Greatest Philosophers In History | Albert Camus

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  • čas přidán 16. 05. 2024
  • Albert Camus was a prolific French-Algerian philosopher and author who contributed to the rise of the philosophy known as Absurdism. He is also considered to be an existentialist.
    This video explores his main ideas: The Absurd, Revolt and Rebellion, as well as his most notable works: The Stranger (or The Outsider), The Myth of Sisyphus, The Rebel, The Plague, and The Fall. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1957.
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    📚 Recommended Reading (High Quality and Best Translations)
    ▶ The Stranger (1942)
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    ▶ The Myth of Sisyphus (1942)
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    ▶ The Plague (1947)
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    ▶ The Rebel (1951)
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    ▶ The Fall (1956)
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    ▶ A Happy Death (1971)
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    ▶ The First Man (1994)
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    ⌛ Timestamps
    0:00 Introduction
    4:58 Concept: The Absurd
    5:51 The Stranger (1942)
    8:06 The Myth of Sisyphus (1942)
    13:21 Concept: Revolt
    14:10 Camus’ similarities to Nietzsche & Stoicism
    15:09 The Rebel (1951) and the concept of Rebellion.
    17:39 The Plague (1947)
    19:07 Camus and Sartre
    19:54 Camus and Dostoevsky
    20:36 The Fall (1957)
    22:47 Why You Should Read Camus
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    #camus #absurdism #sisyphus #albertcamus

Komentáře • 135

  • @Eternalised
    @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +50

    Enjoy these types of videos? Please give it a like
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    • @satnamo
      @satnamo Před 2 lety +4

      I also appreciate your videos.

  • @enbilerfrainitiald8529
    @enbilerfrainitiald8529 Před 3 lety +331

    “The only way to deal with an unfree world is to become so absolutely free that your very existence is an act of rebellion.”
    - Albert Camus

  • @markfreeman-uv7si
    @markfreeman-uv7si Před 3 lety +105

    "In the depths of Winter, I finally learned that within me, there lay an invincible summer."

  • @arkhie9883
    @arkhie9883 Před 2 lety +156

    "If you want to be a philosopher, write a novel." - Albert Camus.

    • @Multicellunaire
      @Multicellunaire Před rokem +5

      Or compose a good peice of dark sarcastic tragic comedy ..

    • @joruss443
      @joruss443 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@Multicellunaire you missed the point - Albert Camus

    • @000Emir
      @000Emir Před 2 měsíci +1

      Source?

  • @FelipeLima-pg9rw
    @FelipeLima-pg9rw Před 4 měsíci +16

    Camus saved my life in highschool. “Live your life to the point of tears” my friends and family, life is as scary as it is silly.

  • @2Sor2Fig
    @2Sor2Fig Před rokem +49

    11:00 - I like how you touched on the repetitiveness of human life. Looking back on my atheistic journey, one of the first things I threw out was the belief that scheduling and planning your life down to the minute was fruitful. I've always had insomnia (specifically, it took me maybe 1-2hrs of lying in bed to actually fall asleep, and if anything disturbed it and awoke me, it was impossible to fall back in again, so I never slept more than 3-4 hrs). Eventually, I decided that if I wish to place meaning in a meaningless schedule, the only one that matters is my own. 12 years later, I'm a self-employed farmer and programmer. Best of all when I sleep, I actually dream. Took a while to realize that what prevented me from sleep was the anxiety associated with trying to fit into a box I didn't want to be in, and the simple solution was... don't.

    • @plainperson7033
      @plainperson7033 Před rokem +2

      Dear stranger, I find inspiration in your story. Just out of curiosity for all things tech related, what does your job as a programmer entail, and how did you gather the necessary knowledge and experience?

    • @someonewhobitthedust9124
      @someonewhobitthedust9124 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Incredible, thank you for sharing your experiences. I find it truly inspiring.

    • @allchatgaming7107
      @allchatgaming7107 Před 4 měsíci

      This makes sense 🤔 ur on ur own schedule

  • @verde3402
    @verde3402 Před 3 lety +96

    Excellent! What a fascinating man he was, how tragic that his life ended at the height of his career.

    • @samwahab8976
      @samwahab8976 Před 3 lety +18

      How absurd!

    • @snapdowndarsee4959
      @snapdowndarsee4959 Před 3 lety +1

      Better to die on top than washed up and lonely. I mean no disrespect.

    • @AL_THOMAS_777
      @AL_THOMAS_777 Před 8 dny +1

      @@samwahab8976 Why ? "We should die when everything is perfectly ! Because: From that on, there is only the LOW road" (unknown wise person) Anbd: What else could there be after winning even the nobel prize ?

    • @AL_THOMAS_777
      @AL_THOMAS_777 Před 8 dny +1

      This is not tragic at all my friend. What seems to me MUCH more tragical is dying without having fulfilled ones own meaning / vocation !

  • @griftegrd
    @griftegrd Před 2 lety +43

    Camus must be the one of the most important philosopher if not the most important, at least in my life. Everyone should read the myth of Sisyphus once in their lives. The idea of realizing that life is meaningless is easy and natural, but the resolve to live against it and not commit suicide or die a philosophical death is what makes his thoughts really a masterpiece. He was a genius of man made by his circumstances, and if you're reading this do yourself a favor and read his works, trust me. As for me, I've done my work here. Great video, salute my friend. I really wanted to know the history of this spectacular mind and you cleared it all and also related him to his books. And for that I thank you.

    • @ravisekharreddy9783
      @ravisekharreddy9783 Před 2 lety +2

      Death of suicide
      Myth of sisyophus
      Breath-- the last one
      Width of our life span

    • @griftegrd
      @griftegrd Před 2 lety

      @@ravisekharreddy9783 that sounds cool!

    • @Williamb612
      @Williamb612 Před 2 lety +3

      Life being meaningless or meaningful is a human mental construct…Camus’s quest for freedom is the freedom from his mind which was shackled ironically by his mental brilliance…Camus is over rated
      Let’s stop discussing whether something has meaning or not, both meaning and meaninglessness are quests to find meaning…meaning in meaningless
      and meaning in meaningfulness
      Real freedom lies in liberating oneself from the mind and creating, producing, doing, being, rather than the inertia of thinking about it.
      You are, whether you think about it or not

    • @griftegrd
      @griftegrd Před 2 lety +1

      @@Williamb612 read the myth of sisyphus

    • @herbertthepervert9129
      @herbertthepervert9129 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Williamb612 The meaning of life is to live your life how ever you want to live it. There is no "objective" meaning of life, you create that meaning. Sorry for my bad writing🙃

  • @Nat1Ka
    @Nat1Ka Před 2 lety +23

    Your content is phenomenal, I'm so glad I found this channel.

  • @kristacousins9502
    @kristacousins9502 Před 3 lety +8

    Loved this video, I need to watch it again to digest the concepts. I am definitely going to pick up one of his books.

  • @caramason56
    @caramason56 Před rokem +11

    “He champions life and ask us to live it to the point of tears” So powerful and beautiful ❤️

    • @AL_THOMAS_777
      @AL_THOMAS_777 Před 8 dny +1

      I did (after reading his epic book about Sisiphos) and did NOT regret a single n a n o second !

  • @stitt_sumie
    @stitt_sumie Před 2 lety +1

    Extremely well structure video. Congratulations.

  • @shad0winfo
    @shad0winfo Před 3 lety +11

    Best video on Camus i've seen!

  • @mathewvlasak
    @mathewvlasak Před rokem +1

    Thank You very much for the outstanding video! It was very informative and provoked many thoughts. I can’t wait to read all of his works.

  • @user-yj8ni6xv8w
    @user-yj8ni6xv8w Před rokem +1

    excellent work, thank you for this video

  • @sarmadchandio1420
    @sarmadchandio1420 Před rokem +6

    I have read many books on science, fiction, politics, philosophy and history. But when a drop of existentialism damped on my tongue! It amazed me with an unknown pain, the pain just tore me into pieces.
    And it all starts when I read "The Fall", a book by Albert Camus. After getting much deeper into Camus's books, I suddenly met with a change. I don't know why all my tears were converted into well-known laughs. I just want to share only a quote by Albert Camus “At a certain level of suffering or injustice, no one can do anything for anyone. Pain is solitary.”

  • @TheBigFella
    @TheBigFella Před 2 měsíci

    Great video ❤ thank you for taking the time to put it together

  • @Davlavi
    @Davlavi Před rokem +2

    This channel deserves way more views. Keep up the great videos.

  • @Jets1713
    @Jets1713 Před 2 lety +9

    How does this only have 40k views? This is top tier content I am watching that's not supposed to be free.

  • @SophiaClef
    @SophiaClef Před 3 lety +7

    We studied fragments from The Fall in our French pragmatics class and they were so intriguing. I read The Stranger, but it wasn't as good as I expected. Hopefully, after reading his other works, my view on him will change. I really liked his ideas, though, and we're both fans of Dostoevsky, so maybe, we'll become firends soemday. He seems to be a cool guy! Great video!

  • @fraidoonw
    @fraidoonw Před 3 lety +3

    thanks! great talk!

  • @user-uy4jc3zz5p
    @user-uy4jc3zz5p Před 3 lety +4

    I am also listening to "The plague" and his thoughts are intriguing and I find him fascinating.. Will sure explore him more! Thanks for this cool Intro though!✨

  • @user-vw6xp5nl6t
    @user-vw6xp5nl6t Před 2 lety +1

    Wonderful work. Thank you

  • @fleongoogle2429
    @fleongoogle2429 Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent is the word for this video. More than thanks.

  • @AniSxuxu
    @AniSxuxu Před rokem +1

    Adore Camus, and loved this 🖤 Excellent 👏

  • @CornCod1
    @CornCod1 Před 2 lety +15

    I never thought much of his existentialism. However, I still liked his novels, even if they oozed Existentialism, they were still a good read.

  • @jayabyss377
    @jayabyss377 Před 3 lety +26

    Currently reading The Myth of Sisyphus, what an excellent read! Great video.

    • @AL_THOMAS_777
      @AL_THOMAS_777 Před 8 dny +1

      Yeah, and after this read I recommnend "Zarathustra" ( Fred Nietzsche) and "Whats new Adam ?" (Osho) -> REAL game changers !

  • @doyle6000
    @doyle6000 Před 2 lety

    nice video, thanks!

  • @Garblegox
    @Garblegox Před 2 lety +10

    I love how Camus calls the Nazis "psychopathic dandies"

  • @clintwillettwellnesssoluti1018

    wonderful !! thanks ~~~ have you considered to do a segment on Rudolf Steiner ..??...

  • @lala12345678919
    @lala12345678919 Před 3 lety +6

    Always felt so curious about Camus but haven't read anything yet. After watching this I reckon I will read ''The fall''. Super interesting video!! Thank you for sharing

    • @gazrater1820
      @gazrater1820 Před 2 lety

      ‘The Fall’ is a classic and worth the energy and time. Judge Penitent what a writer and a sad loss at 44 a great lucid mind,

    • @archaic9525
      @archaic9525 Před rokem

      As for essays "the rebel' is fascinating; as for novels 'the pest' is great too, especially in pandemic times.

  • @raskolnikovman936
    @raskolnikovman936 Před 3 lety +14

    My favorite existentialist author ever. Love this video.

    • @beacondog2440
      @beacondog2440 Před 3 lety +2

      He is the only one that I have read. I agree with much he has to say.

    • @kriketprayme
      @kriketprayme Před 3 lety +1

      Hey there Raskolnikov, how are things going in Siberia?

    • @purplemaze7733
      @purplemaze7733 Před 2 lety

      Mine too,he is immense. It's a very deep insight into such a phenomenal being.

  • @caramason56
    @caramason56 Před rokem +2

    Brilliant and inspiring human❤️

  • @margaretem.385
    @margaretem.385 Před 3 lety +8

    Camus philosophy is very interesting & reading his works is on my agenda ... if absurdities are meaningful then inner conflicts may find relief?!

  • @thurqs1938
    @thurqs1938 Před 2 lety +1

    i would like to ask you for your art collection if you have one, becuase the art in the background of your videos is exceptional.

  • @boxingjerapah
    @boxingjerapah Před 2 lety

    #1 for me. His thought is admirably simple in a discipline that venerates complexity.

  • @katladyfromtheNetherlands

    well done, good voice.

  • @bukurie6861
    @bukurie6861 Před 2 lety +1

    Alber Kamy is fantastic to read resaoing absurd and to see painting existence the Myth of graetist Philosopher🙏

  • @AG10381
    @AG10381 Před 3 lety +14

    The Plague sounds very interesting. I've to read it now!

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +4

      Definitely a great read! It has sold lots of copies since the start of the pandemic, I'm glad more people read Camus.

    • @gazrater1820
      @gazrater1820 Před 2 lety +3

      Worth the time; decency and we are all special cases.

    • @AL_THOMAS_777
      @AL_THOMAS_777 Před 8 dny +1

      Yep. Especially under the world wide Corona-regime !

  • @nicokrasnow1851
    @nicokrasnow1851 Před 2 lety +1

    "Calígula"'s really fascinating

  • @kirkhalls4873
    @kirkhalls4873 Před 2 lety +1

    A fire makes brightness from whatever is thrown at it😉🔥✌🏻

  • @guadalupe8589
    @guadalupe8589 Před 3 lety +9

    FYI, the second statue of a Roman Emperor was Augustus, not Caligula

  • @xoxofrancoise7077
    @xoxofrancoise7077 Před 2 lety +2

    Between being more depressed and relieved, I'm glad that I'm not the only one who suffers to bond with society.

  • @cond.oriano7083
    @cond.oriano7083 Před 2 lety +12

    Would really recommend reading the original french translation for l’Étranger if you can read french. The intricacy of meursault’s character and of Camus’ writing is lost in translation, so you can only really go skin deep into the philosophy of the novel when it’s written in English. Still a good book to read nonetheless, one of my favourites regardless of the language it’s written in.

    • @deepeka134
      @deepeka134 Před 2 lety +1

      One of my friends read that and he says he is like mersault. He says he'll be however he wants and the world shouldn't bother him or ask him why he is like that. Some people are just straight up shooting the book to their ego. They think being an emotionally distant prick is some ideal. Being like that is different from aspiring to be that.

  • @satnamo
    @satnamo Před 2 lety +1

    All great deeds and
    All great thoughts
    Have a ridiculous beginning.
    A journey of 10000 miles
    Begins with 1 single step.
    The first step is das hardest:
    How to remember de Miao Dao in my head
    And to express it with my hands ?

  • @lodewijkwiekgorter8506
    @lodewijkwiekgorter8506 Před 2 lety +1

    What book/text, source(?) is the quotation from 03:10 in the video; (?) He wrote’:
    Hope to hear from you.

  • @moshefabrikant1
    @moshefabrikant1 Před 2 lety

    3:09
    Write all of those immoralities in a book and release it.
    And act like the others and adapt to them so they will notice you are a stranger
    7:41
    10:00
    Working the same job everyday

  • @Dennnis10B
    @Dennnis10B Před 2 lety

    Highest truth...it's different for everybody. Sooner our later, you might have to keep it a secret and live amongst the crowd..

  • @asitisfilms3499
    @asitisfilms3499 Před měsícem +2

    If you want to be a philosopher, be a chillosopher.
    -kharb

  • @SIRMETALGOD
    @SIRMETALGOD Před rokem

    As he stared at his feet and said “this is funny” lol Doc Holiday is my huckleberry.

  • @davicool9958
    @davicool9958 Před 2 lety +4

    Camus hated driving or being driven... He had a fear of dying in something as absurd as a car crash. After the car accident- two train tickets Camus was supposed to have used by himself and his wife were found in his pocket.

  • @szczesciejestkoloruczarneg749

    Gombrowicz is needed when it comes to existentialism

  • @Multicellunaire
    @Multicellunaire Před rokem

    Obviously changed the western philosophy . Hats down ..

  • @DJSTOEK
    @DJSTOEK Před 2 lety +1

    🖤

  • @walnuttv1999
    @walnuttv1999 Před 3 lety

    Featured on top 10 videos of the day on walnut.tv/science

  • @dipak1978
    @dipak1978 Před 2 lety +2

    I rebel therefore I am....

  • @HalfinchLonomia
    @HalfinchLonomia Před 3 lety +2

    If everything means nothing, than everything means something.

  • @jamesjun6393
    @jamesjun6393 Před rokem +1

    Camus lives on with his good looks and philosophical blah blah...

  • @brianheiper3444
    @brianheiper3444 Před 3 lety +1

    Meaningwave exists

  • @srinivasteja998
    @srinivasteja998 Před rokem

    "The comment section is better than me" - Albert calm down.

  • @smkh2890
    @smkh2890 Před rokem +1

    I had an Algerian friend who immediately decided that Camus must be a racist.
    in law, a good lawyer could make a case for self-defence, regardless of what Meursault himself says.

    • @smkh2890
      @smkh2890 Před rokem

      FYI, there is a filmed version of L' Etranger by Visconti, with Marcello Mastroianni !
      Who is far too handsome to play Meursault!

  • @MrAtownDown1
    @MrAtownDown1 Před 3 měsíci +1

    The Plague was about plague (not a virus)

  • @ShadowFri3nd
    @ShadowFri3nd Před 8 měsíci +1

    Camus was like the "Sigma Grindset" meme for philosophy and existentialism, "life has no meaning? yeah but at least it can be worth to live it!" type of view on human life.

  • @WWS322
    @WWS322 Před 8 měsíci

    What if suicide seems absurd?

  • @richardbenitez1282
    @richardbenitez1282 Před 8 měsíci

    In college I of course was intoduced to Camus and Kafka. I hated both passionately. In class I found myself hostile. I was in expensive college… I was paying big bucks for this Camus crap? I was not interested in any kind of personal enfranchisement. As a handicapped person I already learned from parents , others I ain’t nothing. I had gotten used to this feedback where ever I went. What was I to do? Cast aside years of acquiescence to my situation and find a new existence, a new self? Oh BS! All folks had to do was look at me to completely demolish any smart ass idea about myself in the universe. Screw that crap. I know the profs would say I had already found myself as living a life if she!!t. I had already adapted Camus without realizing it and proved Camus wise. I am not impressed.

  • @Roust7
    @Roust7 Před 2 lety

    Loving absurdity and accepting absurdity of life is another form of philosophical suicide like religion. Rebellion is only answer to the absurd even if it means tearing everything down.

  • @scottthomas5819
    @scottthomas5819 Před 2 lety

    comments get points! comment comment comment...

  • @jonathanleal-allen8039
    @jonathanleal-allen8039 Před rokem +1

    like the picture of jesus broing down with satan

  • @QasemBakr88
    @QasemBakr88 Před 4 měsíci

    Camus's denial of the Algerians' right for independence is a colonial stand..... The unsed train ticket found in Camus's pocket after his death in that accident is the equal stand for the right of independence for all nations which he denied for the Algerians

  • @Philusteen
    @Philusteen Před 2 měsíci

    Notice how Trump said "they want to win another election." - so at least he's finally conceding.

  • @digambersingh8446
    @digambersingh8446 Před rokem

    हिंदी मे बताने का कट्ट करे

  • @huntergray3985
    @huntergray3985 Před rokem

    What? "devastating virus of 2020?"

    • @2NDFLB
      @2NDFLB Před rokem +1

      ▪️
      BOOGEYMAN-I9.
      CattIe Pretendemic.
      ⬛️

  • @Menapho
    @Menapho Před 2 lety

    Devastating Pandemic???

    • @2NDFLB
      @2NDFLB Před rokem

      ▪️
      CattIe Pretendemic of 2O2O.
      BOOGEYMAN-I9.
      ⬛️

  • @honahwikeepa2115
    @honahwikeepa2115 Před 5 měsíci

    Did he commit suicide?

    • @AL_THOMAS_777
      @AL_THOMAS_777 Před 8 dny +1

      Nope. Severe traffical accident (Bad car, bad road-conditions, bad tyres)

  • @chitskirits
    @chitskirits Před 2 lety +2

    In humans history, the philosophers are the biggest waste of space as far as I'm concerned. Some ancient ones I have time for but classics no Just in case you've been leaving on another planet how exactly these people make us better? We are sicker, fatter, greedier, lazier, and stupider than ever in our history not to mention we might be at beginning of a extinction that we created so I ask you again how exactly these philosophers improved humanity?

    • @SV42165
      @SV42165 Před 2 lety

      Didn’t get it can you elaborate ?

    • @sonicyell
      @sonicyell Před 2 lety

      Waste of time you mean? Then i think you are a crack of shiet jf

    • @Raghgghhhaaahhhhhhas
      @Raghgghhhaaahhhhhhas Před 2 lety

      Such a vague opinion, care to elaborate?

    • @chitskirits
      @chitskirits Před 2 lety

      @@Raghgghhhaaahhhhhhas Just in case you've been leaving on another planet how exactly these people made us better? We are sicker, fater, greedier, lasier, and stupider than ever in our history not to mention we might be at beginning of a extinction that we created so I ask you again how exactly these philosophers improved humanity?

    • @Raghgghhhaaahhhhhhas
      @Raghgghhhaaahhhhhhas Před 2 lety

      @@chitskirits They're contemporary thinkers and the very reason people still suffer are their own. Those who want fufillment seek it be it religion/pyhlisophy or modern BS you see on the news/internet.
      Then your making a poor generalization which could infer you have a poor understand of how it actually benefits the self.
      Humans are their own destroyers. The masses redicule and judge anyone who opposes the common belief system yet seek guidance. Understanding why we as whole suffer isn't an easy anwser aside from my personal belief; We're fucking stupid.
      You cant just call it useless or stupid because YOU dont understand it. That belief is flawed itself.

  • @anapoda3081
    @anapoda3081 Před 11 měsíci

    why do you speak like that?

  • @WiseOwl_1408
    @WiseOwl_1408 Před 2 lety

    Oh he was french. Pass.

  • @samuelalbrycht6724
    @samuelalbrycht6724 Před 3 měsíci

    Luciferin nonsense.

  • @user-ug6ct5cv1h
    @user-ug6ct5cv1h Před 4 měsíci

    เราเชื่อในเเนวทางที่เลือกเรียนรู้ทางที่ดีกว่าเป็นเป้าหมายของความขีวิตที่ดีด้วย☮️เรียบร้อยหากาิ่งดีที่สุดนั้นราคาถูกจริงหรือไม่คิดค่าในเรื่องดีจริงทีดีต่อมวลมนุษย์ชาติที่ไม่คิดค่าแต่เป็นการให้ฟรีๆแม้แต่ให้มาแล้วที่เป็นความดีที่ให้เลือกเองคนที่เลือกได้เท่านั้นจึงจะเข้าใจ คำว่าเลือกได้สิ่งดีที่ฟรีนั้นเป็นแค่บทเรียนและภาพประกอบเสียงสื่อบรรยายอย่างได้ความเข้าใจใครรัยดีนั้นได้ถือว่าระบบรับสื่อระบบการศึกษาหรือรับรู้นั้นต้องดีพอเท่านั้นจึงจะสามารถเข้าห้องเรียนที่มีคุณภาพสูงมีคุณสมบัติที่มีค่าที่หาอะไรทานเปรียบไม่ได้เพราะคสาทดีที่เป็นเรื่องที่สื่อมาให้เราหรือใครๆก็สามารถรับได้เท่าๆกันแต่จะเข้าใจไหมเท่านั้นเพราะคสาทเชื่อและเคารพศรัทธาความรู้จริงๆนั้นมาจากผลงานและสำคัญพื้นฐานของสายเลือดเลือกแต่สิ่งดีที่ชอบที่รักที่ใช่ที่สุดมาฝึกฝนให้ได้ความสำเร็จตามใฝ่ฝันดีๆนี่เองพวกใฝ่ดีมาจากตระกูลเท่านั้นจะรู้ดี ที่เขาเรียกว่าสายไหนเส้นทางสายนั้นจริงๆ ของดีจริงๆมีฟรีให้กับทุกคนว่าแต่จะรับได้หรือเข้าใจไหมก็เท่านั้นของดีมีฟรีทั่วโลกยุคนี้มีแล้วค่ะอย่างเวลานี้เราได้ฟังคำชี้แนะคำบรรยายสื่อให้เห็นว่าที่มากว่าคนจะสร้างผลงานสร้างสรรค์สรุปได้ว่าดีจริงมาให้เราได้เข้าผ่านรุ่นต่อรุ่นเสี่ยงได้มากว่าความดีจะโผล่นำมาให้ชมกันและจะมีกี่คนจะเข้าใจความดีที่มีที่มาเช่นนี้เอาหละไม่แค่เเนวคิดและตัวอย่างจากผลงานของผู้เจริญรุ่งเรืองนะมีดีกว่านั้นคืออาหารที่ดีที่ขาดไม่ได้ที่ราคาถูกจนเกือยจะฟรีก็มีให้มาเเล้วค่ะแต่ยอกไม่ได้กลัวจะขึ้นราคาค่ะนี่แหละคนจนเงินจะไม่มีปัญหาถ้าไม่จนสื่อสัมผัสกับการเรียนรู้รับรู้ขอให้อย่าจนปัญญาเท่านี้อยู่ที่ไหนก็สวยสง่าเหมือนเดิมเชื่อเลยค่ะไม่จำเป็นกับเรื่องนอกกายที่ไม่จำเป็นเพราะที่เขาว่าอยู่ที่ไม้เเขวนจริงๆคนสวยคนหล่มาจากที่ไหนบ้างให้เรียนรู้ให้รู้จักจริงๆนะค่ะตะแต่ความเจริญรุ่งเรืองค่ะ