Greatest Philosophers In History | Jean Paul Sartre

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  • čas přidán 5. 06. 2024
  • Jean Paul Sartre is one of the key figures in the philosophy of Existentialism, which emphasises the existence of the individual or human subject who faces existential angst in an apparently absurd world.
    This video explores his main ideas including: Nausea, the Absurdity of the World, Existence precedes Essence, Freedom, Bad Faith, The Look and Hell is Other People, among others.
    Sartre had a great influence on many areas of modern thought. A writer of prodigious brilliance and originality. He worked in many different genres: as a philosopher, a novelist, and a cultural critic. Sartre is credited for revivifying and popularising Existentialism to the world after it had remained quite stagnant since the death of Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard.
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    📚 Recommended Reading (High Quality and Best Translations)
    ▶ Nausea (1938)
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    ▶ The Wall (1939) and Other Stories
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    ▶ Being and Nothingness (1943)
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    ▶ No Exit (1944) and Three Other Plays
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    ▶ Existentialism is a Humanism (1946)
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    ⌛ Timestamps
    0:00 Introduction
    3:50 Nausea
    5:08 The Absurdity of the World
    5:57 Existence precedes Essence
    8:31 Freedom and Responsibility
    11:35 Bad Faith
    13:08 Being and Nothingness
    14:42 The Being For-itself and The Being In-itself
    16:27 The Being For-Others
    16:53 The Look
    18:31 Hell is Other People
    19:19 Why You Should Read Sartre
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━
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    #sartre #existentialism #jeanpaulsartre

Komentáře • 174

  • @Eternalised
    @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +39

    Enjoy these types of videos? Please give it a like
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    • @HOllyGolightlysHeart
      @HOllyGolightlysHeart Před 3 lety +2

      Your video helped be understand more clearly what was offered me in college 💝thank you 🌻

    • @domilorddomilord
      @domilorddomilord Před 11 měsíci

      Your videos are wow, mind blowing..., thank you 👍

  • @spasticalien
    @spasticalien Před 3 lety +137

    “Nothing looked real. I felt surrounded by cardboard scenery which could suddenly be removed. The world was waiting, holding its breath, making itself small - it was waiting for its attack, its Nausea”. - That´s deep.

  • @elenasyvokaite7019
    @elenasyvokaite7019 Před 2 lety +58

    This is definitely one of the most accurate accounts of Sartre's philosophy I've ever come across CZcams. Well done

  • @monofeo224
    @monofeo224 Před 3 lety +47

    Freedom is what you do with what's been done to you.
    - Sartre

  • @AG10381
    @AG10381 Před 3 lety +65

    Just recently read Nausea. Happy to see Sartre's philosophy being covered here! It's very well done.

    • @TheWorldTeacher
      @TheWorldTeacher Před 2 lety

      And by "philosophy" you mean abject NESCIENCE. :p
      Merry Christmas!

  • @danielqueiroz6723
    @danielqueiroz6723 Před 3 lety +83

    Underrated channel, you explained sartre x kierkegaard better than my teacher did!

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +10

      Thanks Daniel!! Appreciate the kind words.

    • @NLsononoah
      @NLsononoah Před 3 lety +1

      Just wait , this quility content is timeless. People will keep watching these, and people will be in search of them as well. We got here, others will too. Slowly but steady

    • @dickrichard626
      @dickrichard626 Před 2 lety

      That's, because you don't learn anyway.

    • @iforget6940
      @iforget6940 Před 2 lety

      @@dickrichard626 what does that mean.

    • @dickrichard626
      @dickrichard626 Před 2 lety +2

      @@iforget6940 Ppl always say:" I learned more from this video then my teacher." Implying that somehow watching a video once with out actually internalizing the actual information being presented is better then going to school to learn or that the teacher is suppose to present information for the class in some kind of documentary style format... Sure you can learn from videos especially if you watch alot and look into the more in-depth and nerdy channels, but actual learning requires some form of actual work and tedium inorder to progress realistically. I don't see the point of the comparison.

  • @InfinitiSin
    @InfinitiSin Před 3 lety +37

    Ah Yes, my daily dose of existentialism, now coming through Eternalised’s Satre. Great vid mate xD

  • @peace_cat76
    @peace_cat76 Před 3 lety +18

    Very well done, sir! I think probably one of the best Sartre summaries I've ever watched. Your key points and build-up, your pics, narration and music, excellent work. New subscriber! Thank you🙂

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +4

      Wow thank you so much John! Really appreciate your kind words. This is motivation is what keeps me going!

  • @joshturner5165
    @joshturner5165 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for this introduction. I really appreciate your videos.

  • @minimalism2o2o
    @minimalism2o2o Před 3 lety +16

    8:45 Man is condemned to be free. I came across these lines few days back.
    This is liberating as well as harrowing.
    PS: I love the introduction part where faces of great ones is juxtaposed beautifully and the bgm accentuates the feel.

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +2

      Definitely, an interesting take on freedom! Thanks so much for your kind words and your support!!

    • @KaustubhGhanekar
      @KaustubhGhanekar Před 3 lety +1

      @@Eternalised What is the list of faces of great ones at the beginning of the video

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +5

      @@KaustubhGhanekar Aristotle, Plato, Socrates, Confucius, Epicurus, Kant, Locke, Rousseau, Hume, Kierkegaard, Descartes, Camus, Foucault, Bertrand Russell, Machiavelli, Dostoevsky, Nietzsche, Schopenhauer, Sartre. :)

    • @KaustubhGhanekar
      @KaustubhGhanekar Před 3 lety +1

      @@Eternalised thanks a lot

  • @MarioChilaq
    @MarioChilaq Před 2 lety +8

    It's incredible how the concept of Bad Faith is something that probably millions of people do or have done in their lives, especially in the western world.

  • @sewfairyadhock8618
    @sewfairyadhock8618 Před rokem

    This was brilliant - thank you so much. 100% appreciated.

  • @gbeagle417
    @gbeagle417 Před rokem +1

    I'm glad I stumbled upon this channel!

  • @sandro-nigris
    @sandro-nigris Před 3 lety +1

    Great video, nicely done!

  • @dipeshduwal3234
    @dipeshduwal3234 Před 3 lety

    Amazing work like all your other videos! Keep uploading!!

  • @Davlavi
    @Davlavi Před rokem +1

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

  • @msauleh3476
    @msauleh3476 Před 2 lety +1

    You're really under rated and deserve more of a following.

  • @fraidoonw
    @fraidoonw Před 3 lety +1

    yes a great episode! thanks!

  • @gauravsharma9655
    @gauravsharma9655 Před rokem +2

    The concept of being looked by others was Spot on relatable.

  • @enbilerfrainitiald8529
    @enbilerfrainitiald8529 Před 3 lety +4

    Finally I understood some of Sartre! Thanks for the video 👍😀

  • @raskolnikovman936
    @raskolnikovman936 Před 3 lety +17

    fascinating philosophy!! I really like Sartre.

  • @Steve-yn3cs
    @Steve-yn3cs Před 2 lety

    Awesome documentary.
    Keep it up.🔥🔥

  • @iunoi4493
    @iunoi4493 Před rokem +1

    Thank you! 🤗

  • @M.O.1981
    @M.O.1981 Před rokem +1

    Excellent. Thank you.

  • @yubia5216
    @yubia5216 Před 3 lety +4

    You deserve millions of views my friend, amazing video :)

  • @Lucario-xv5vq
    @Lucario-xv5vq Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the Video! You rule dude.

  • @michaelcollins7738
    @michaelcollins7738 Před 3 lety +1

    Superb documentary and summary of Sartre's thought, thank you !

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you Michael! Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @Country_boy_zero
    @Country_boy_zero Před 3 lety +1

    Great video !!

  • @SeanLucasYT
    @SeanLucasYT Před 3 lety +12

    I didn't start reading seriously until my junior year in college. This meant that I have heard a lot of words in the past but I didn't really see those words written down on paper before. A lot of the words in more challenging books were very unusual for me. But, I would sound them all out and try to fit them into a sentence, like ones I would have previously heard. Awesome video man, I passed it at the 5:29 mark to write this comment, going to continue on with the video now!

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +3

      That's interesting!! There are times where we do experience that unusual absurd feeling of reading or just looking at something stripping it off all human meaning and observing at it nakedly, which seems bizarre. I appreciate your comment Sean and you watching the video, it means a lot!!

  • @thevipera5904
    @thevipera5904 Před 3 lety +2

    Fantastic work

  • @SHOUTband
    @SHOUTband Před 3 lety +2

    this was really interesting great video!

  • @funkymunky
    @funkymunky Před 3 lety +4

    We choose long-term agony to avoid short-term discomfort.

  • @mathew9851
    @mathew9851 Před 2 lety +5

    I've never resonated with a philosopher this much until now. Thank you for this.

  • @mbellizia75
    @mbellizia75 Před 2 lety +10

    Im binge watching this series, and its very interesting., But I cant help but wonder why these better known philosophers have such a depressing outlook on..well..everything. lol Is a deep pessimism a prerequisite for philosophy?

  • @jimmyraymond8625
    @jimmyraymond8625 Před 3 lety +9

    I love your explanation of Sartre's existentialism and his most important ideas.

  • @HOllyGolightlysHeart
    @HOllyGolightlysHeart Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you for your work of art 🥳🙏💝

  • @selvmordspilot
    @selvmordspilot Před 2 lety

    Subscribed!

  • @smkh2890
    @smkh2890 Před rokem +2

    I studied French Lit and I have read Camus and Sartre.
    The Roads to Freedom trilogy and Nausea are both essential reading.
    I haven't got into his philosophical works, but as a novelist, I think he is very good,
    not expounding philosophy in a novel, but really doing the work of a good fiction writer
    with characterisation and dialogue.

  • @richardking3206
    @richardking3206 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I think this is a decent explanation of some difficult concepts. I’m no philosopher and I always struggle with philosophical ideas as complex as these. I hold Sartre in very high esteem, not least because he developed the ideas within a very modern world.
    One aspect that I would have liked some discussion of is his support for socialism/communism. Existentialism is such a personal philosophical experience and yet Sartre’s political action was dedicated to communal beliefs, to societal actions. Many existentialists are pretty right wing (eg Iris Murdoch), and feel Sartre lost his way in politics. Can you explain this area of his thinking, at all? I know a little of how he came to that thinking, but would like to understand it better than I do. Can you cast any light on this, or indicate where it might best be sought? Your thinking is so clear here, so I’d love to read/hear what you have to say in elucidating this. Thank you.

  • @mathseasyasabcde5995
    @mathseasyasabcde5995 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice video and ideas

  • @MG-bc1ng
    @MG-bc1ng Před 3 lety +12

    ¡Fascinante filosofía del maestro Sartre y muy bien explicada!

  • @freedomworks3976
    @freedomworks3976 Před rokem

    Fantastic 👏 video

  • @sonazki
    @sonazki Před 3 lety +2

    very informative.

  • @PickVideos
    @PickVideos Před 3 lety +2

    Nice story. Very informative.

  • @tshibamo7971
    @tshibamo7971 Před rokem +1

    When I first read his line “Man wants to be God” in Being and Nothingness, I was blown away.
    Humans are bound to seek the meaning-filled existence that doesn’t have or require a reason for being (“the In-itself”), thereby being utterly content with themselves. Just like the soil wouldn’t ponder a philosophical reason for why it exists. It lacks consciousness. It just exists, contently.
    Humans, by virtue of having consciousness, are in terrible fate. We are born to be aware of why possibly we exist and what in hell we’re living towards, which obviously doesn’t have an answer (unless a god gives you one).
    So we’re lost in our doomed empty search, which we had no choice before birth but to join. And the only ways out are either a leap of faith into a god that gives you an arbitrary answer or to become one yourself.
    Men want to be God. How pithy.

    • @zayanalam9828
      @zayanalam9828 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I find sartre's notion of 'authentic being' in constrast to 'bad faith' rather unjustified. First of all, the idea of a 'being' being 'authentic' goes against the notion that existence proceeds essence. Sartre defines the self as 'we are what we are not' (process of negation, nothingness, transcendance of the conscious from the corporeal realities) and as 'we are not what we are' (bad faith, the 'being for others' as a constitutive element of ones conscious). These contradictory definitions, a succint explanation of Sartre's explanation of the self, discards any notion of grading the 'authenticity' of the self. Also, Sarte gives no realistic path of actualizing our 'authentic' self as he even describes the non reflective consciousness as a faculty that transposes the causality of the action it prompts as an end in of itself (a jealous act being defined as not by the relation between the agents action and the agents objective but by the particular act being preconditioned by the self which has become 'Jealousy' through the pre-reflective consciousness -remember, he doesnt distinguish between pre- reflective consciousness, reflective consciousness, and being for other as being separate from the 'self'.) Since bad faith can be determined as being caused by the being in itself (pre-reflective consciousness) overpowering the reflective attributes of being for itself (reflective consciousness) that would otherwise make the self aware of its potentialities, how is one who lives in bad faith lives a life of inauthenticitiy in comparison to someone who's cognizant of their potentiality. What Sartre did is just to explain the state of existence, he didnt establish a working philosophy where one can build towards and live as an 'authentic being'. Since the 'self' can never be understood by us through determinate terms, how can we hope to understand what an 'authentic' self even is if we dont hold a working premise. Since Sartre's whole philosophy is developed by the process of negation and defining the conscious through nothingness (the conscious is defined by what it is not - defining the conscious precludes any attempts of determining its essence) there is no primary principle as to what the self is in determinant, essential, definition. How can one construct a method of cultivating an 'authentic' self then.
      Also, I feel that his characterization that free will causes a never satiated angst to be not grounded. One 'self' is not constantly in an 'being for itself' mode where existential dread is doomed to be a constant for humans. The fact that the self is determined by its potentialities, not through concrete fixated definition that would be built under the assumption that essence proceeds existence, why is this angst, this dread is positioned as a constant for the self to deal with when the self is characterized as in constant flux. If anything, bad faith is an appropriate way of sublimating the angst that follows free will and acts as an appropriate engine to actualize one of our potentialities. Since the self is defined by potentialities and a being in flux (not a concrete, definable, entity), our constitution of a self being actualized by existence and free will should be more than apt to face the burden of carrying this so called angst as we are beings that naturally pursues a life of potentialities (we are never simply a fixated essence) without any rational basis for doing so. The fact that humans are wired to live a life of free will that constantly constructs and forgoes definitions of itself with no rational impetus means that our beings as existing in flux rather than concrete essence would not be 'condemned' by this 'dread', this 'angst'. In fact, these terminology are fallaciously applied as it assumes that an entity defined by its essence, by definition constructed through positive attributions, is being subjected to a constant condition contrary to the constitution of its being. Concepts such as 'dread', 'angst', 'sickness', underlies a concrete phenomenon. One that is illogically applied to an entity such as a 'self' that is defined through existence and it defined through negation. A concept derived through a priori prescients cannot be diagnosed with symptoms that would hold the subject as a being of 'essence'.

  • @sayorr
    @sayorr Před 3 lety +3

    Mind blowing!

  • @caramason56
    @caramason56 Před 2 lety

    Absolutely inspiring and brilliant philosopher 😊❤️💕

  • @AFUDDLEFUGGLECAT
    @AFUDDLEFUGGLECAT Před 29 dny

    Very inspiring

  • @contentweaverz2438
    @contentweaverz2438 Před rokem +1

    Nausea feels like world's smallest violin.

  • @Hi.malone
    @Hi.malone Před 2 lety +1

    Outstanding

  • @whoaitstiger
    @whoaitstiger Před 2 lety +4

    As much as I love Sartre a part of me can't help but want to say to him "Dude, come on, just chill out." 😂

  • @Rigoletta53
    @Rigoletta53 Před 6 měsíci

    Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose

  • @REOkcu
    @REOkcu Před 3 lety +2

    very nice

  • @productivityguy6128
    @productivityguy6128 Před 3 lety +1

    Great Video as always.
    Does somebody know the name of the painting 6:24
    Its on the cover of my (german) version of demons dostoevsky, but I never knew the name.

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you! Its the Desperate Man by Gustave Courbet :)

  • @P1915
    @P1915 Před 4 měsíci

    Read him in college..still fascinated by his thoughts on Being./ .. Nothingness..
    Still fascinated. Trying to break it down..fully understand.

  • @Beederda
    @Beederda Před rokem

    I had an insight about the envious eye that people often gaze with onto other without actually taking into account of the small aspect the envy eye sees and that to be envious of whatever it may be comes with its own kind of hell attached underneath the skin we all have a hell within in. But to hear that hell is other people i sorta understand this deeply and it is mind blowing a real how is this possible moment cause ive never read anything really just music so maybe something from a song provoking this in my mind I really don’t know how to explain it anymore

  • @XanderShiller
    @XanderShiller Před rokem

    The poetic words in the final pages of Nausea were so beautiful, as well as surreal as I was reading them in a Jazz café. He was a a linguistic acrobat..kind of like the Eminem of his time.

  • @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879

    I have bathroom books that I read for fun ('Worlds Worst Aircraft', 'The Past of Pastimes', 'The Order of Things') and then there are some of my favorite authors or ones I felt I should read. Four Christopher Hitchens books, one Richard Dawkins book, 'The Republic' by Plato, Fahrenheit 451.....and this book I found found for free. Seemed interesting but I didn't know the author as I'm uneducated, to be frank about it. It's called "The Psychology of Imagination" by Jean-Paul Sartre.
    .....I just started it and it's a very good read!

  • @jaymogamy
    @jaymogamy Před 3 lety

    Excellent! JfromOH

  • @freedomworks3976
    @freedomworks3976 Před rokem +1

    Freedom is what you do , with what has been done to you.
    I can see using this

  • @waynevanrensburg8037
    @waynevanrensburg8037 Před 2 lety

    Coming from a layperson, thank you for the enlightenment,

  • @satnamo
    @satnamo Před 3 lety +4

    My life is my own work of martial art.

  • @Luke-tk9lm
    @Luke-tk9lm Před 11 měsíci

    I don’t understand how Sartre could honestly assert that “these limiting things (circumstances) that we do not have control over do not limit our freedom.” Absolute freedom would have no limitations. Limitations prove the lack of freedom.

  • @benschorr-kon2071
    @benschorr-kon2071 Před rokem +1

    Essentialism only works if you feel the need to categorise, in order to feel comfortable. Were one to remain content with things being undefined, as they ultimately are, (as in, 'not separate'), then all that would remain would be to find a way to function in that state, and enjoy the flux.

  • @Unkn0wn1133
    @Unkn0wn1133 Před rokem

    Imagine robert sapolski and sartre having a conversation

  • @maketodaygreat9965
    @maketodaygreat9965 Před 2 lety

    🔥

  • @bitkurd
    @bitkurd Před 2 lety

    Freedom isn’t to choose freely,
    Rather to be free from choice.

  • @gogettalorri
    @gogettalorri Před 2 lety

    Thanks

  • @pbgaming3631
    @pbgaming3631 Před 2 lety +1

    should i watch this before reading his works or after?

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 2 lety +1

      You can watch this before reading his works to get a general overview of his philosophy

    • @pbgaming3631
      @pbgaming3631 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Eternalised ok thanks for replying so fast love your videos and also what about your single video on nausea

    • @Eternalised
      @Eternalised  Před 2 lety +2

      @@pbgaming3631 Yeah watching the Nausea video will reading help to get familiar with what's his talking about, since the philosophical concepts are implicit in the novel (freedom, responsibility, contingency, bad faith...). But if you do not want spoilers, do not watch the conclusion of the video 8:39-10:00

  • @rosismordet
    @rosismordet Před rokem

    Sartre my dude

  • @Appophust
    @Appophust Před 11 měsíci

    The Whittaker family in the US has a high number of members with Exotropia, or wandering/lazy eye. This is VERY common in consanguineous unions. This coupled with the odd beliefs and opinions, I'd say there's a good chance he was exactly that.

  • @bitkurd
    @bitkurd Před 2 lety

    All the roads lead to the same light.

  • @rberliner6680
    @rberliner6680 Před 5 měsíci

    We can choose it, but if we don’t take into account what we must do to survive in the world as it is, we are idiots.

  • @jorgeguerra5475
    @jorgeguerra5475 Před 3 lety +1

    Currently Reading existentialism is a Humanism

  • @Hambastegy
    @Hambastegy Před 2 lety

    🙏🙏🙏

  • @TheTricksterFigure
    @TheTricksterFigure Před rokem

    Freedom itself is a burden because of responsibility of making a right choice

  • @mind-numbingtasks1575
    @mind-numbingtasks1575 Před 4 měsíci

    As far as I'm concerned, JPS had it all figured out or at least gained some kind of satisfaction in not figuring it out. I would probably be an existentialist if I could truly understand what it means. I know for certain I exist way outside current societal norms and that gives me hope for some unknown reason.

  • @Williamb612
    @Williamb612 Před 2 lety +2

    He actually great for the times…however the envelope he was pushing broke many decades ago, and now can be encapsulated in just a few lines..

  • @gkk2215
    @gkk2215 Před 2 lety +1

    Please dont use such kind of background music which will make loose interest in knowing great minds life

  • @insidethewired
    @insidethewired Před 2 lety

    right

  • @philosophyman
    @philosophyman Před 2 lety

    Is the eyes thing basically talking about how the displeasure from societal Dissatisfaction with "me" creates anxiety, and changes my mental state to be isolated? How wad this man a marxist again?

  • @moshefabrikant1
    @moshefabrikant1 Před 2 lety

    1:00
    לסארטר גם היה טיימינג טוב שכתביו האקזיסטיאליסטים היו בתקופה מלחמת העולם השנייה במקום שאנשים חיפשו משמעות, בעקבות עולם אשר רצח עשרות מיליוני בני אדם.
    אנשים בחלקם רצו לקחת אחריות
    1:20
    מי השפיע על סארטר ואיך זה מתבטא בכתביו.
    7:00
    אנחנו האדונים אשר נותנים משמעות לדברים.
    ואנחנו מה שאנחנו עושים.
    כל מעשה עושה את עצמנו.
    המעשים שלנו בתודעה של החירות שלנו הם חלק מהסיפור של כתובת הדנא שלנו
    10:20
    סארטר מציב בפולוסופיה שלו שאין אלוהים, ואנחנו צריכים לבחור את המשמעות שלנו.
    בלי השלכות כי כשזה נגמר זה נגמר
    11:00
    מנגד לכך קירקגור לא חושב ככה.
    16:00
    אנחנו צריכים להיות מודעים לדבר שאנחנו עושים, לסיפור שאנחנו יוצרים, למשמעות שאנחנו נותנים.
    19:30
    בשביל מה צריך לקרוא את סארטר לדעתך?
    20:15
    כפי שסארטר אמר
    "הייתי רוצה שחיי יהיו יצירת אמנות
    20:15
    למה אנחנו חווים משבר קיומי בכלל?

  • @DSTH323
    @DSTH323 Před rokem

    Few lived a more bourgeois life than Jean Paul Sartre who (he said, wink, wink) wished to destroy the bourgeoisie.

  • @blackrebelradio9879
    @blackrebelradio9879 Před 2 lety

    Let's try this again, hello. U notice your head light is out.

  • @morosanuandrei4692
    @morosanuandrei4692 Před měsícem

    09:39

  • @Waferdicing
    @Waferdicing Před rokem

    😎

  • @carol-us4xn
    @carol-us4xn Před 8 měsíci

    It happens??

  • @Raven28Pisces
    @Raven28Pisces Před 2 lety

    Eren be like: *tatakae*

  • @markfisher6404
    @markfisher6404 Před rokem

    John Paul Sartre does not belong in the category "Greatest Philosophers in History". His best ideas were stolen from his lover.

  • @philosophyman
    @philosophyman Před 2 lety

    I love ur channel, but man I'm not a fan of sarte lol. I do like his view of God and that he fits in with nietzsche as far as the way to win is to progress aka discovering ur essence. But I'm not a fan of the idea of essence tbh. Can someone explain it to me? I can maybe get behind it if everyone has their own essences based on their brains individually defined patterns. I also don't know if we find our own essence. I feel as though we are born with an essence but using logic we try and change it.

    • @noah5291
      @noah5291 Před 2 lety

      Yep, existentialist who believe in absolute freedom aren't materialists. It's bizarre that Sarte was a communist.

    • @philosophyman
      @philosophyman Před 2 lety

      @@noah5291 why is that bizarre? Because communism is opposed to absolute freedom?

  • @boxingjerapah
    @boxingjerapah Před 2 lety

    I'll take Camus over JPS every time. He lived it. JPS talked about living it.

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 Před rokem

      Camus was the better man. He had the moral courage to denounce Stalin while Sartre, who knew the truth about Stalin’s crimes, refused to do so because he didn’t want to discourage the French Communists.

  • @rberliner6680
    @rberliner6680 Před 5 měsíci

    Buddhists devote themselves to discovering and maintaining that freedom.

  • @wiwysova
    @wiwysova Před rokem +1

    Uhm, its called "greatest philosophers" but youre talking about sarte the fart?

  • @edmcboy7308
    @edmcboy7308 Před 6 měsíci

    Yeah, well Scooby Doo, can do do! But Satre is smarter
    😔😔😔 I’m so alone

  • @haydencromwell8821
    @haydencromwell8821 Před rokem

    Didn't he and other French philosophers of the time lobby for the age of consent to be abolished 🤨

  • @raghavzingal
    @raghavzingal Před 11 měsíci

    j

  • @user-ug6ct5cv1h
    @user-ug6ct5cv1h Před 6 měsíci

    คำตอบอยู่ที่เราคำถามก็เราเป็นคนตั้งคำถามเองและคำตอบที่ไม่ได้ตั้งเองแต่เราต้องตั้งใจแก่โจทก์ให้ได้เพราะมันจำเป็นและถึงเวลาแล้วที่จะต้องข่วยกันแก้ไขทุกปัญหาที่เผชิญและเชื่อว่าต้องรีบแก้โจทย์นั้นให้จบลงให้ไวไม่งั้นจะอดตายกันทุกชีวิตตรงนี้ถ้ามันฝังอยู่ในรู้สึกสำนึกและจิตใต้สำนึกจริงคนนั้นจะไม่บ่นเลยสักคำว่าจะทำไม่ได้หรือแก้ไขปัญหาที่เผชิญอยู่ไม่ได้เพราะนี่คืองานของเราเองและคนอื่นเชื่อว่าถ้าคนทั้งโลกคิดเช่นนี้โลกก็จะได้ความลงตัวหรือสรุปทางเดียวกันด้วยดี

  • @sammy94780554
    @sammy94780554 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Is there gonna be a jaden smith episode?????

  • @fondofthebonds4914
    @fondofthebonds4914 Před rokem

    All you did was copy the exact transcript from the all too human documentary

  • @vladimiratanasovski9655
    @vladimiratanasovski9655 Před rokem +1

    Everything OK, but I don't understand by what standards is Sartre one of the greatest philosophers in history? He belongs in the third tier at best.