong50thats also the left

    • @daebong50
      @daebong50 Před 2 měsíci

      @@wtice4632 I agree; it's both left and right.

  • @loriedmundson782
    @loriedmundson782 Před 3 měsíci +22

    Thank you for the consistently interesting, thought provoking and many times inspirational content. Love your channel. Always been a fan of Russian literature too.

  • @eileenoconnor391
    @eileenoconnor391 Před 2 měsíci +4

    Thank you so much. Love your work. Have been away for a while. Nice to be back.

  • @johndavis2399
    @johndavis2399 Před 3 měsíci +36

    Good job!
    It was especially interesting (at 5:44) to learn that the Russian intellectuals followed European philosophers on Twitter.

    • @PS-ic4bp
      @PS-ic4bp Před 2 měsíci +9

      I think he throws these in there to distinguish listeners from commenters 😂 or to get people to go back and listen to the video again.

    • @jordiros5723
      @jordiros5723 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Hysterical "are you paying attention" moment. Love the sense of humor.

  • @spookyscaryskeleton9876
    @spookyscaryskeleton9876 Před 3 měsíci +9

    Great work. Thank You very much Fiction Beast!

  • @ivanarredondo8481
    @ivanarredondo8481 Před 3 měsíci +2

    that final part is really helpful. thanks fiction beast

  • @not_emerald
    @not_emerald Před 3 měsíci +68

    The House of the Dead/The Dead House kind of reads like Johnny Cash's prison albums in prose. And in Russia.

    • @ElonMuskrat-my8jy
      @ElonMuskrat-my8jy Před 3 měsíci +1

      That's motivation to read it.

    • @carlorizzo827
      @carlorizzo827 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Oh yes amazing. Do you recall towards the end, the "theatricals", the prisoners were allowed to put on variety shows. OMG drama queens the same in all cultures

    • @SKMikeMurphySJ
      @SKMikeMurphySJ Před 3 měsíci +3

      Hello, I'm Fydor Dostoyevsky!

    • @not_emerald
      @not_emerald Před 8 dny

      @@carlorizzo827 "inside the walls of prison my body may be, but the Lord has set my soul free"

  • @Cruxnugget
    @Cruxnugget Před 3 měsíci +11

    I really enjoyed this, thank you for putting out content that grows the mind on a macro level.

  • @nektulosnewbie
    @nektulosnewbie Před 2 měsíci +18

    I remember having to critque an essay about anti-intellectualism from an American university student in college once.
    After a good opening, the essay degenerated into a rant at common people for looking up to celebrities and football players and not their real betters: intellectuals - intellectuals like HIM.
    I summed up my critique by saying that anti-intellectualism was rife mainly because of the attitude shown in that very essay.

    • @wrath908
      @wrath908 Před 2 měsíci

      Did you get any reaction out of him? Because I imagine he wouldn't have taken it well.

    • @nektulosnewbie
      @nektulosnewbie Před 2 měsíci

      @@wrath908 it was a topic essay for the course. I didn't go to his uni.

  • @uncleusuh
    @uncleusuh Před 3 měsíci +9

    Thanks for this beautiful content.

  • @JimmyDThing
    @JimmyDThing Před 3 měsíci +7

    This is a fantastic video my friend.

  • @lilyghassemzadeh
    @lilyghassemzadeh Před 2 měsíci +3

    Thank you very much for the precious content.

  • @furtherdefinitions1
    @furtherdefinitions1 Před 2 měsíci +17

    “[beware that] “many of what are called social problems are differences between the theories of intellectuals and the realities of the world-differences which many intellectuals interpret to mean that it is the real world that is wrong and needs changing.”
    ― Thomas Sowell, Intellectuals and Society

  • @TheTricksterCoyote
    @TheTricksterCoyote Před 2 měsíci +1

    Great vid! Thanks for making this. Brothers Karamazov is my favorite novel and I love hearing more about Dostoevsky and the context of his writings. Take care!

  • @MrMarktrumble
    @MrMarktrumble Před 3 měsíci +8

    that was an entertaining explanation that made sense. Thank you

  • @AhmadKhan-lh3vu
    @AhmadKhan-lh3vu Před 3 měsíci +6

    The only CZcams channel I commented on! Really love you dear.. ❤

  • @cheri238
    @cheri238 Před 3 měsíci +7

    Fiction Beast, you are the best.
    I never can disagree with your ability to thoroughly inspire more people to read books of literature of great depth.
    🙏❤️🌏🌿🕊🎵🎶🎵

  • @brownvoltaire2722
    @brownvoltaire2722 Před měsícem

    i never realized i needed this,thanks for sharing❤

  • @nicholaskostopulos8631
    @nicholaskostopulos8631 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Excellent documentary that will lead me to read his novels, especially “Notes from Underground “. Thank you

  • @kingofthorns203
    @kingofthorns203 Před 2 měsíci +6

    What a coincidence to have come across this video as I'm in the middle of Crime and Punishment! Darrick Taylor also just published a series on Dostoevsky in Crisis magazine that I highly recommend.

  • @antont229
    @antont229 Před 3 měsíci +51

    Thank you man.
    The economic philosopher Nassim Taleb thinks similarly about intellectuals. He criticises that they don’t „own“ the ideas that they preach. In essence they don’t have to take risks for their living, which is just inherently wrong.
    Which reflects the points of lacking Accountability and Dishonesty

    • @manlikeJoe1010
      @manlikeJoe1010 Před 3 měsíci +9

      Please never compare Dostoesvky with that hack Taleb ever again...

    • @antont229
      @antont229 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@manlikeJoe1010 why do you think Taleb is a hack?

    • @cardiox5051
      @cardiox5051 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Cause he is a hypocrite for stating something he is a victim of himself. All ideas are based upon other ideas.

    • @marianhunt8899
      @marianhunt8899 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Sadly, neither do other business or religious people 'own' their mistakes. It's part of human nature I think. Taking responsibility is difficult for all humans.

    • @juanramonsilva1067
      @juanramonsilva1067 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@cardiox5051And that’s why just because someone says something that is good, doesn’t mean that the person saying it is good.

  • @victorvick1076
    @victorvick1076 Před měsícem

    Great intro to Mr. D. You've convinced me to start reading his works, thanks!

  • @kevinwhelan9607
    @kevinwhelan9607 Před měsícem

    This was excellent- thanks for posting.

  • @BC-wo5sc
    @BC-wo5sc Před 2 měsíci +17

    That was amazing. Thank you!
    I couldn't help but think the entire time about the modern left, of which I once smugly identified with.
    That was until a few years ago when I got out of my echo chamber in the city and away from my fellow pretentious metropolitan elites, and moved a couple of thousand kilometres away to the countryside.
    Basically all of my beliefs were swiftly challenged and easily dissolved after being exposed to more 'real people' and the real world outside of my bubble.
    It was humbling and so necessary.

    • @rorymosley9356
      @rorymosley9356 Před 2 měsíci +9

      What necessarily makes one group of people more “real” than another though? Simply because certain people live a certain way does not make their existence false. And don’t we all live in bubbles? We perceive the world which we interact with. A person living on a farm in Iowa will see the world differently than a person living in the South Bronx. One lives in a bubble surrounded by rural and agricultural life while the other lives in a bubble surrounded by an urban environment. Is one of their lives more worthwhile than the other? Just some food for thought.

    • @Hermeneus778
      @Hermeneus778 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@rorymosley9356yes.

    • @JesusIsKingAndSavior
      @JesusIsKingAndSavior Před 2 měsíci +2

      Simple answer. Iowa rural landscape is the God bestowed reflection of work planted in the earth and nurtured by the miracle of the spark of life in combination with the care taking of humanity to produce abundance and sustain life. There's not the confusion of the ultimately baseless opinions of a scab like concrete social environment keeping one closed in between the earth and sky. One is more or less left alone with their thoughts and God's creation. After high school I lived in a college town-intellectual small city, until my early 30s, and in that span of 12 years observed everyone I knew and myself become more debased and literally crazy. At 30-31 I moved to a rural community and the last ten years have reverted back to sanity and peace, while finding everyone I knew who moved to even larger cities become unglued and hateful and increasingly debased. I'd move to a city in a second if it were 100 yrs ago. Now- No way. Zero benfits and everything I don't want in society

    • @jbellflower83
      @jbellflower83 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I think Cities by nature bring out the worst in ppl. Some of my worst experiences have been in cities. As soon as I get into a city there's this claustrophobic feeling that overtakes me. Just the overwhelming feeling of flesh everywhere I look surrounded by concrete and steel. The ppl are nasty and spiteful. Contrast that to country life, where ppl are more spread out, calmer and (to my experience anyway) friendlier. I think it's that closed-in feeling in a city that brings out the worst in ppl. I honestly don't understand anybody who prefers city life to country life. I enjoy the freedom of living in the country.

  • @hell-hollowfarmer41
    @hell-hollowfarmer41 Před 3 měsíci +8

    Incredibly thought-provoking video as always; but I must say the paintings you showed during the video depicting Russian life spoke so deeply to this simple farmer that I will doubtless learn how to do an image search so as to find prints. And will of course continue listening to audiobooks of Dostoevsky's work while farming my land without equipment and staying strong by eating the Lamb. Eat the lamb!

  • @thatdberad
    @thatdberad Před měsícem +1

    I’ve slowly absorbed many ideas ideas the last few years. mostly following writers and not any -isms. always tell myself, it’s okay to get lost in one, maybe feel down for a few days, but always come back up for air and see it in context of real life not ideal life. Through this you can listen and take what you like out of anything and still come out clear minded and yourself.
    Great video, definitely subscribing 😁

  • @Batosai11489
    @Batosai11489 Před 3 měsíci +16

    It sounds like he disliked the left wing intellectuals of the late enlightenment era to me, not intellectuals in general. He definitely did pick the most loathsome and contemptible ones. The ones who pretend to ally with the poor but really just say it to appear magnanimous or because it was popular. I think we all can understand that loathing right now (except poor has been replaced with other pretend victims like racial minorities, gays, and women).

    • @robfromvan
      @robfromvan Před 2 měsíci

      Left wing intellectuals are pseudo-intellectuals and cause vast amounts of harm to millions of people. For example, Karl Marx’s ideas caused over 100 million people to die because of Communism, and even today pseudo-intellectuals like Noam Chomsky keep vouching for these ideas and are apologists for left-wingers like Pol Pot just because they meant well and had good intentions. Meanwhile true intellectuals like Milton Friedman or Thomas Sowell whose ideas are based on empiricism and are results-driven are not even well-known and are derided by mass media, even though the net result of their ideas are that millions of people all over the world have escaped and are continuing to escape grinding poverty, the same type that Karl Marx’s ideas produce.

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 Před 2 měsíci

      Good post and I have a special type of hatred for the race hustlers . The folks that have lined their pockets for decades while making the group they supposedly care about worse

    • @novinceinhosic3531
      @novinceinhosic3531 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@robfromvanJesus Christ, in what parallel world do you live?

    • @novinceinhosic3531
      @novinceinhosic3531 Před 2 měsíci

      You can make these analogies if you don't know the historical context.
      Tsarist Russia was an autocracy led by an absolute monarch who controlled all the aspects of social life through the Russian Orthodox Church that acted as the propaganda machine for the Christian population in order to support the personal interests of the Tsar and of the Russian nobles.
      People lived in extreme poverty, state and class brutality and in constant wars of expansion. Russian intellectuals, which were a sort of middle class, saw how Western middle class lived in countries where bourgeois revolutions took place and liberal values prevailed over traditional christian values and absolutism. They wanted to live in such society too, which benefited them, and to improve image of their people, but this could not be possible if the social order was not allowing for reform. He said that they were on the side of the masses not in the sense that they view themselves as equal to them, they view them as people who deserve rights and opportunities, those rights and opportunities which were repressed by the feudal order.

    • @robfromvan
      @robfromvan Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@novinceinhosic3531 Pol Pot went to the Sarbong, one of the finest schools in France, to get all his high-minded ideas. Then he went back to Cambodia, became the leader, put all those ideas into practice and killed off 1/3 of the population in the name of income equality and socials justice. Similarly Karl Marx’s ideas killed off over 100 million people in USSR, China, Cambodia, Vietnam, and practically every country in Africa, and also Cuba. This is because his ideas were not empirical, they were emotional.

  • @anthonyveblen3745
    @anthonyveblen3745 Před 3 měsíci +9

    That was great man, much appreciated.

  • @davidronin1536
    @davidronin1536 Před 3 měsíci +6

    II just ordered the book this video is based on. I'm really looking forward to reading it.

  • @fbcpraise
    @fbcpraise Před měsícem

    Very well done. I see a little of why his work is so respected. Thank you!

  • @ashinch0r
    @ashinch0r Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent analysis and insight. Great video!

  • @routaboss3824
    @routaboss3824 Před 3 měsíci +23

    you're the best my guy really love your contents!

  • @TheRealSteveMay
    @TheRealSteveMay Před 2 měsíci +8

    Its a mistake to assert that being a low status peasant precludes one from also being an intellectual. Plenty of no status poors are highly intelligent and exercise their intelligence regularly. Many of them are far more concerned with ideas and abstractions than they are with the tasks of daily life or their jobs, which imo qualifies them as intellectuals. Many of these people do the labor intensive jobs most people associate with low status employment, and are not strangers to the stark realities that come with their lifestyle/position.
    I'm just pointing it out because i think its worth bearing in mind. It often seems like we assume that highly intelligent people will almost certainly achieve status and economic success that reflects their abilities, but i think that more often than not they achieve nothing more than the common man does.

    • @novinceinhosic3531
      @novinceinhosic3531 Před 2 měsíci

      Here the intellectual is presented as a lifestyle or as a general attitude towards life.

    • @Bleilock1
      @Bleilock1 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Shhhh bro, you are ruining their ideology, hell maybe they'll even figure lut that dostoyevski was an intellectual himself

    • @jennifs6868
      @jennifs6868 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Bleilock1i am so having buyer’s remorse about brothers K after reading these comments. Not sure whether to start reading, or gift it….

  • @LawrenceKennard
    @LawrenceKennard Před 2 měsíci

    This is the most insightful post! You earned it sub here😊

  • @Lea-ns3ef
    @Lea-ns3ef Před 2 měsíci +2

    Liked it very much. I am reading his Diaries and I am amazed to see how relevant his ideas are today .

  • @paulwolstenholme1673
    @paulwolstenholme1673 Před 3 měsíci +4

    I found this to be very helpful...so thanks.

  • @sayantandas1164
    @sayantandas1164 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Absolutely amazing

  • @hayatkaidi7889
    @hayatkaidi7889 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Missed these videos 😍

  • @BIB126
    @BIB126 Před 2 měsíci

    Amazing video sir! Great work

  • @alwaysgreatusa223
    @alwaysgreatusa223 Před 2 měsíci +9

    Did he really believe that ordinary criminals took responsibility for their crimes ? I've spent some time in jail myself, and I never met even one inmate who confessed his crime. To a man, they are all completely innocent. Lol

    • @salami155
      @salami155 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Did you really believe that ordinary criminals of today would have the same upbringing and culture of 19th century Russian citizens?

    • @alwaysgreatusa223
      @alwaysgreatusa223 Před 2 měsíci

      @@salami155 Criminals are criminals

  • @KoKoJoBlacKSnaKe
    @KoKoJoBlacKSnaKe Před 2 měsíci

    nice video and I look forward to watching others

  • @tamiressoares9303
    @tamiressoares9303 Před 2 měsíci

    This is so good and refreshing ❤

  • @WilliamDoyle-rb6lt
    @WilliamDoyle-rb6lt Před 3 měsíci +4

    Excellent presentation.

  • @dijonstreak
    @dijonstreak Před 3 měsíci +9

    Awesome dude !! GREAT Presentaion on one of my Favorite Wroters of all time .just happened to come across his Novel Crime and Punishment when i was 18 and had a great everlasting impat on me..i STILL haven;t finshed The Brothers Karamazov. !!!!

    • @MrBallynally2
      @MrBallynally2 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Congrats on finding 'crime and punishment' at such young age. Same w me. It is his best novel. Bros K is rather convoluted. Too many ideas spun out.

  • @ChristianStout
    @ChristianStout Před měsícem +2

    "An open mind is like a fortress with its gates unbarred and unguarded."
    -Brother Dostoevsky, probably

  • @ianwilliams8475
    @ianwilliams8475 Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent, refreshing really enjoyed that 😀

  • @rickywinthrop
    @rickywinthrop Před 2 měsíci +27

    I'm a plumber and a self identified intellectual. I spend my days building and designing and toiling with my hands in the filth and dirt to stay gounded (and generate income)and use my brain by night to explore, create and research in an attempt to elevate above all that and breathe the rarified air of thought, reason and theory. That is the frequency of my life, what keeps me balanced and gives me meaning. It has also made me better at both things and I am slowly becoming a force to be reckoned with. People who dont like intellectuals seem to be people without a complex interior life and I find it very hard to relate to them. It must be nice though and I often wish it was in my nature as a skeptical and curious mind can never be turned off, regardless how much dirt gets under my fingernails. Great video!

    • @andreagroves8917
      @andreagroves8917 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I relate to your description of inner thought exploration vs. outer work, each dimension bootstrapping the other. Over time the two very different realities permeate each other somewhat but not completely. My goal is to facilitate the integration to the degree that thinking facilitates my working (in the real world), and working incites my thinking. With a good bit of extra time left for people. I imagine that eventually I will be able to behave in the world instinctually while feeling integrated much of the time.
      My path began as a child too young for school, walking around the block out of boredom, waiting for the older neighborhood kids to get back. I recall imagining my view of experience as a limited porthole. Why THIS body, THIS limited view of space and time?

    • @didjeikdjdjdjdj137
      @didjeikdjdjdjdj137 Před 2 měsíci

      It's not that others lack a complex interior, It's that you have an inferiority complex.

    • @thehighlightsreel953
      @thehighlightsreel953 Před 2 měsíci

      Everyone has a complex interior life.

    • @rickywinthrop
      @rickywinthrop Před 2 měsíci +1

      @thehighlightsreel953 Everyone has an interior life of some depth I would assume but as someone who meets a vast number of new people for work and spends enough time with most of them to develop a sense of where they are at and how they think...I would say a complex interior life is certainly not universal or a given in the human species. At least 30% of people I meet seem to be running on their amygdala alone about 90% of the time lol. And for the record I don't place myself at the top of the internal complexity list by any means but clearly have enough going on inside to tell the difference when I meet an NPC type out in the world. My experience training apprentices also exposes me to a wide variety of learning and communication styles which gives me an even greater understanding of the way different minds work and how best to approach them in a teaching capacity. Complexity can also be learned in my experience but does not come as standard equipment right out of the womb.

    • @wtice4632
      @wtice4632 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@rickywinthropA plumber whos full of sh*t, ironic.

  • @cooperstephens147
    @cooperstephens147 Před 2 měsíci +4

    TLDR: “Touch grass, bro.”

  • @waynesutherland-rs6ct
    @waynesutherland-rs6ct Před 2 měsíci

    Thankyou so much for your observations of life

  • @onliwankannoli
    @onliwankannoli Před 2 měsíci +2

    I like smart people, but I do rather dislike people that think they are smart - wrongly or rightly.

  • @nicbahtin4774
    @nicbahtin4774 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Kind of reminds me of the great Thomas Sowell who has a life time of debunking intellectuals with quotes like “many of what are called social problems are differences between the theories of intellectuals and the realities of the world-differences which many intellectuals interpret to mean that it is the real world that is wrong and needs changing."

  • @asielnorton345
    @asielnorton345 Před 3 měsíci +24

    i dont think the main idea of dostoyevsky is taking responsibility. one could potentially make that argument about sartre. you cannot divorce dostoyevsky from christianity. his main focus is redemption through faith. his intellectual characters tie themselves in knots, whereas his simple good characters are universally religious in nature.

    • @Nick-qf7vt
      @Nick-qf7vt Před 3 měsíci +14

      Very true. People who try to separate Dostoevsky's work from his Christianity will forever miss the point.

    • @PEDROGARCIA-qj3gr
      @PEDROGARCIA-qj3gr Před 3 měsíci

      The faith part my god, the guy wrote how people in the churches were also a bunch of a**holes divorce from reality...
      That's the thing with Fydor he is not as black and white as people expect and then they start to oversimplifying his books...
      It's not Christianity is gonna save us, it's the basic values in it "as helping people just because is a good thing to do" that make our lives better, BUT this values are not exclusive from Christianity... Or even faith.

    • @tearsinpain
      @tearsinpain Před 2 měsíci

      This was my understanding from reading his novels .

  • @blazingamr
    @blazingamr Před 2 měsíci

    Great video essay. Thank you ❤🙏🇪🇬

  • @misterparadise9542
    @misterparadise9542 Před 2 měsíci

    Really interesting video. Thank you for it.

  • @Mnnwer
    @Mnnwer Před 2 měsíci +5

    He didn't dislike intellectuals, he just disliked the wrong kinds of intellectuals. He disliked the Russian intelligentsia who espoused western liberal ideas. I mean he himself and everyone he knew were also intellectuals, so he clearly thought that there were some value in being part of that class.

    • @teddyvabson
      @teddyvabson Před 2 měsíci

      Thank you, at last, someone with a little nuance and sense.
      I’m not sure how this guy can read Dostoevsky and come to that conclusion with hardly any proof. Someone can easily cherry pick parts of Dostoevsky’s work and prove the opposite.

    • @deselby260
      @deselby260 Před měsícem

      Note the distinction between intellectuals and philosophers. Intellectuals trade in other people's ideas but act as if they are their own.

  • @oligreen1192
    @oligreen1192 Před 2 měsíci +6

    He was above them all in his truthful literary tales and faith in God.

  • @1The1Sun1Teacher1
    @1The1Sun1Teacher1 Před 2 měsíci

    An honest evaluation of intellectuals. Thanks for posting. Again, refreshing.

  • @arindambanerjee5030
    @arindambanerjee5030 Před měsícem

    I deeply enjoyed the video! Thanks!

  • @MaitlandJones
    @MaitlandJones Před 2 měsíci +4

    It's after I spent a couple years working retail after college that helped me to understand how removed from reality intellectuals are. Funny enough I'm still trying to break into academia, I find a good habit of grass touching keeps me rooted in the real.
    The internet is not the real world, the longer one wastes time on it, the more rotted and weak the mind becomes. I developed the poor habit of listening to CZcams videos while gaming. I consumed too many ideas, as a result it hurt my mental faculties. My mind was stronger when I gamed with only the company of my thoughts, some music, or the still small voice of God.

  • @DmitryKoleev
    @DmitryKoleev Před 3 měsíci +45

    I love Fedor Mikhailovich. He changed my mind and my life. I'm so happy that I met him and I'm so glad than I'm Russian because I can read him in original. And thank you too much for your vidios. There is a special place for you in heaven

    • @kulturzivilisation548
      @kulturzivilisation548 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Дорогой Дмитрий, Достоевский - главная причина моей любви к России, её языку, её культуре и её истории. Кто знает, когда - нибудь я тоже смогу читать его книги прямо на русском языке...
      Привет из Южного полушария, дорогой брат!

    • @DmitryKoleev
      @DmitryKoleev Před 3 měsíci +3

      Очень приятно это слышать мой друг❤

    • @african_forum
      @african_forum Před 2 měsíci +1

      Jealous of the Russian part, I wish I could read Dostoevsky in original. But the French translations are better than English so I read or listened to those.

  • @johnloving9401
    @johnloving9401 Před 2 měsíci

    Great looking video - thanks!

  • @ameofami6715
    @ameofami6715 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Love your analysis. Ca' you do one on the tempest of Shakespeare ?

  • @janedawson1398
    @janedawson1398 Před 2 měsíci +5

    The intellectuals “followed European philosophers on Twitter?” (5:42) I had to rewind it and put on the captions to make sure I heard that correctly. Hilarious that you slipped that in there. 😂

    • @meikala2114
      @meikala2114 Před 2 měsíci

      i thought elon had renamed it X so it fitted in with the z zombie meat waves in Ukraine

  • @vincentcrowley5196
    @vincentcrowley5196 Před 2 měsíci +8

    George Orwell wasn't a fan of those who talked a good game but don't back it up. Orwell fought in the Spanish Civil War against General Franco and was shot in the throat

    • @wwc51450
      @wwc51450 Před měsícem

      He was shot in the throat by a Soviet agent.

  • @zachlong5427
    @zachlong5427 Před 2 měsíci

    Subscribed. Thank you

  • @orthodoxchristiansupply8043
    @orthodoxchristiansupply8043 Před 2 měsíci

    This is excellent - thank you.

  • @fbi9792
    @fbi9792 Před 2 měsíci +4

    "Touch grass." - Dostoevsky

  • @ShadowMantis702
    @ShadowMantis702 Před 3 měsíci +8

    Everyone calls others out for being too dumb. NO ONE calls others out for being too smart

  • @SCB-dd4io
    @SCB-dd4io Před 2 měsíci

    Wow! Very enlightening. thank you

  • @jeannovacco5136
    @jeannovacco5136 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This explanation reminds me that elevating mere ideas can lead to a narrowly derived idealism -- which is not as virtuous as we would like to imagine when we fail to maintain reference and living connections to the real experiences of others as well as of ourselves.

  • @JB-gj8pu
    @JB-gj8pu Před 2 měsíci +3

    It's the balance between induction and deduction, theory and experimentation. You need both to progress. The worst academics are those who work in fields where ideas are difficult to prove, or can't be disproven at all. I only ever had a single good literature professor and that is because they included 5 centuries of history, culture, language, philosophy, and religion into the curriculum.

  • @reuvenpolonskiy2544
    @reuvenpolonskiy2544 Před 2 měsíci +4

    Boy was he right

  • @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115

    Excellent video. Subscribed.

  • @petertefft7335
    @petertefft7335 Před 2 měsíci

    Great vidya. Thank you.

  • @_pawter
    @_pawter Před 3 měsíci +22

    That was a really interesting, coherent analysis. Subscribed.
    Though a quick scan of the comments confirms your assessment: "now everyone is an intellectual". Often due to possesion of recently devalued undegraduate degrees (I know as I used to grant passes for them) modern people have grotesquely elevated notions of their paltry intellect. How deeply and condignly Dostoevsky would've depised them: the idea of stopping at a building site to talk to dirty people who work with their hands would cause them Woke hysteria.
    Большое спасибо. Вы побудили меня перечитать немного Достоевского перед тем, как я приеду в гости этим летом.

    • @manduvaprasadrao5391
      @manduvaprasadrao5391 Před 3 měsíci

      Intellectuality verified by reality is the need of the hour

    • @swami15
      @swami15 Před 2 měsíci +2

      "Often due to possesion of recently devalued undegraduate degrees (I know as I used to grant passes for them) modern people have grotesquely elevated notions of their paltry intellect."
      Sounds like Dunning/Kruger Syndrome.

    • @adeleinetheartist8267
      @adeleinetheartist8267 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@swami15 Society as a whole is suffering from the Dunning-Krueger effect on a global scale.

  • @Thejmack115
    @Thejmack115 Před 2 měsíci +4

    Well the intellectuals of his time were jews who he saw quite accurately as the enemies of the russian people which he was tragically right about.

  • @leemionis9241
    @leemionis9241 Před 22 dny

    I appreciate this video quite a lot. It crystallized my thoughts about intellectualism. I’ve always thought these things and now I get to see that other folks do as as well. Dostoyevsky was a genius using his characters to point out aspects of human nature that can collectively get us nowhere and in doing so lead to an amazing amount of pain.

  • @cliffordbates
    @cliffordbates Před 2 měsíci

    An excellent video. Well done.