Going Deep on Heidegger, Heraclitus, and the Philosophy of Nature

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  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2024
  • Join Michael Michaelides in a profound exploration of Martin Heidegger's philosophy and its connection to the ancient wisdom of Heraclitus. In this episode of Ancient Greece Revisited, Michael delves into the depths of philosophical thought, discussing the intricate ideas of nature, hiddenness, and the eternal flow of existence. Inspired by Heidegger's interpretations and the timeless teachings of Heraclitus, this episode invites you to ponder the mysteries that lie beneath the surface of reality. Don't miss this enlightening journey into the depths of philosophical inquiry.
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Komentáře • 22

  • @adt3030
    @adt3030 Před 20 dny

    looking forward to this one!

  • @Wyattinous
    @Wyattinous Před měsícem +3

    I’ve only ever heard the name Heidegger when learning philosophy, such a complex and intense topic just in this conversation alone. When I was young I would pick out books from my mother’s shelf regarding topics specific to zen Buddhist philosophy among others, mostly because I liked the cover art. She would tell me “those are a bit heavy for you at this time” and I would try and read them anyway out of interest. She was right of course, but that didn’t mean I wasn’t left with deeper impressions that kept with me as I grew older. Lighting a small spark in someone, chances are that hearth for knowledge grows. Thanks for another great video ❤

  • @michellem7290
    @michellem7290 Před 26 dny

    Thanks for the little breakdown! You always re-stir my interest in philosophy

  • @fokusnikfm
    @fokusnikfm Před 29 dny

    Beautiful, visuals helped me contemplate and imagine the concepts together with the beautiful metaphors. The scientific references where unneeded and mentally distracting.
    Thank you

    • @AncientGreeceRevisited
      @AncientGreeceRevisited  Před 28 dny

      You speak from the perspective of those already converted (to philosophy). The scientific references are exactly what is typically thrown back at us when suggesting that philosophy has still a seat on the table for understanding nature. Trust me, they are there for those who would smirk and dismiss Heidegger as “doesn’t get science!”

  • @IIVVBlues
    @IIVVBlues Před měsícem +3

    As I delved into physics, or the idea of physics, I realized that perception is all that I have. I cannot see the entire spectrum of what exists only what I perceive to exist. Even assisted by analog devices, I am limited in my perceptions. Space, matter and "dark matter" are constructs of my perceptions. Biological organisms likewise are limited by my perceptions. Each of us are conglomerate communities of organisms and biochemical interactions, our mind or life force governing our totality until we die. Life can be experienced, but never completely comprehended. For me that is enough.

    • @AncientGreeceRevisited
      @AncientGreeceRevisited  Před měsícem

      Nicely put, however, the mystery that Heidegger is trying to convey is not about what is hidden FROM PERCEPTION, but what is hidden “while being revealed.” It’s a difficult one, for sure, but that’s what we need to apprehend.

  • @PoundianAesthete
    @PoundianAesthete Před měsícem +3

    Millerman is great

  • @zacharycurrie3708
    @zacharycurrie3708 Před měsícem +2

    Excellent video and introduction to Heidegger.

  • @Marion10610
    @Marion10610 Před 29 dny +1

    👏👏👏🥰✨

  • @gabrieldifiore6620
    @gabrieldifiore6620 Před měsícem +2

    great video!!

  • @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time

    Could I use part of this video in one of my own videos? I would set up a link to this video and your channel. Your ideas on 'light' are very interesting!

  • @natewikman
    @natewikman Před měsícem +1

    I think a more intuitive way I've found to describe why platonic forms might be incorrect (which is what you're doing with the DNA example I think) is to propose a thought experiment about humans. If you put a group of humans on a spaceship and sent them to a planet with different conditions, gave them 1 million years, and then put them on a spaceship and brought them back to Earth, which group of people would reflect the form of the human? Changes would have occurred in both populations over that amount of time, maybe massive ones depending on the pressures involved. They're both human and not the same, so there is no form of the human, it's the form of everything to change...panta rei

    • @AncientGreeceRevisited
      @AncientGreeceRevisited  Před měsícem

      But you are falling in the same vicious circle that I am exposing here. Through what measure would these people.still be human? Why would they - like apes turning into men through evolution - not have morphed into something non-human? What would be the measure to judge one from the other? It would presuppose that you, the writer of this comment, KNOWS what is essential to the Human. The TRUE FORM of the human if you will, for otherwise there would be no way of telling whether the people you described have remained (kept the form) of evolved away from (changed the form) human beings. See what is happening here?

    • @natewikman
      @natewikman Před měsícem

      @@AncientGreeceRevisited Yes I suppose I am imagining some third perspective that knew both of these groups used to be one. But from each of the two groups perspectives they would never cease to be human because they would use the word to reference themselves to some image of themselves. So there is some kind of platonic form in there in the sense that the word needs reference, but to what? The problem with reference occurs when both groups get together, if both have kept using the term human to reference themselves in accordance to some image, and find that the image of the other does not match theirs. So what did the word ever actually reference? Maybe a concept? An idol? A vision?

    • @AncientGreeceRevisited
      @AncientGreeceRevisited  Před měsícem +1

      The point is that it references something that is obvious when perceived. We have no problem identifying a human, but when asked to define just what that is, we are filled with doubts.
      An much simpler example - rather than your alien-evolved humans - is actual human evolution. At which point, exactly, did the ape become man? What was that one genetic trait that when gained, moved the needle, so to speak, into another species? I mean, you can even think of a simpler example: boldness (or fatness, or shortness etc.) Which one hair was it, that once it fell, it rendered the head “bold?” And if we were to put it back, would the person stop being so?? It’s nearly impossible to tell, but we have no problem conceiving of the concept of a “bold head” or a “fat body.” We may argue on whether this concept applies to THIS particular head, but we know what we mean by “bold” (which does not mean a total absence of hair by the way). That is a FORM. Forms are not just shapes, you have to remember that. In fact, Plato used a different word than we do: είδος, which means “kind” or “species,” like a species of animal. Bravery, Love, Justice, Friendship, are all είδη, they are “kinds” of things that exist, just like squares and circles are. So once you broaden the concept of Forms to include something like “boldness” you can see the riddle that sparks Plato’s imagination.

  • @brian423
    @brian423 Před měsícem +1

    Thanks for another interesting video. I would be thrilled if, one of these days, you told us what you think of defenders of free-market capitalism such as Adam Smith and Friedrich Hayek. (You and Hayek have at least one thing in common: you are both strongly opposed to scientism.)