Greatest Philosophers In History | Friedrich Nietzsche

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • Friedrich Nietzsche was a German philosopher of the 19th century. He is regarded as one of the most revolutionary thinkers in Western philosophy and intellectual history. He was a cultural critic of his era, of traditional European morality and religious fundamentalism, especially of Christianity.
    Nietzsche shares his views on how he wants us to perceive the world liberating ourselves from oppressive tradition. The main concepts revolve around self-overcoming, amor fati, perspectivism, human nobility, the will to power, the eternal recurrence, and the overman.
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    ▶ Thus Spoke Zarathustra (1883)
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    ▶ On the Genealogy of Morals (1887)
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    ⌛ Timestamps
    0:00 Introduction
    4:19 Self-overcoming
    6:02 Perspectivism
    7:21 Human Nobility
    9:55 God is Dead
    11:29 Critique of Christianity
    13:44 Beyond Good and Evil
    15:05 Thus Spoke Zarathustra
    17:36 The Will to Power
    18:59 The Eternal Recurrence
    19:36 The Overman
    21:15 Why You Should Read Nietzsche
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    #nietzsche #overman #ubermensch

Komentáře • 234

  • @Eternalised
    @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +42

    Enjoy these types of videos? Please give it a like
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    • @satnamo
      @satnamo Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, I like it.

    • @balak7161
      @balak7161 Před 2 lety +1

      The title of your youtube videos is typical pompous western view. You should have named it Greatest Philosophers in Western history. When the west was still uncivilized, India had some of the greatest philosophers and thinkers the world has ever known. Of course, you can continue to be intellectually dishonest by not changing the title. Or invest the time and effort to learn about the great Eastern philosophers.

  • @thequantartist
    @thequantartist Před 3 lety +166

    "I am no man. I am dynamite". So powerful, got chills hearing that.

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +3

      Love that amazing quote :D Thanks for watching!!

    • @AvadoNMod
      @AvadoNMod Před 3 lety +3

      Don't you find a phrase like that entirely narcissistic?

    • @ondrejjavurek7748
      @ondrejjavurek7748 Před 3 lety +7

      @@AvadoNMod And that's supposed to be an argument for or against him?

    • @AvadoNMod
      @AvadoNMod Před 3 lety +1

      @@ondrejjavurek7748 isn't it obvious? Of course against him.

    • @ondrejjavurek7748
      @ondrejjavurek7748 Před 3 lety +20

      ​@@AvadoNMod That's the thing, to most people it would be obvious but I'm not sure it would be obvious to Nietzsche. Why would a supremely confident, let's even say arrogant statement like "I am no man. I am dynamite" be wrong? Only reason I would be able to come up with, would be disillusion (If he thought he was something special but he wasn't) in which case the problem still wouldn't be the arrogance but the disillusion. With Nietzsche, I don't think that's the case, he is till this day regarded as one of the greatest thinkers of all time. He challenged and blown up (hence dynamite) countless ideas seen as "obviously" true for thousands of years. Nietzsche doesn't care how it sounds to most people, he says it as he thinks it is.

  • @rudraksh5840
    @rudraksh5840 Před 2 lety +26

    Instead of sugar coating the Value of Truth, he takes it apart like a true gamer. Respect for this Gladiator of thought.

  • @raison3342
    @raison3342 Před 2 lety +38

    Nietzsche isn't dead yet, once have someone to remember his existence, he cannot cease to exist

  • @akshitsharma187
    @akshitsharma187 Před 3 lety +53

    "His works were not for general public but only for intellectuals" - now that's something that defines this CZcams channel.

  • @uelude
    @uelude Před 2 lety +5

    Coming back to your channel is always uplifting.
    My very favourite philosopher this time. Will watch again.
    Thank you.

  • @Davlavi
    @Davlavi Před rokem +3

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

  • @beyondselflessness8656
    @beyondselflessness8656 Před 2 lety +3

    This video was amazingly produced! Love the work:)

  • @jammon798
    @jammon798 Před 3 lety +6

    This is great! Very well made, love this! Thank you so much

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you very much! Glad you liked it.

  • @johnfromdownunder.4339
    @johnfromdownunder.4339 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much for your knowledge and for showing me all my greatest writers and philosophers.

  • @michaelconlan3205
    @michaelconlan3205 Před rokem +1

    'He expected them to hate him." Something I did not expect, but now understand.

  • @laszlobacs9347
    @laszlobacs9347 Před 2 lety

    Great content, I enjoyed every moment of it. Thanks for sharing.

  • @eirikmurito
    @eirikmurito Před rokem +16

    Western philosophy is so awesome. Straight to the meat and potatoes. No cope, no fanfiction, no distractions

    • @xs10tl1
      @xs10tl1 Před rokem +1

      Modern leadership is convincing the sheep the gate doesn't exist and is locked.

    • @knb2b-cu1ll
      @knb2b-cu1ll Před měsícem

      that's too ambiguous to narrow down, whatever you're attempting to convey. Bad job@@xs10tl1

  • @lynxclangaming8745
    @lynxclangaming8745 Před 3 lety +6

    I love the visuals and audio, this is some really good work and probably took a lot of hard work.

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you very much! Appreciate your kind words, this is what keeps me going! =)

    • @satnamo
      @satnamo Před 3 lety +1

      He who loves what he does
      Worn himself out doing it.

  • @soleilm3866
    @soleilm3866 Před 3 lety +3

    Great content and excellent narration

  • @Meta.Empress
    @Meta.Empress Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you - this is very valuable in my studies of lifelong learning and mixing with similar souls in solitude

  • @deadman746
    @deadman746 Před 2 lety +3

    This is the best overall summary of Nietzsche I have seen on CZcams. I have listened to a lot. Most of them focus on Zarathustra and/or the first of the three essays in Genealogy. That's great stuff, but there is a lot more great stuff. One thing you omit is that his philological/linguistic contribution, especially in "On Truth and Lie in an Extra-Moral Sense," which prefigured Cognitive Science by about a century. I can forgive that omission, especially as none of the Cognitive Scientists seem to be aware of it. I'd also like to suggest that Übermensch is more properly translated as "beyond human." "Beyond" comes closer to what he meant than "over" and "super." It is the idea of having perilously crossed over the unstable bridge of humanity. I can't figure out a good way of making an English noun out of that, though.

  • @InspirationFromThePast
    @InspirationFromThePast Před 3 lety +16

    Friederich Nietzsche love his ideas great philosopher.

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +5

      Indeed! The best :) Thanks for commenting!

  • @fraidoonw
    @fraidoonw Před 3 lety +2

    wonderful talk on Nietzsche! thanks!

  • @JuanJuan-yv2oc
    @JuanJuan-yv2oc Před 2 lety +18

    Well done! What a profound and amazingly produced video! Such an organic mixture of images, music and content. I am very glad having discovered this channel and eager to explore it further. One questions: do you credit the paintings as well? I'd like to look further into some them regarding the artist, the background and so. Thx

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 2 lety +5

      Thank you! I have recently made artwork galleries of my latest uploads. If you like a certain painting, try to screenshot it and drop it in Google Images to search the author/painting name

  • @MrBorderlands123
    @MrBorderlands123 Před 3 lety +3

    Great video! Look forward to your next one.

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks Matt! Appreciate your kind words, will be working on the next one :)

  • @2ayous
    @2ayous Před 3 lety +3

    What a video! AMAZING content keep it up!

  • @thewongmindset451
    @thewongmindset451 Před 3 lety +6

    Dang Great video!! 🔥 I can’t imagine the time to research and put this together 👍👍

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +4

      Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it! Did definitely take some time! :)

  • @theradicalno1
    @theradicalno1 Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks for the we'll needed info 👍

  • @SeanLucasYT
    @SeanLucasYT Před 3 lety +12

    Halfway through I remembered watching your video of Jordan Peterson on Nietzsche, and I was like I knew this guy sounded familiar. Awesome video, these types of videos are always super interesting to me. I liked The Overman part where man is like the tightrope between the beast and the Overman. Again awesome video!!

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +2

      Thanks Sean! I'm happy you liked it. Appreciate the support a ton!

    • @TheExNonGrata
      @TheExNonGrata Před 3 lety +3

      Careful, Peterson appropriates Nietzsche for his own causes a lot.

  • @aaronsmith2929
    @aaronsmith2929 Před 2 lety +3

    I think it has to do with consciousnesses. Some people reach such high states of consciousness that they feel drawn to solitude for a type of clarity because they see the fog of society as a play or even a mental trance that everyone gets caught up in.

  • @songngam
    @songngam Před 3 lety +2

    thank you very much! great video for me!

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +3

      You're very welcome! Thanks for the support

  • @freshflesh1
    @freshflesh1 Před 3 lety +3

    Great insight and well told.

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you kindly! Appreciate the kind words

  • @trevorhassel8296
    @trevorhassel8296 Před 3 lety +2

    great video!

  • @RobertoCardella
    @RobertoCardella Před 6 měsíci

    Wonderful job

  • @omgomg5067
    @omgomg5067 Před 2 lety +4

    I never ever comment but these are amazing, please post more ❤️❤️

  • @PhoenixSB5
    @PhoenixSB5 Před 3 lety +3

    Great videos and great contents!

  • @user-es3bo6sv4x
    @user-es3bo6sv4x Před 3 lety +3

    amazing. Continue doing this.

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +3

      Thank you! Will keep doing so! Working on my next. :)

  • @djjkoddyssey6393
    @djjkoddyssey6393 Před 3 lety +3

    Great Video!! Never heard of him before!! Very interesting!! Subbed!! Underrated philosopher!

  • @yuthikaarunkumar
    @yuthikaarunkumar Před 3 lety +2

    Learnt new facts about this philosopher!!

  • @JoeMacekRealEstate
    @JoeMacekRealEstate Před 3 lety +3

    Liked and watched in real time end to end!
    Joe

  • @aakkoin
    @aakkoin Před 2 lety +2

    A scientific article said that people think more clearly and creatively when they are walking/moving, not just sitting down. And Nietzsche used to hike in nature and roam in the city, and I read that he even said something like "No great idea has ever been thought while sitting down." paraphrased.. That idea stuck with me for some reason.

  • @MG-bc1ng
    @MG-bc1ng Před 3 lety +7

    Fantástico, me resultó de gran utilidad para comprender los conceptos de Nietzsche. He estado leyendo sus obras y a menudo me encuentro con dificultades.

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +4

      ¡Me alegro mucho que te haya sido de utilidad! Un abrazo

  • @lucky8057
    @lucky8057 Před 2 lety +7

    literally an hour ago, I scribbled on my copy of 'Man's search for meaning'.."What gives values their value?" and i have also written a note titled "Humanity is in the stage of infancy".. So thankful for this video. Now i know who to read next!!

  • @filipppolyvianyi1819
    @filipppolyvianyi1819 Před 3 lety +4

    Good Job!!!

  • @lesprilib1
    @lesprilib1 Před 3 lety +15

    One of the best You Tube introductions to Nietzsche's philosophy. But, the absence of Dionysus makes it a little problematic.

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +10

      Thank you for the kind words! You're right about Dionysus, I'd consider that a bit more "advanced Nietzsche". I could've mentioned it nevertheless. Thanks again!

    • @edwardwoods3097
      @edwardwoods3097 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, I agree. That is perhaps a little more advanced Nietzsche.

    • @boobyhatch7897
      @boobyhatch7897 Před 2 lety

      Good be on you all

  • @dlloydy5356
    @dlloydy5356 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant information, very well summarised. I really like his work yet often struggle to to get to the core. Thanks I found this helpful & clear.

  • @mathseasyasabcde5995
    @mathseasyasabcde5995 Před 3 lety +2

    Nice video

  • @Matt_Burns
    @Matt_Burns Před 3 lety +3

    Well done!!!!!

  • @bernardliu8526
    @bernardliu8526 Před rokem

    Best exposition of Nietzsche I have come across.
    How and when we have killed

  • @nelsonx5326
    @nelsonx5326 Před 2 lety +1

    I just got a couple of his books, 'Will to Power' and 'Thus Spoke what's his name'. Nietzsche's philosophy is contrary to all I understand to be grounded in life and socially. I'm due for an adventure.

  • @lilmoe4364
    @lilmoe4364 Před 2 lety +1

    "Whatever doesn't kill you.. isn't working.." (from grumpy cat meme) 🤣 Thanks for the video! Great stuff, and eternally relevant!

  • @mistsister
    @mistsister Před 2 lety +4

    The Norwegian musical couple Heidi Solberg and Vegard Sverre Tveitan have made music with lyrics based on Neitzche's philosophies since the 90s. They were paramount to my personal growth.

    • @karkkosvolfe
      @karkkosvolfe Před rokem

      Can I locate their music on popular platforms like Spotify?

  • @user-we2qv1cx6x
    @user-we2qv1cx6x Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for prefacing the program by uncovering some of the misconceptions for those out there who were misled. Many still say that Nietzsche was anti semitic or that he was somehow evil and responsible for the war. But his words were twisted and taken out of context. Which, when one thinks about it, can happen to anyone’s words. Or, perhaps, someone can misunderstand a work and then run with it. Walter Kaufmann goes into this in depth in his main work on Nietzsche. That’s what initially educated me. I found his translations peerless as well. He certainly was passionate about it and took it seriously.

  • @babasheep2828
    @babasheep2828 Před 3 lety +2

    Wow! I learned so much!

  • @borismortier1057
    @borismortier1057 Před 2 lety

    what is the painting at 5:48 called? The one with the clouds and the mountain climber.

  • @berizont
    @berizont Před 3 lety +9

    I believe the story with the horse after which he completely went crazy is actually a myth...but an interesting one of course, especially in reference to the similar experience of raskolnikov out of dostoevskys "crime and punishment"

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +5

      Yep, could just have been a myth. That's a very interesting connection!

    • @TheExNonGrata
      @TheExNonGrata Před 3 lety

      How is it similar, the only similiarity is that they both went crazy, the reason they did is different, Rashko went crazy because his persona died, and the fragile man underneath came to the forefront, Nietzsche went crazy because he doesn't like to see horses get abused

    • @berizont
      @berizont Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheExNonGrata Obviously Nietzsches pathogenesis is a little more complicated, but I won't go into it right now. I was refering to one dream passage of Raskolnikov, were he recalls an event similar to said one, where his father (?) whips a horse and he can't do anything to help etc.

    • @piccadelly9360
      @piccadelly9360 Před 2 lety

      Everyone goes crazy when you know that everything you have taught yourself cannot be passed on because people are unable to process your information. Einstein experienced almost the same thing, at some point he asked himself why people can't see what he can see so easily, are people crazy or It self. Fortunately, he didn't fall into depression or maybe he did. If nobody understands you it's hard to stay sane

  • @ayda2876
    @ayda2876 Před 7 měsíci +1

    The story with his sister and what she did is so interesting it makes me wonder how much of Nietzsche's work was authentic or not. She might've been able to change a lot of things while he was sick..i'd love more information on that matter

  • @schlongy2dope
    @schlongy2dope Před rokem +1

    Your voice is HILARIOUS

  • @alexg4870
    @alexg4870 Před 3 lety +1

    Very cool

  • @theterminaldave
    @theterminaldave Před 2 lety

    Nice ending!

  • @weirdexistence2611
    @weirdexistence2611 Před 2 lety

    Como encuentro estos videos en español?

  • @june4294
    @june4294 Před 3 lety +20

    The greatest philosopher of all time.

    • @edwardwoods3097
      @edwardwoods3097 Před 2 lety +1

      I agree.

    • @alexmorrison9156
      @alexmorrison9156 Před 2 lety +1

      Lol, he wasn´t very deep. And was a bit confused too

    • @june4294
      @june4294 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alexmorrison9156 He was very deep actually. He went even deeper than Descartes..

    • @alexmorrison9156
      @alexmorrison9156 Před 2 lety +1

      @@june4294 Descartes wasn´t deep at all

    • @june4294
      @june4294 Před 2 lety

      @@alexmorrison9156 According to you, who was?

  • @martynasauz2241
    @martynasauz2241 Před 2 lety

    Nice! When video about Gang Nam Style?

  • @edwaaard46
    @edwaaard46 Před 3 lety +18

    The work "The will to power" from Nietzsche, was mind boggling for me. I know this book is a fake, but the notes are still nietzsche.. And some notes are so profound and smart, that when i read it, my consciousness transforms in a transcendent state of mind. In my opinion the collection of will to power covers all his significant thoughts from all his works. But it's not a good start in nietzsches world. All his works are amazing. Love gay science too, my second favorite. My favorite philosopher of all time, and a father that i never had

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +4

      Brilliant! I have yet to read his Will to Power. The Gay Science has some amazing parables. I love Thus Spoke Zarathustra.

    • @TheExNonGrata
      @TheExNonGrata Před 3 lety

      Ernst Junger is better :) He was in some ways more Nietzschean than Nietzsche

    • @humanfirst11
      @humanfirst11 Před 2 lety

      "I know this book is a fake.."? That book not written by Nietzsche?

    • @Reality-Distortion
      @Reality-Distortion Před rokem +3

      @@humanfirst11 His mental health collapsed before he finished it. His notes were taken by his sister and she finished it into a book. The problem is - she was a nazi and the book itself was also used within the nazi's circles. So at least part of the script is a perverted version of original vision (he hated both nazis and his sister) and we will never learn the full extent of what it was supposed to hold. Which is sad because Nietzsche referred the term itself many times and announced Will to Power in his previous work, so this could have very well been his magnum opus that surpasses even Zarathustra.

    • @juliusevolvere6835
      @juliusevolvere6835 Před rokem

      Yeah except that’s all bull sht. Nietzsche died in 1900 the first publication of Will to Power was in 1901 final in 1906. The nazi party wasn’t a thing until 1920.

  • @philosophemes
    @philosophemes Před 3 měsíci

    @10:40 He wasn't trying to "end all values." I was surprised you handled all of Beyond Good and Evil in under 2 mins and less than 20 sentences. Quite popular video though. Good job!

  • @cesarmedina4600
    @cesarmedina4600 Před 2 lety

    thank you friedrich nietzsche !

  • @juanarel6966
    @juanarel6966 Před 2 lety

    Exelente

  • @ProdBeto
    @ProdBeto Před 3 lety +5

    This kind of video should be more relevant than it is. Hope you get there!

  • @CygnusEight
    @CygnusEight Před 2 lety

    4:20 a one frame image? Interesting.

  • @dandydante7924
    @dandydante7924 Před 2 lety +2

    Bro I fucking died when I saw the spaghetti Monster 🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😭 talking about creating your own values oh boy I have a new desktop background 🤩

  • @Demention94
    @Demention94 Před rokem

    I'd love to see a modern film about Neitzsche on the big screen.

  • @landonbolts7650
    @landonbolts7650 Před 2 lety

    This explains me

  • @Asanga987
    @Asanga987 Před rokem +1

    Thank you only one thing missing is Buddhist ideas contribution to his thoughts.

  • @alexispa41
    @alexispa41 Před 3 měsíci

    Apparently I've been thinking like this dude for a while

  • @saeiddavatolhagh9627
    @saeiddavatolhagh9627 Před 3 měsíci

    Nietzche must have been an evolutionist. His idea of overman as the pinnacle of evolution on earth has a great vibe to it. He is probably the greatest and most misunderstood philosopher of all time. Thank you for the very illuminating video!

  • @mojib.nasery
    @mojib.nasery Před 2 lety

    Rest in peace.

  • @anothermike4825
    @anothermike4825 Před 2 lety +1

    Wasn't the horse an ode to Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment? Nietzsche's state of mind was probably similar to Raskolnikov's when Raskolnikov tried to save the horse in Crime and Punishment.

  • @burritodog3634
    @burritodog3634 Před 2 lety +1

    9:16 among us family 😳

  • @hscgoldenboy
    @hscgoldenboy Před 3 lety +6

    His life surely ended in misery but his works, after his death, flourished! In that sense, he became immortal. Nice video! 💯

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +1

      Absolutely, well said! Thanks for the comment!

    • @satnamo
      @satnamo Před 3 lety +1

      Some man is reborn posthumously

    • @AvadoNMod
      @AvadoNMod Před 3 lety

      This is what he wanted. To become immortal. Simply because he was afraid of death, as probably most people are...

  • @shadowking1380
    @shadowking1380 Před 2 lety

    Remember reading his works in my college ethics and philosophy classes and I have to say I fell fairly heavy on the side of the German with the push broom mustache

    • @B0DYSLAM
      @B0DYSLAM Před 2 lety

      I did a philosophy degree, we were always told this wasn’t actually true and his sister caused this

  • @oc5515
    @oc5515 Před 3 lety +1

    @21:25 is that the narrator from fight club?

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +1

      Haven't watched Fight Club, perhaps it shares common beliefs?

    • @oc5515
      @oc5515 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Eternalised I highly suggest you do. I think Brad Pitts character in the movie shares the same beliefs. It reflects a Nietzschean perspective on postmodern life. I would even say, in some regards the Brad Pitt Tyler is meant to represent the higher ideal for ourselves.
      Watch it when you can and let me know what you think. Cheers!

    • @zachariasjeppelaunemborg4461
      @zachariasjeppelaunemborg4461 Před 3 lety

      There’s a great video on CZcams explaining the connection between Nietzsche’s ideas and Fight Club! Highly recommend both the movie or even just the short analysis on here :)

  • @bingflosby
    @bingflosby Před 2 lety

    Did you shop ur face onto the picture of the dude on horseback

  • @DreamsFantasized
    @DreamsFantasized Před 2 lety

    Are we just going to ignore the fact that at 9:47 they put a picture of the Flying Spaghetti Monster in?

  • @piccadelly9360
    @piccadelly9360 Před 2 lety +1

    Knowledge is dynamite . Philosophie should be learned in school and everything else comes from alone (primary school)

  • @fairfeatherfiend
    @fairfeatherfiend Před 2 lety +2

    It's easy to philosophize when you don't have to work to make a living.

  • @WiseOwl_1408
    @WiseOwl_1408 Před 2 lety +2

    This guy was bat shit crazy. Smart but crazy.

  • @danielkelley7548
    @danielkelley7548 Před 2 lety

    Wow. Agent Smith does a great job narrating this.

  • @lordofchaosinc.261
    @lordofchaosinc.261 Před rokem

    Nietzsche's great revenge against zoroastristic religions is that more people remember Zarathustra from his book now.

  • @DeadEndFrog
    @DeadEndFrog Před 3 lety +5

    Great overview of Nietzsche! Theres alot there to love, but you can almost taste the coping mechanisms in Nietzsche. I sometimes wonder what the younger Nietzsche would have said about the older Nietzsche. Would he see his overman rants as overly religious? Afterall the future is just yet another 'hinterwelt' for people to hide in, so they don't have to face the here and now. Would he have seen his treatment of humanity as a collection of beings to overcome as overly collectivist? Yet another movment to unite us all and kill what is great about the individual person. Would he have seen the will to power as yet another attempt by a philosopher to unite everything that exists under the dominion of some grand 'idea' rather then face the real world?
    There is a sad irony to Nietzsche
    Both in his life, what his works got used for, and the contrast between his works
    Not to mention that his 'overman' probably came and went before he even got to write any of his works, and didn't change anything in this world.

    • @TheExNonGrata
      @TheExNonGrata Před 3 lety +1

      > I sometimes wonder what the younger Nietzsche would have said about the older Nietzsche.
      There are variations for sure, such as how he defined Apollon and dionysian
      > Would he have seen his treatment of humanity as a collection of beings to overcome as overly collectivist? Yet another movment to unite us all and kill what is great about the individual person.
      No he would not have seen it as collectivist, where did you get the idea that humanisty is a collection of beings to overcome, he states repeatedly that only few great men can overcome and the rest shall be rightfully enslaved. Someone who thought to collectively overcome would be Junger, in the days of the 1930s when he wrote the worker. Junger was the most Nietzschean man to come after Nietzsche's death.

    • @DeadEndFrog
      @DeadEndFrog Před 2 lety

      @@TheExNonGrata Well i guess its probably true that he didnt want humanity to be overcome collectivly, but then the fascist inspiration is probably true, that there is a sense in which the ubermensch is an authoritarian idea.
      Its still rather idealistic, as the ubermensch will be easily done away with by the herd, as the concept lacks the strenght in Numbers.
      Ernst junger is indeed the most nietzchian to come after, but both him and nietzche are lesser Max stirners, they lack the courage to drop idealism of any kind, and simply let man be man, rather then some philosophers delusions of grandure.
      But thats what one gets when one attempts to «overcome» nihilism. One simply becomes religious. And sure you can find a good religion out there, a good «philosophy». But they all Ask you to worship ideas as if they are corporeal, and as if thats what the world is made of.
      Its all a cope with nihilism

    • @nightwatchman7482
      @nightwatchman7482 Před 2 lety

      @@DeadEndFrog You really don't understand, Nietzsche, do you? What does it even mean to "overcome humanity collectively"? There are base, common instincts and there are rare, higher instincts; one can only strive to overcome what is lowly in oneself. And as nature has hitherto pushed towards man, it will continue to push beyond man, towards the overman. We can choose to either take on this task and be bridges to the overman or go back to the ape. That's authoritarian for you?
      What idealism did Nietzsche propose? His entire philosophy is a fight against idealism, an effort towards a human-all-too-human philosophy of the earth. A philosophy of physiological and psychological health and strength as I see it. Will to power is not a metaphysical concept but a basic observation about life on earth: an endless battle among forms/patterns for propagation and domination. Every idea/philosophy is an expression of an underlying instinct -- even "simply let man be man" is an idea. And the value of an idea lies in the consequences it produces -- enhancement or decline of the type man. Creatures with highly developed concepts of self as modern humans are incapable of living without finding meaning in ideas.

    • @DeadEndFrog
      @DeadEndFrog Před 2 lety

      @@nightwatchman7482 you conflated multiple diffrent points into two paragraphs. But i dont mind, heres what i was getting at;
      There is a sense in which the ideas mirror the religious, the overman is a messiah to come, the future is his heaven, the authoritarian part is merely the insistance on this dogma.
      Sure you can interprate him diffrently, but that doesnt make my interpretation any less valid. Unless your willing to say that these ideas are merely a «parody» of religion (which some have claimed). Its still the case that these ideas are diffrent then other philosophers way of dealing with idealism. Instead of inventing a new myth one could simply dismiss the old, and leave humanity as a concept as well. If a philosophy is to be individualistic, it has to stop focusing on these overarching ideas and collective goals for all. Thats just if one wants a truely individualistic philosophy.
      But i can agree, as i did with the person above, that he probably didnt want humanity to be overcome collectivly.
      Nietzche hates the way Schopenhauer conceptualized «the will» and he proclaims that this idea is like religion, bound to a dogma, why wouldnt that be the case for the will to power?
      It seems to me that the critique of asceticism, Even when its done without moralizing, is just a way to critique that which doesnt fit the dogma of will to power. As these people dont seem to share any of the characteristics of power as we see around the world.
      Does one really need a principle to describe reality? Reality works regardless of ouer mental conceptions, thats what makes it diffrent then philosphies who want to create a new religion, they prescribe how to act, rather then leaveing the ought claims out of ones view of reality.
      And the danger is of course when one attempts to describe a principle, that one simutaniously creates an ought, while ignoring that which doesnt fit, or having to shoehorn philosophies into «power».

    • @nightwatchman7482
      @nightwatchman7482 Před 2 lety

      @@DeadEndFrog Okay, I see it differently than you. First of all, developed humans cannot do without a philosophy, whether it be a collective religion or an individual set of values. Even nihilism is a philosophy/idea -- animals don't "believe" and so they don't "believe in nihilism" either. The point is not to describe reality but to have a sense of direction when we're past the stage where nature gave us direction in the wilderness. And so every philosophy is an ought, a Yes and a No.
      I see Nietzsche's work as an effort to bring man's meaning, or rather his search for meaning, from the heavens to the earth so as to revitalise the withering plant "man". The concept "overman" is part of that effort; he's not a messiah dropped from heaven but a possibility on the earth, a possibility of what we can make ourselves. Of course, like "the best version of ourselves", we will never reach overman and we're never meant to. It's an idea to inspire self-overcoming here and now so we get one step closer to the overman each day, on the bridge that is "man". We must not see overman as an end but adopt self-overcoming as a process, and I think this was the highest goal of Nietzsche's -- to bring back man lost in heavenly idols and ends to an earthly process.
      Finally, Nietzsche doesn't give a list of thou shalts. And the overman isn't even a collective goal. Very few are capable of the self-overcoming process and to those he gives the tools to create their own overmen and their own thou shalts. This process has to be essentially born out of a will to power, but a form of will to power that makes an individual healthier, stronger and freer, as opposed to the ascetic form of will to power, which negates the animal man and his instincts. Every morality ever created is a will to power, where power is not some metaphysical force but domination and assimilation of patterns on earth, and this is the realization that carries one "beyond good and evil".

  • @tilleternity
    @tilleternity Před rokem

    ❤️❤️

  • @joseramonpirela6160
    @joseramonpirela6160 Před 3 lety +2

    En Espanol???

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +2

      Hola José. Originalmente está en inglés hablado. Sin embargo, están disponibles los subtítulos en Español en el botón de opciones debajo a la derecha del vídeo. ¡Un saludo!

  • @conversationcorner1837

    Why has Nietzche captured the imagination of more people than other philosophers ?

  • @EclecticEngineer604
    @EclecticEngineer604 Před měsícem

  • @johnjepsen4243
    @johnjepsen4243 Před 2 lety +1

    1:11: gossip and hearsay re: "a horse being whipped ", a la Dostoevsky. Lol..

  • @DSTH323
    @DSTH323 Před 2 lety +1

    "It is vanity to follow the lusts of the flesh and to desire that for which thou must afterwards be grievously punished" --- Thomas a Kempis, The Imitation of Christ

  • @timothycorneille9500
    @timothycorneille9500 Před 2 lety

    Break the flesh(suffering) so the spirit lives on

  • @MichaelHannatoday
    @MichaelHannatoday Před 3 lety

    Urantia Book: 15:14.9 Your planet is a member of an enormous cosmos; you belong to a well-nigh infinite family of worlds, but your sphere is just as precisely administered and just as lovingly fostered as if it were the only inhabited world in all existence.

  • @bAa-xj3ut
    @bAa-xj3ut Před rokem

    💚💚💚💚💚💚

  • @Laneline5000
    @Laneline5000 Před rokem

    "Good and evil, and joy and pain, and I and you - colored smoke did they seem to me before creative eyes. The creator wished to look away from himself; so he created the world. ~Friedrich Nietzsche

  • @JSwift-jq3wn
    @JSwift-jq3wn Před rokem

    He would have gladly exchanged his entire Self and philosophy with a 10" ...

  • @xs10tl1
    @xs10tl1 Před rokem

    The last two years prove The Last Men are the most dangerous Men.

  • @johncaiwa
    @johncaiwa Před 3 lety

    i took a philosophy class before. it was okay

  • @Charlie-rh8od
    @Charlie-rh8od Před 3 lety +1

    Isn’t the horse story not confirmed?

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +2

      That's right. As far as we know in 1889, while walking in the streets in Turin, Nietzsche suffered a mental breakdown. Nietzsche collapsed in the street after seeing a horse being flogged by its owner, throwing himself towards the animal and embracing it, although this is a famous event and movies adapted such as The Turin Horse, there is little evidence of it ever occurring. The episode seems similar to a passage which occurs early on in Crime and Punishment, a book of one of Nietzsche’s most revered writers: Dostoevsky.

  • @jayburkett2859
    @jayburkett2859 Před 3 lety +2

    You didn’t explain the eternal recurrence at all. Otherwise good video

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +4

      Thanks for the compliment. I agree it was very brief! It is what Zarathustra calls his "most abysmal thought", the event for which the whole book of Thus Spoke Zarathustra exists, the antithesis of Heaven, to want to experience the same life, same struggles, same joys, for eternity. Embracing amor fati. The highest affirmation of earthly life and the ultimate Yes-sayer. I hope it is a bit clearer.

    • @satnamo
      @satnamo Před 3 lety +2

      Here is a simple test:
      Was that life ?
      I want to say to death.
      Well then!
      1 more,
      My friend!