Ancient Philosophies as a Way of Life: Socrates

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  • čas přidán 29. 02. 2012
  • January 25, 2012 - John Cooper gives the first of two lectures in the Tanner Lecture Series. This first lecture focuses on some of the ancient philosophies of Aristotle and how they apply to life today.
    Stanford University:
    www.stanford.edu/
    Center for Ethics in Society:
    ethicsinsociety.stanford.edu/
    Tanner Lecture Series:
    ethicsinsociety.stanford.edu/e...
    Stanford University Channel on CZcams:
    / stanford

Komentáře • 125

  • @tito1894
    @tito1894 Před 12 lety +45

    Time to procrastinate on my homework by learning.

    • @coaboa5339
      @coaboa5339 Před 3 lety +4

      This was nine years ago. But still. Learning on your own is your education

    • @_N0_0ne
      @_N0_0ne Před 2 lety

      @@coaboa5339 true story 🙂

  • @charlesgodwin2191
    @charlesgodwin2191 Před 4 lety +4

    Philosophy is a way of being in the world that hopefully feels inherently good, to experience completion of joy in form, which is fulfilment.

  • @tlove93
    @tlove93 Před 4 lety +5

    At first I was like damn, come on fore Jesus come back. But on the real, yo this lecture is so PROFOUND! I LOVE IT!!!! For future listeners, just give it time, and it makes so much sense. Well put together!!

  • @yohansir
    @yohansir Před 10 lety +7

    When people start to see life as life is when people start to change.

  • @PhilosopherMuse
    @PhilosopherMuse Před 9 lety +4

    John's presentation was very dynamic, passionate and relevant for the times. His grasp of Platonism is profound.

  • @ArvindBhave
    @ArvindBhave Před 12 lety +6

    no starts at 6:27

  • @20FreeWill
    @20FreeWill Před 11 lety +2

    Platos dialogue "phaedo" convinced me life after death is a distinct possibility. My favourite of the dialogues I have read

  • @jaekn
    @jaekn Před 8 lety +5

    Its not the subject matter that's tedious, its the vocal presentation. This was my issue at University - brilliant thinkers are so very rarely even adequate speakers. And bfore anyone tries to steer me towards "American Idol" or the like, I have a degree in philosophy

  • @WisdomisPower-10inminute-dn5no

    Your points echo many of the themes I've been discussing in my latest content. Such thoughtful dialogue is inspiring.

  • @StAndAl0neCompl3x
    @StAndAl0neCompl3x Před 12 lety +9

    I confess the speaker lost my interest when he began to read directly from a pre-written speech.

  • @Fer-De-Lance
    @Fer-De-Lance Před 9 lety +1

    Thank you for the great talk.

  • @MrMarktrumble
    @MrMarktrumble Před 10 lety +2

    great lecture.

  • @Beauweir
    @Beauweir Před 6 lety +1

    Is there a follow up video on the later philosophies, Epicureans, Platonists, Aristotelians, Stoics etc?

  • @kmj2109
    @kmj2109 Před 9 lety +25

    if it is boring for you than may be " American idol" is something for your mind.

    • @siddharthk9487
      @siddharthk9487 Před 4 lety +1

      Lol

    • @AvgJane19
      @AvgJane19 Před 4 lety +1

      Your condescending tone contributes nothing.

    • @RomanMedvid
      @RomanMedvid Před 3 lety +1

      You better learn when to use ‘then’ vs ‘than’

  • @Socratic469
    @Socratic469 Před 11 lety +2

    "Philosophy aught to be a total way of life" he says. That's for damn sure!! Especially if its based on the Socratic way. You do this alone and you're free, I'm not BSing you here. Take the time to read all Platos dialogues more than once and come back here and tell me if I'm wrong.

  • @ThunderBroomPilot
    @ThunderBroomPilot Před 9 lety +5

    Professor, please join Toastmasters as soon as possible.

  • @platoman214
    @platoman214 Před 11 lety

    Couldn't agree more. Very abrasive "melody" in his voice.

  • @malgretout563
    @malgretout563 Před 5 lety

    Thank you for sharing this

  • @brianbelgique3267
    @brianbelgique3267 Před 5 lety

    Great lecture! I really enjoyed it and it inspired me.
    I would say that this lecture would be difficult to follow for people not used to philosophical discussion, as this is a very condensed lecture. Certainly not for your average non-philosophical type.

  • @German1184
    @German1184 Před 11 lety +1

    Where is the Lecture 3 (25th May 2011): 'The Stoic Way of Life' ???
    I would like the see he talking about stoicim.

  • @phacker7967
    @phacker7967 Před 9 lety +2

    GET ON WITH IT!!!!!

  • @German1184
    @German1184 Před 11 lety

    Thank you very much.

  • @publicme
    @publicme Před 12 lety

    This is an excellent presentation. Thanks.
    I'm curious where Leo Strauss fits in here, as he discusses the ancients vs moderns in philosophy.
    Too bad there are so many infantile comments here. I guess we can just ignore these.

  • @falcodarkzz
    @falcodarkzz Před 10 lety +1

    Perhaps I wasn't clear enough. Take the nature of your experience of the color red, this experience is something you know well. If we took a blind man, blind his entire life, and orally taught him physics. He becomes a top student, a superb mathematician. Yet for all his expertise working with the mathematics of light, the rules which govern it, will he come any closer to that experience you have of red than an uneducated man? Predicting phenomena does not equal experiencing it.

  • @sowcratees
    @sowcratees Před 12 lety +3

    I think he should just send me the email. He reads; does not lecture. I can't think of anything less socratic.

  • @daliakrinsky4895
    @daliakrinsky4895 Před 6 lety

    Thank you.

  • @ReX0r
    @ReX0r Před 12 lety +1

    To summarize: Philosophy, fuck yeah!

  • @DBSpy1
    @DBSpy1 Před 12 lety +1

    @vikeliz1 I played with plato when I was a kid.

  • @DawsonTyson
    @DawsonTyson Před 12 lety

    Glade to know that i'm not the only one who sees the world in this way.

  • @jc1838
    @jc1838 Před 12 lety

    Where are the links for the handouts?

  • @luizclaudio6724
    @luizclaudio6724 Před 4 lety +1

    Does anyone has a PDF for the handout?

    • @sydneywheeler5037
      @sydneywheeler5037 Před rokem

      tannerlectures.utah.edu/_resources/documents/a-to-z/c/Cooper%20Lecture.pdf

  • @guiadetodo2654
    @guiadetodo2654 Před 5 lety

    Dowunload Wise Universal from Play Store, it`s great

  • @scorpio4lyfe
    @scorpio4lyfe Před 12 lety

    @ironassbrown, I'm sure you understand that resorting to ad hominem attacks will not advance your argument. I simply stated my opinion. I don't doubt that what he discussed was substantive. However, I still maintain that it would have been more accessible if it was presented more naturally. That is, presented with a natural speaking voice-- with appropriate pauses, intonations, emphasis etc.
    PS. I accept that I am a practical person, therefore, this may still be too abstract for me :-)

  • @bbcrumbs
    @bbcrumbs Před 11 lety

    While understanding alone may not stop you from yelling, it will help•

  • @ironassbrown
    @ironassbrown Před 12 lety

    @ehecutor congratulations in your conflabberation, and confustication.

  • @falcodarkzz
    @falcodarkzz Před 11 lety

    Science has is a description of phenomena that allows us to make predictions. This in no way constitutes an explanation in all cases. Conscious awareness is utterly unexplained by neuroscience, chemistry of physics. We observe electrical impulses and the complex interactions of matter, but we cannot make the bridge between our mathematical models and actual experience. Its like showing a deaf man all the mathematics behind sound, he still wont experience it.

  • @Exiro
    @Exiro Před 11 lety

    He regularly looks at the room to check if the people haven't left.

  • @yorgoskep4608
    @yorgoskep4608 Před 9 lety +6

    Socrates and Plato would condemn such a way of presentation! Their method was dialectical; Socrates especially was speaking his mind to ordinary ctizens in the ancient Agora of Athens!

    • @TheMaster1237
      @TheMaster1237 Před 5 lety

      Why does it matter if its ordinary people or not?

  • @TheRealHimself
    @TheRealHimself Před 11 lety

    Yeah...I'm gonna need that handout.

  • @Ghostonplanet
    @Ghostonplanet Před 4 lety

    Regards to all

  • @FreshHeat
    @FreshHeat Před 12 lety

    @tito1894 Exactly how I feel, especially about this terrible high school work.

  • @jenmemphis7818
    @jenmemphis7818 Před 11 lety +1

    My fav part.... 37 mins in :)

  • @massimilianopirrottina5958

    Socrate philosophy who discover with dialogue the true in speaker person not negativity

  • @ayyashC
    @ayyashC Před 12 lety

    @gosucoaching all the time ??? I'm half way there and I am distracted by waiting for the lecture starts and reading stops. sigh

  • @Socratic469
    @Socratic469 Před 11 lety

    Now is one's character not dependent on genetics, epigenetics and social environment. All of which can be argued to be quantifiable and does free will have a place in this tricotomy. I say yes but ask for your input.

  • @watermelonlalala
    @watermelonlalala Před 4 lety

    What is the most important thing? The soul.

  • @HoneyRainbowFlower
    @HoneyRainbowFlower Před 11 lety

    I agree.

  • @theIdlecrane
    @theIdlecrane Před 10 lety +1

    If only he was actually able to tell me something..

  • @razamaer
    @razamaer Před 11 lety +1

    I was about to fuckin start watching a 1 hour long video, just to fucking realize that it's one dude reading a piece of paper.
    A man reading a text instructing other about a man who refused to ever use writing and reading a form of constructive dialog. Irony.

  • @groki9572
    @groki9572 Před 7 lety

    Very nice talk, but his conclusion goes against what Socrates himself says before his judges, he can't stop philosophizing because that would be impiety against the God. The same sort of reasoning can be found in the Roman stoic Epictetus.

  • @penklislawnmowing4508
    @penklislawnmowing4508 Před 10 lety +2

    Thy shall not get caught

  • @crimsonsamuraiftw
    @crimsonsamuraiftw Před 12 lety

    @tito1894 I see that you have the same problem that I have! :)

  • @matthewmichaelcrown3643
    @matthewmichaelcrown3643 Před 11 lety

    Hmm, it seems the gentleman might benefit him and his audience from reading and applying Aristotle's "Rhetoric" in addition to his Ethics.

  • @misstuesy
    @misstuesy Před 9 lety

    I guess my philosophy of philosophy is I'm not interested in learning anything about it after 30min I still was wondering what the lecture was about. He has a good voice for speaking but the speech didn't help me get anymore interested after watching so long already. 😒😒

  • @quacking
    @quacking Před 11 lety

    How arrogant to claim that because ethics can be found throughout philosophy that somehow means other subjects are less valid, if that was true, which it's not, it wouldn't need to be explained, especially not that many times. Other than that though this was very interesting

  • @Efilzeo
    @Efilzeo Před 10 lety +4

    Is this even a lesson? He could have given us the pdf and we could read it by ourselves.

  • @scottk1525
    @scottk1525 Před 10 lety +2

    This sounds like a fucking book on tape

  • @futurekillerful
    @futurekillerful Před 8 lety

    Man taking notes on this seems so hard to do tbh. I guess it shows how much my generation depends on power points lol.

    • @mhikl4484
      @mhikl4484 Před 8 lety +2

      +The Great Debater
      GD, maybe a mental exercise you might try is to train the brain to listen and absorb. When I went to University we made notes as the professor spoke. You lose a lot that way. Finally, I just gave up and listened and worked on connexions. Seemed to work. Now I can dl the lecture, put it straight to audio and listen, stop and go back if need be. A good lecture can be listened to more than once.
      I use CZcams to MP3.
      Namaste and care,
      mhikl

    • @futurekillerful
      @futurekillerful Před 8 lety

      ***** nice man when I go to a university i'll try this. Thanks for advice.

    • @mhikl4484
      @mhikl4484 Před 8 lety +1

      +The Great Debater
      A guy who stops and thinks, excellent. Great Debater, here's another quick hint for university, for life. A simple way to make each day a memory.
      Practice now. Get quality scribblers from the dollar store for home, for work if you have a desk, and another for the car. Get some small ones for the pocket.
      Start writing during the day, 5 times, 10, however often you can muster. Just three sentences, no more or it becomes a chore. Doesn't matter what you write: the topic is 'the idea' to be captured in three sentences. Simple examples: advert on TV, radio, something you read, something you saw, something you heard, just a thought-any thought, any happening, any ponderation.
      Don't worry about handwriting, spelling, 'could be done better', or any other discouraging thought; which are really just distractions and excuses to stop. Doing it is the objective, the only goal, for ten a day becomes 3 650 in a year which is an encouraging 10 950 sentences. That's the equivalent of a book,
      Do not correct, nor be concerned about spelling, grammar, structure, dumb writing, worries such as "could do better. . ." If you are a sports guy, it is how you develop skills in a sport or any activity, actually. Repetition cements focus and focus leads to proficiency and proficiency cements confidence in a skill, which is how a man is driven to become.
      Just do it. Over a period of three to four months you will be amazed how easily your skills are honed, how sentences become more complex and ideas so well expressed that you will be suddenly, pleased and satisfied. Over a year, you will discover grace in your writing, clarity in your thought, spontaneity in your choice of phrase, as easily as water runs its course.
      Namaste and care,
      mhikl

  • @xale7593
    @xale7593 Před 4 lety

    ^ without saying

  • @ehecutor
    @ehecutor Před 12 lety

    With philosophy, I don't understand people who look for help in books for self-motivation.

  • @StAndAl0neCompl3x
    @StAndAl0neCompl3x Před 12 lety

    @tito1894 Best comment ever.

  • @CreepyGoblinIsU
    @CreepyGoblinIsU Před 12 lety

    this is what i do on friday nights

  • @sueXass
    @sueXass Před 11 lety

    7hat's not true. A deaf man can well vibrations, which he in term can relate to the mathematics. Never forget the sequence. First there is the phenomenon, then there is the realization, and then there is the calculation translated back to mathematics. By the hand of those formula, it should be possible to predict future outcomes of a phenomena, depending on the skills of the creator of the mathematical translation, which in term correlates with the reputation of the mathematician.

  • @longcastle4863
    @longcastle4863 Před rokem

    Philosophy has abandoned ethics; unfortunately. We should be living for the future of our species and managing to have meaningful useful lives in the process.

  • @Socratic469
    @Socratic469 Před 11 lety

    Isn't ethics not a part of natural philosophy; science?

  • @Eyemallfunkedup
    @Eyemallfunkedup Před 9 lety +1

    The problem is he's reading. I can read. I don't need him to read to me; like I'm in Pre-K.

  • @Socratic469
    @Socratic469 Před 11 lety

    How could knowledge of philosophy change your life? Yes, this guy seems a good soul regardless of rhetorical style. I like his energy for the topic he belongs in the Agora with Socrates I suspect.

    • @innosanto
      @innosanto Před rokem

      Active philosophy examinjng the daily, not just storing in a knowledge box.
      Act philosophy

  • @MaxwellPietsch
    @MaxwellPietsch Před 12 lety

    holy shit me too

  • @sueXass
    @sueXass Před 11 lety

    genes are energetic, not physical.
    animals do as a fact relate to others to conform there well-being.
    not knowing the language used in psychology gives these kinds of misunderstandings.

  • @wildreams
    @wildreams Před 12 lety

    @tito1894 NO.

  • @dan020350
    @dan020350 Před 5 lety

    just make a entertaining movie for Socrates -.- and we will know it all

  • @djjal667
    @djjal667 Před 4 lety

    32:15wattuuduu***Mhuhuhu
    The WatchMen
    peace

  • @CallHimNames
    @CallHimNames Před 11 lety

    ooo piece of candy

  • @derekmracek6257
    @derekmracek6257 Před 11 lety

    Says Philosophy over 500 times lol

  • @dark4krad
    @dark4krad Před 12 lety

    it got a little boring towards the end

  • @ironassbrown
    @ironassbrown Před 12 lety

    @chikeeze If he hadn't read it, you would have gotten more out of his talk? You have got to be kidding right, just admit you don't have the attention to analyze abstract, and sometimes conflicting concepts.

  • @evelinakonstadinidi6578

    I prefer Aristotelis..

  • @RhettWright
    @RhettWright Před 10 lety +1

    Anyone else think the lectern looks like a grill? God, I'm so bored. . .

  • @Socratic469
    @Socratic469 Před 11 lety

    go 49ers! LOL!

  • @alexkrantz316
    @alexkrantz316 Před 4 lety +1

    How does such a learned man miss the spiritual exercises found throughout the ancient philosophers? In the Phaedo, Socrates uses and recommends music to aid reason in maintaining resolve. In the Republic, Plato endorses physical training and poetry for educating the spirited part of the soul. Plutarch's Life of Dion says that while studying at Plato's academy they trained in methods that mitigated anger. While I enjoy Prof Cooper's accessible summary of Socrates' pursuit of wisdom as a way if life, his exaggeration of reason reflects and justifies modern the academic philosophy of which he is a representative part. The discipline of academic philosophy has absolutely nothing to do with the cultivation of virtue; and reasoning and writing such as Prof Cooper's is perfectly compatible with the kinds of moral scandals that have been occuring throughout philosophy departments of late. Philosophy professors are no more morally developed than accountants. It is not enough to know and talk about virtue, or else Socrates and Prof Cooper wouldn't have been chubby. Exercises and techniques are vitally necessary to make moral progress. Since modern philosophers do not study or practice the techniques of moral progress, they are poor, but well-paid, examples.

  • @XlogicXX
    @XlogicXX Před 12 lety

    Cmon, I have no idea what was important about what he said, no idea what to pay attention to, no emotion to emphasize what he thought was key to understanding the speech. He shouldn't have read the whole thing... geez.

  • @DawsonTyson
    @DawsonTyson Před 12 lety

    Oh by the way the Bible would fall under this theory of philosophy.

  • @kiwiotatts
    @kiwiotatts Před 11 lety

    Not the greatest lecturer, but neither apparently, was Sir Issac Newton.

  • @gosucoaching
    @gosucoaching Před 12 lety

    Hate how he is reading the whole time. :-/

  • @gregwrangler2800
    @gregwrangler2800 Před 9 lety +3

    After spending the first 7 minutes of this lecture patting each other on the back and extolling the greatness of each other's accomplishments in their work, we get another 5 minutes of why it was a good reason to sit through this boring lesson in nothingness. In 12 minutes of absolute babble, I haven't heard a word about the person...Socrates, that i tuned in to hear about. At 16 minutes...still nothing! time to tune out.

  • @chrislauren1108
    @chrislauren1108 Před 11 lety

    Brilliant words, terrible orator. Hard to follow because of the way he presents it and makes his sophisticated ideas more of a challenge to understand than it needs to be.

  • @Hume2012
    @Hume2012 Před 11 lety

    People who use the word "fuckin" and the word "dude" and follow them with pseudo-intellectual tripe should get a life....dude.

  • @adamredman3000
    @adamredman3000 Před rokem

    Totally inarticulate

  • @ingridweber1
    @ingridweber1 Před 2 lety

    Nothing more boring than reading a lecture!

  • @supertragedy945
    @supertragedy945 Před rokem

    Shockingly bad. This person has no business talking about Socrates.