Nietzsche In Twelve Minutes

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  • čas přidán 12. 02. 2014
  • I do not own any of these images. This 12-minute video is intended as an introduction to the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. It is not intended as a comprehensive or definitive account of his thought. This video is for educational purposes only.

Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @TheModernHermeticist
    @TheModernHermeticist Před 7 lety +1383

    “In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule.”

    • @johnsmith4630
      @johnsmith4630 Před 6 lety +10

      The Modern Hermeticist well Society needs a mythology in order to rectify the contradictions we must entertain to function as a group competing against other groups.

    • @PearComputingDevices
      @PearComputingDevices Před 6 lety +7

      +Josh Steffen (stookified) amen on that!

    • @LVXMagick
      @LVXMagick Před 5 lety +5

      The Modern Hermeticist I love you Brother. 🖤

    • @michaelpondo6324
      @michaelpondo6324 Před 5 lety

      F

    • @keithwalker8738
      @keithwalker8738 Před 5 lety +14

      It’s called “Mob Mentality “ which is Worship of the herd .

  • @dukadarodear2176
    @dukadarodear2176 Před 6 lety +506

    I remember climbing to the top of Table Mountain in South Africa while my friend took an elevator/stairs about 30 years ago.
    I distinctly remember feeling tired but elated when I go to the top whereas by contrast, my friend was listless and even a little bored.
    That taught me that struggle has it's own rewards.

    • @eppiehemsley6556
      @eppiehemsley6556 Před 5 lety +3

      Good on you Dukky. You sound like a man after my own heart.

    • @kheart8812
      @kheart8812 Před 5 lety +5

      ''its'' own rewards even

    • @jn846
      @jn846 Před 5 lety +29

      and another similar story...there was a young boy who was watching a caterpillar struggling to break free of it's cocoon and become a butterfly. Sensing the struggle and worried it would not make it he quickly decided to try to help the struggling insect. He tore apart the remains of the cocoon and freed the insect from it's seeming tomb. But then something surprising, the butterfly did not fly away for you see it was the struggle which gave it the strength to fly and not having gone through that struggle it's wings did not develop the strength it needed. So the lesson from that story is that it's the struggle that makes us stronger and is actually just what we need to grow into a butterfly - metaphorically speaking that is! :P

    • @jerryshortt4143
      @jerryshortt4143 Před 5 lety +2

      another fucknut who doesn't know the difference between _it's_ + _its_

    • @GameFuMaster
      @GameFuMaster Před 5 lety +2

      or there's the possibility that you subconsciously had to justify the effort put in. Studies have shown that we're more likely to give explain reasons for our choices, through left-right brain image testing.

  • @TheProgressiveParent
    @TheProgressiveParent Před 9 lety +458

    Nietzsche was inspired by Beethoven who, in spite of his difficulties including going deaf, still said he would live his life over again 1000 tomes.

    • @aslaing
      @aslaing Před 6 lety +4

      TheProgressiveParent tomes 😂

    • @monroecorp9680
      @monroecorp9680 Před 6 lety +10

      Thought it was Wagner he was inspired by?

    • @hyperspacejester7377
      @hyperspacejester7377 Před 6 lety +8

      It was Monroe... perhaps he was inspired by both but he wrote extensively on Wagner!

    • @sttarch5150
      @sttarch5150 Před 6 lety +4

      You mean Wagner

    • @gordonmacdonald8660
      @gordonmacdonald8660 Před 5 lety

      @Bruno56 Marilyn Monroe (Norma Jean) took her last name as "Monroe". It was chosen in reference to James Monroe - the 5th POTUS

  • @dvd11811
    @dvd11811 Před 5 lety +43

    "Philosophers build mansions, but live in hovels next to the mansions" ... Kierkegaard

  • @heyassmanx
    @heyassmanx Před 9 lety +299

    Wow, rare that I hear Nietzsche put so cogently. Well done Eric, thoroughly enjoyed this vid

    • @duanedilling7758
      @duanedilling7758 Před 5 lety +1

      read more

    • @sartreplagiarizedmyunborns9104
      @sartreplagiarizedmyunborns9104 Před 5 lety +4

      You're fucking gay and so is everybody who liked your comment.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Před 5 lety

      Cogent Nietzsche: Arrrrgggghhh!

    • @philipzanoni
      @philipzanoni Před 5 lety +1

      You make it sound like you've been studying Nietzsche and will continue to study Nietzsche for years and years,
      and years to come!
      come on bro...

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Před 5 lety

      @@philipzanoni Dont you like my satire of Nietzsche?

  • @supasweetmorg4228
    @supasweetmorg4228 Před 3 lety +7

    I am a college student taking a course on Nietzsche's philosophy and I must say this video was so helpful in helping me understand his material better! Thank you so much for creating videos like this!!

  • @FellTheSky
    @FellTheSky Před 4 lety +5

    ive been reading Nietzsche for 12 years and still today find out new things. So you make your conclusion about what could you possible learn in 12 mins.

  • @hsn3333
    @hsn3333 Před 4 lety +30

    Well done, Eric. A brief, eloquent and cogent articulation of Nietzsche’s core philosophy, for all.

    • @JamesJoyce12
      @JamesJoyce12 Před 3 lety

      Nietzsche does not have a "core" philosophy - Nietzsche has no philosophy at all - any one who thinks Nietzsche has a philosophy has not read much Nietzsche

  • @88nising52
    @88nising52 Před 3 lety +12

    I’m new to Nietzche, so I had to rewind this video a few times, but my goodness- what an incredibly succinct overview of his work!

  • @spetsnatzlegion3366
    @spetsnatzlegion3366 Před 3 lety +3

    Nietzche would have had an absolute field day with the internet

  • @roseannereddy9687
    @roseannereddy9687 Před 7 lety +590

    Don't forget that every philosopher is describing themselves.

    • @peterkaramazov6586
      @peterkaramazov6586 Před 7 lety +11

      yeah,in Beyond good and evil

    • @lovepeace-er1wl
      @lovepeace-er1wl Před 6 lety +16

      Roseanne Reddy one thing is for sure, they are detailing their own personal experiences and processing them with the knowledge that they have acquired through academics this far and leave their findings to be used as stepping stones for future philosophers... but who takes the time to stop and make sure that these findings and interpretations of his are factual and true before moving forward and basing your own theories off information of his? I would ASSUME there are few.

    • @jamesparthos6811
      @jamesparthos6811 Před 6 lety +20

      it could be said that every criticism or value that people hold and discuss openly with others is something that they probably personally value themselves. so yeah, basically what you said.

    • @9yearsagooner611
      @9yearsagooner611 Před 6 lety +5

      some people/. SOME PEOPLE.... just wish they had something origional to say.

    • @stevedoetsch
      @stevedoetsch Před 6 lety +18

      False. Every MODERN philosopher is describing himself. The medieval and ancient philosophers actually did real philosophy.

  • @pantslizard
    @pantslizard Před 5 lety +37

    "He who fights too long against dragons, often times, becomes a dragon himself"
    (YAWN) ...time to get up and eat all the dwarves...

  • @gessie
    @gessie Před 5 lety +91

    Excellent, I was expecting the usual CZcams-level garbage, but this is a surprisingly powerful yet accurate brief summary.

    • @andrewszemeredy4458
      @andrewszemeredy4458 Před 3 lety

      gessie: if you know that, the video was wasted on you. If you did not know Nietzsche before, then you have no critical basis to say whether it was good or not good. :-)

    • @cube2fox
      @cube2fox Před 3 lety +1

      We can have some basis even if we do not know Nietzsche. Otherwise we couldn't distinguish a good piece of art from a bad one if we couldn't make good art ourselves. But we can so distinguish, even if we aren't good artists ourselves.

    • @gessie
      @gessie Před 3 lety +2

      @@andrewszemeredy4458 I wrote that this is a good summary, a judgement which inherently requires that I'm acquainted with Nietzsche's work. Your assumption is a non-sequitur - it doesn't follow.
      Perhaps you associate watching a summary on CZcams with a lazy first introduction, which is probably true for many viewers, but not necessarily.

    • @andrewszemeredy4458
      @andrewszemeredy4458 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes, I agree, a good review is its own merit. Many original art can be introduced into one's life by a good review. But reviews are not facts, and there is the offside chance that the reviewer is mistaken (convincingly) or perhaps (very unlikely) is lying through his teeth. I find that likely actually in reviews of movies.

    • @andrewszemeredy4458
      @andrewszemeredy4458 Před 3 lety

      @@gessie Thanks for telling me that. But then why did you read the review? If you decided before reading it to give your opinion on it after reading it, then yes, I understand you. But if you read it only because you are interested in Nietzsche, and you wanted to gain more insights, but gained none, while agreeing with the content, then I maintain that it was wasted on you, as your initial objective may have been to learn something new, but which you did not. Please notice the conditionals in the proposition. (If... then, if... then).

  • @rw8185
    @rw8185 Před 6 lety +17

    I was just enlightened. These 12 mins beat the 50 classes of philosophy I took while going to school.

  • @CitizenShane
    @CitizenShane Před 5 lety +6

    Good vid and easy to understand. I remember when your channel had 1,300 subs, you blew up fast!

  • @billreitter7343
    @billreitter7343 Před 5 lety +15

    Once I learned how to spell his name, I realized why he thought life was ludicrous and funny!

  • @denniskiruai9125
    @denniskiruai9125 Před 4 lety +15

    "Master morality and slave morality."

  • @7srchoed
    @7srchoed Před 5 lety +255

    "God wills it!"
    "so what"
    Nietzsche in five words

    • @t4705mb6
      @t4705mb6 Před 4 lety +1

      "GOD'S ARE IMAGINARY!"
      t4705mb6 in THREE words.

    • @tomipresley3242
      @tomipresley3242 Před 4 lety +7

      @@t4705mb6 because there is only 1 god

    • @philiposborne982
      @philiposborne982 Před 4 lety +1

      He just needed to move to somewhere sunnier and stop being so bloody miserable.
      Literally the most dull philosopher ever to have lived. Just quibbling over semantics and doing sod all.

    • @zigzac1563
      @zigzac1563 Před 4 lety +9

      @@philiposborne982 I wouldn't say "dull". "Dark" would be more applicable.

    • @davidturner1641
      @davidturner1641 Před 3 lety +3

      I ask this all the time
      But in an implied way
      Even though i Actually believe in a powerful semi biblical God...
      Free will
      Which also sometimes is a "so what" idea too.
      Funny that he calls it Christian-ish morality. When it's actually Roman slave morality, that hasn't changed since before Rome existed.
      I think he was obviously very brilliant. He also found. Some truths or CREATED some too.
      I think he truly failed in understanding the truths that are paradoxes though.

  • @lucaskazama878
    @lucaskazama878 Před 6 lety +1

    This was the best video about Nitzsche's philosophy. While documentaries, movies, and short films try to show how Nietzsche lived, they fail on to explain how Nietzsche could possibly think. This video is so great, and so illustrative, especially because of the awesome editing plus explanation, it's really a shame it has only 300k views (at the moment), yet I bet it helped a lot of people on thinking again about life, feeling good, society and morality.
    If it's worth it, I always will share this videos with others. Well done.

  • @tajtzu3185
    @tajtzu3185 Před 5 lety +1

    I am thoroughly impressed. Usually people are not accurate in their assessment of Nietzsche, let alone completely accurate in 12 minutes.

  • @carolingi1741
    @carolingi1741 Před 3 lety +16

    Me: reading Nietzsche for hours and hours, year after year📖🤔 trying to decipher his mind and put it all together🔬🧐
    CZcams: *yOu caN LeaRn nIeTzscHe in TeN minUteS*

    • @TheDionysianFields
      @TheDionysianFields Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah, but it's still good to introduce people. Do you realize how many young ppl don't even know who Nietzsche is?

    • @nforne
      @nforne Před 3 lety

      You mean to say I've just wasted two whole minutes??!!!!

    • @deacon8318
      @deacon8318 Před 3 lety +2

      What should I read from him? I haven't gone past the general CZcams level philosophy topics on Nietzsche and I would like to learn more.

    • @TheDionysianFields
      @TheDionysianFields Před 3 lety +1

      @@deacon8318 Start anywhere. There's no wrong way to go at Nietzsche.

    • @ishangyan9051
      @ishangyan9051 Před 3 lety

      @@deacon8318 no go with beyond good and evil..... within one month u will know no moral facts
      And u will be suspicious of truth

  • @idontwannanamemychannel5890

    These videos are great dude

  • @Katherine.west1230
    @Katherine.west1230 Před 3 lety +1

    Eric, I really appreciate your videos. I've watched a few now and I find them balanced, fair, accurate to the text....and your use of illustrations effectively elucidates the concept at hand. Well done! I'll be recommending your work to my undergrad students.

  • @403patriot3
    @403patriot3 Před 5 lety +86

    ‘Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools...’

    • @goyonman9655
      @goyonman9655 Před 4 lety +1

      IKR?

    • @jimmyfallon2484
      @jimmyfallon2484 Před 4 lety

      You might be pretty foolish. Meat head

    • @goyonman9655
      @goyonman9655 Před 4 lety +7

      @@jimmyfallon2484
      You sound triggered

    • @jimmyfallon2484
      @jimmyfallon2484 Před 4 lety

      @@goyonman9655 his place is in the gym. Leave philosophy to those with well put togethor brains...n bow down..

    • @goyonman9655
      @goyonman9655 Před 4 lety +5

      @@jimmyfallon2484
      You don't know him well enough to know 'his place'

  • @andrewheffel3565
    @andrewheffel3565 Před 4 lety +11

    If I could have his view on life, or be able to grow his moustache, I would choose the moustache. We don't need ubermen. Or hermanutical suspicion. We need cool facial hair.

  • @chrisdrummond8893
    @chrisdrummond8893 Před 5 lety +59

    I'm gonna be super pissed if I have to live another life exactly like this one.

    • @strosarn
      @strosarn Před 5 lety +9

      It's time to overcome that my intellectually mellow fellow

    • @MM-nh8ez
      @MM-nh8ez Před 4 lety +3

      It will be the same, but you will be the opposite sex and a different color.

    • @stevewilliams5130
      @stevewilliams5130 Před 4 lety +1

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @Brejnstorm
      @Brejnstorm Před 3 lety +3

      Our world will be much different if religious people actually believed in this story. You didnt want to be miserable if you thought that after death you will be reliving it for ever. Great concept for life motivation.

    • @charredskeleton
      @charredskeleton Před 3 lety +1

      Most things in life are cyclical. There is no reason to believe that life it's self is any different.

  • @juniorhernandez6873
    @juniorhernandez6873 Před 6 lety +1

    This is the easiest to understand and the most interesting video about Nietzsche that I have ever seen! Thank you for making these!

  • @QuadraticMuffins
    @QuadraticMuffins Před 7 lety +8

    This presentation is amazingly succinct and informative. I'd like to see a list of reputable sources used when creating it, so that I might properly cite the many things i learned here!

  • @nickparkison977
    @nickparkison977 Před 7 lety +382

    After reading much of Nietzsche and even taking a class on him, I can say this is a great little summary that doesn't shy away from difficult subjects. The School of Life has a few good ones too. N should get a lot better recognition nowadays, than the crap that makes him into an antisemitic nihilist. But those who actually read his works know how absurd that happens to be.

    • @hartley81848184
      @hartley81848184 Před 7 lety +6

      His regard for Christians as nihilists smacks of bitterness. It's what makes him most pathetic really, as a philosopher. No genius was he. Just a bitter man with an eroding mind.

    • @juniorhernandez6873
      @juniorhernandez6873 Před 6 lety +1

      Nick Parkison I agree my friend! Have you seen Crashcourse Philosophy's existentialism video?

    • @VileDaegon
      @VileDaegon Před 6 lety +28

      You have no idea what you're talking about & it's so obvious. To say Nietzsche was pathetic is to not know a damn thing about his writings.

    • @juniorhernandez6873
      @juniorhernandez6873 Před 6 lety +2

      He just might not have understood Nietzsche clearly -- or, yeah, haven't red him, lol!

    • @hartley81848184
      @hartley81848184 Před 6 lety

      You're pathetic too. Any idiot can look at his own imbecility and proclaim himself to be a genius.

  • @ewaldseiland8558
    @ewaldseiland8558 Před 6 lety +6

    Thanks for the interesting and educational 12 minutes!

  • @DanielKR
    @DanielKR Před 8 lety +2

    That was EPIC Eric. Thank you so much for your videos. I'm going off to bed and off the grid for a while. Thanks so much I will stay tuned to your channel.

  • @Uberlaser
    @Uberlaser Před 7 lety +2

    I enjoyed this - And it makes a lot of sense - Thank you for producing and sharing

  • @user-dk6ek9hm7e
    @user-dk6ek9hm7e Před 5 lety +6

    Thank you, this is extremely helpful!

  • @phenotyped4961
    @phenotyped4961 Před 4 lety +5

    "Lo great star, what would be thine happiness if you did not have thy comments section for whom thou spoketh?"

  • @hypesy
    @hypesy Před 4 lety +1

    This is great, I’ve always been curious and this video is simple, elegant, and informative. Thx

  • @maedadaisuki2011
    @maedadaisuki2011 Před 7 lety

    I really appreciate your videos, understanding Nietzsche's ideas is not an easy job, thank you for making an introduction to Nietzsche's philosophy

  • @camilocuesta
    @camilocuesta Před 5 lety +6

    5:05 I don't quite agree with this phrase "The deepest expression of a master morality lies not in opressing others". The powerful will opress. The power is not given, one always usurp. I notice always the tendence to sugar coat Nietzsche and make it presentable to our ears but that doesn't show what I think is what he ment in his philosophy.

  • @Coolguy8623
    @Coolguy8623 Před 5 lety +5

    10:22 I never understood the Saying quoting the French Revolution 'God is Dead' until it was described here as being in context of 'Social Importance' . Makes Sense .

  • @williemcgee7291
    @williemcgee7291 Před 6 lety +1

    I really liked this and got a lot out of it. I've been reading Julian Young's biography of Nietzsche and struggling with a lot of the philosophy being discussed. This video was quite helpful. Eric Dodson, I like your style!

  • @robertj.norris4103
    @robertj.norris4103 Před 6 lety +2

    Well done..!!! This video is probably the most well formed, understandable and non-convoluted of its kind I've seen..
    Thank you..!!! -- the world requires a constant reminder of what FN actually espoused-- there being so much seeming confusion re: his thoughts and philosophy..

  • @SpaceganBlogspotTwist
    @SpaceganBlogspotTwist Před 8 lety +13

    Fantastic ! Best Nietzsche vid on youtube. Thanks Eric :)

  • @gwang3103
    @gwang3103 Před 4 lety +15

    Excellent summary of Nietzsche's thought. Good work. I've just a few thoughts of mine, though...
    1. Considering that Nietzsche went bonkers at 44 and died shortly after rather than living happily to a ripe, old age, one would like to know if his philosophy really worked for him as a genuinely fulfilling way of life. If not, then it (his philosophy) would seem like a very hard sell to me.
    2. How practical would it be for us all to choose to 'overcome' the values we were brought up with? Would civilized society still be possible anymore if we did so? And don't tell me that very few of us would do so anyway. One of Kant's rules for testing the soundness of a moral rule would be whether it can be universalized i.e. how it would work out if everyone lived by it.
    3. If I choose to adopt Nietzsche's ideas as a guide to life, am I not becoming a slave to his ideas, in contradiction to his condemnation of slave morality?
    4. If I were living in miserable circumstances and yet could still love my fate, why couldn't I also love the rules I was brought up with rather than seek to 'overcome' them?
    5. One's suspicion is that Nietzsche's 'Will to Power' could have been inspired by Darwin. Also he was raised in a household of women, making one wonder if he might not have felt overly smothered by this ubiquitous femininity and sought to 'overcome' it, hence the stress he places on this 'Will to Power'.

    • @user-gu1ss9vo4x
      @user-gu1ss9vo4x Před 4 lety +5

      1 Good point but an isolated occurance, not a real test of his ideas, + Nietzche didn't value happiness at all, he valued his work
      2 Nietzche acknowledges that his ideas are not for everyone, in fact that it may be harmful to many, it is your choise whether to pursue them. Kant's idea included nobody lying ever even if to save your loved one's life, don't you think that morality is really more subjective since people are different ;)
      3 No, because Nietzche explisitly states to shung away from his ideas, his famous phrase "This is my morality, where's yours?" (or something like that) really shows everything. Nitzsches philosophy is a guide to look beyond standart norms of morality and to build your own. As was said in the video, act upon your own desire.
      4 You certainly can, look at point 3 again.
      5 Possibly, evolution certainly seems to have played a role in nietzches ideas. Again possibly, every philosopher's ideas are a reflection of himself.

    • @rockmefucker
      @rockmefucker Před 4 lety +1

      You have a lot of thoughts for a 10 minute video.
      1- I think it worked great for Nietzsche. He did what he could and what he wanted, and also got to be inmortalized in philosophy on the way. You can read Ecce Homo, one of his last and more autobiographical writings.
      2- I think society IS ruled by people who overcame their values and created their own morality. Kant on morality? meh
      3- Yes, you would be becoming a slave to his ideas, probably because you don't understand them.
      4- You can do whatever you want. Like the saying: ignorance is bliss. I think Nietzsche also has a few sayings about it. If you are happy, be happy i guess? But you can also choose to overcome your supposed mysery that you so love.
      5- I think Nietzche rejected Darwin ideas and favoured some of others (I don't remember who). He also has written a lot about his relationship with his family. Maybe it is related? But I don't see the freudian point.
      What a strange set of questions, have you read anything, or this all came from the video?

  • @hugosoberanes8309
    @hugosoberanes8309 Před 3 lety

    Very nice job at summarizing his views. Anyone watching would be able to understand and finish the video without questions

  • @Painter16480
    @Painter16480 Před 4 lety

    Excellent summary Mr Dodson, thank you - you have to know your subject really thoroughly to be able to do this so faithfully and so convincingly.

  • @blackhogarth4049
    @blackhogarth4049 Před 5 lety +5

    Wow. Thanks for doing this video. I can't count the number of times I've heard people misinterpret Nietzsche's famous quote, "God is dead."

  • @0shockadelica0
    @0shockadelica0 Před 4 lety +5

    This was literally an introduction for me and I thank you for the yogurt coated pill.

  • @izzymcfrizzyton4358
    @izzymcfrizzyton4358 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for giving me a rundown on his ideas! It's been hard trying to find a video that wasn't using his thoughts to tell people how to live lol, I was just looking for an unopinionated summary

  • @daecole
    @daecole Před 6 lety

    I have often scoffed after listening to a talk like yours that i want that 12 minutes of my life back. But I am going give you another 12 because that is the way you tell the story in 12 min and my meta narrative was impacted. Thank you it was an honour to learn from this presentation when I hold a Mac in apologetics good stuff.

  • @TheRealValus
    @TheRealValus Před 6 lety +158

    "Action is the last refuge
    of those who cannot dream."
    ~ Oscar Wilde

    • @hlehman1987
      @hlehman1987 Před 6 lety +41

      “I am too drunk to taste this chicken.”
      - Colonel Sanders

    • @randykuhns4515
      @randykuhns4515 Před 5 lety +1

      so said the sloven.

    • @animeshpathak3921
      @animeshpathak3921 Před 5 lety +2

      @ginganz13 well he still has his plan intact ,can't say about his face though .

    • @lashropa
      @lashropa Před 5 lety +3

      @ginganz13 lol. Seriously.

    • @riphihe
      @riphihe Před 5 lety +2

      @@hlehman1987 I was about to fall asleep when I read this and it made me laugh my ass off!

  • @denniscash4072
    @denniscash4072 Před 4 lety +5

    Hello, Eric. Congrats on 1 MILLION views.... I love and miss you, my dear friend.

    • @ericdodson2644
      @ericdodson2644  Před 4 lety +3

      Hi Rob! Ha ha... and to think that YOU were the one to introduce me to CZcams all those years ago, when you showed me some Concrete Blonde videos in my office one day. Yes, through YOU I had my first contact with the wonderful world of CZcams. So... many thanks for that. Anyhow, I hope you're well, wherever in the world you are... perhaps Botswana? (Just a guess). I'm still chillin' in the crib in Carrollton... getting older and fatter. Some things never change, I guess. Anyhow... thanks for dropping me a line. Eric

  • @mrwane826
    @mrwane826 Před 4 lety +1

    People are mistaken when saying that Nietzsche is describing himself, he is giving deep thoughts about human nature that we now describe as a common property, he has built the modern philosophy and psychology. ( Alfred Adler, Carl Jung, Sigmund Freud) were all inspired by his philosophy.

  • @jkam2524
    @jkam2524 Před 2 lety

    Eric, this was really well done. Thank you!

  • @shiitakestick
    @shiitakestick Před 6 lety +3

    I loved “Performance” .

  • @ultraextreme8228
    @ultraextreme8228 Před 6 lety +7

    Going down a river heading toward the sea and i used to love that river but now I'm salty.

    • @MichelG
      @MichelG Před 4 lety +1

      If it's a river of love, you will never be thirsty !

  • @ytashu33
    @ytashu33 Před 5 lety

    Very well put, nice gist without oversimplifying. Gotta check out more of your work.

  • @ZilogBob
    @ZilogBob Před 4 lety +2

    The most concentrated philosopher-speak I've ever heard!

  • @justinhawk1698
    @justinhawk1698 Před 4 lety +10

    Simply put, I think he meant good and evil are purely subjective, based upon ones own subjective reasoning, which is merely a product of social conditioning and the enforcement of the collective morality.

  • @dalisabe62
    @dalisabe62 Před 4 lety +4

    Falling in love with all aspects of living? having to live more lives over and over again until that goal is finally achieved? NO THANKS!

  • @Smoothbluehero
    @Smoothbluehero Před 6 lety

    The idea of picture life as circle and all about living the best life you possibly can sounds amazing to me.

  • @AnhPham-kb7by
    @AnhPham-kb7by Před 5 lety +2

    Thanks so much for your video. I learn a lot from your channel and was wondering if you are considering making your video lecture as audio or podcast. If so, I would love to buy it to support and believe many people will do the same.

  • @M64936
    @M64936 Před 9 lety +59

    Along with all the others, this is a great video. Thanks for making them.
    One point on this video - you mention around 2 minutes that Nietzsche thought his 'revaluation of all values' can "lead the entire human race beyond all that has defined it thus far". From my understanding this skews Nietzsche's ideas. His 'higher man' is an exception; overcoming is but for the select few. The human race as a whole will always be the herd, it is only the exceptional individual who rises above, and becomes a sort of "superman".
    "Mankind surely does not represent an evolution toward a better or stronger or higher level, as progress is now understood. This "progress" is merely a modern idea, which is to say, a false idea. The European of today, in his essential worth, falls far below the European of the Renaissance; the process of evolution does not necessarily mean elevation, enhancement, strengthening. True enough, it succeeds in isolated and individual cases in various parts of the earth and under the most widely different cultures, and in these cases a higher type certainly manifests itself; something which, compared to mankind in the mass, appears as a sort of superman." (Nietzsche)
    "These alone are my readers, my rightful readers, my predestined readers:
    what do the rest matter? -- The rest are merely mankind. -- One must be superior to
    mankind in force, in loftiness of soul..." (Nietzsche).
    "Their fundamental faith simply has to be that society must not exist for society’s sake but only as the foundation and scaffolding on which a choice type of being is able to raise itself to its higher task and to a higher state of being-comparable to those sun-seeking vines of Java-they are called Sipo Matador-that so long and so often enclasp an oak tree with their tendrils until eventually, high above it but supported by it, they can unfold their crowns in the open light and display their happiness." (Nietzsche)
    There are numerous other passages conveying the same theme. Anyways, just thought I'd point that out for the sake of clarity. Thanks again for making these videos, they are very thought provoking. I hope you keep it up!

    • @karenhodges7545
      @karenhodges7545 Před 6 lety

      towardsthesun Thank you

    • @2ndbestfriend
      @2ndbestfriend Před 6 lety +3

      Read chapter 3 of The Antichrist. Nietzsche discusses what type of man should be bred to replace mankind. He then says that this type of man occurs today only as a sort of "happy accident", but never deliberately willed. To me this implies that Nietzsche hoped that the higher man, which is an exception today, will be bred to replace the herd.

    • @willbranson3216
      @willbranson3216 Před 5 lety +1

      I guess that would be supermen like Stalin, Lenin and Hitler, who were not constrained by the tree of knowledge of good and evil.

    • @cedricgist7614
      @cedricgist7614 Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks for your comment and for sharing quotes of Nietzsche. I acknowledge being part of the "herd," - being an "intellectual pygmy."
      Earlier, I watched a video featuring Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen (?), history professor at the University of Wisconsin who wrote "American Nietzsche." She says her work is not a biography of the man, but of his ideas and how we have accepted them in the U.S.
      I was introduced to Nietzsche as a high school freshman, but I didn't understand how his ideas had influenced world thinking - and I didn't know how his ideas could be interpreted so many ways. Until now, the most I'd heard of Nietzschian thought came from viewing episodes of "Andromeda. "

    • @2ndbestfriend
      @2ndbestfriend Před 5 lety

      JG Alegria idiocracy :)

  • @williamwells835
    @williamwells835 Před 5 lety +17

    Jesus of Nazareth enacted ultimate power. He mastered himself, and overcame the world.

  • @bonconfidant7514
    @bonconfidant7514 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for making a daunting topic digestible without dumming it down. You have an extraordinary ability to summarize and link the important themes into a holistic narrative. I should have learned more about Nietzsche much sooner in life, but Germanic peoples have produced so many great thinkers that it's hard to keep up. Goethe, Rudolf Steiner, Max Weber, Herman Hesse, Marx, Hannah Arendt... the list just goes on and on.

    • @bonconfidant7514
      @bonconfidant7514 Před 4 lety

      @Rishi Eastwood Thank you. And I would add the Tao to the list of superior philosophies.

  • @l34l
    @l34l Před 5 lety

    Great overview of -THE- Mustache, thank you Eric, liked and subscribed.

  • @ChadKimzee
    @ChadKimzee Před 4 lety +6

    I like Manly P Halls lecture on overcoming more it is far more in depth and lays out exactly what and why to encapsulate the reasons your choices should be carefully and meticulously followed through with in order to understand the introspective gaze you take when wondering whys it all for. I like Nietzsche but he has tons of flaws in his work. That being said no one is perfect and true philosophy os never finished just like wisdom which should be learned, practiced, and passed on to everyone. Still Nietzsche had accomplished more than me so I'm not judging the great man, just an opinion that's probably wrong anyway.

  • @smartin700
    @smartin700 Před 6 lety +9

    Man is always (will to power) thinking he is smarter than God; seemingly unaware of the disposition of serving the created (including other men) as opposed to the one who created all. All these man-made philosophies are created out of a desire of these men to be their own god, with their own following and a freedom to do whatever they want without violating the conscious.

    • @DCGARR
      @DCGARR Před 6 lety +2

      Do you mean "violating the conscience"? Agree with you mostly, but I do have sympathy for Nietzche. I try to put myself in his place and imagine myself with a 260 I.Q. (what many scholars think was his level of intelligence!) and realize that I could very easily think myself an ubermensch or my own god. The odds of NOT going mad or thinking/analyzing oneself into madness with that dynamic, original and organic of a mind would be pretty slim IMO. It would almost require God to choose him and save him (from himself), rather than vice versa. I think in a way, God DID choose him and gifted him, as he did Leonardo, Beethoven, and maybe a handful of other humans throughout history. To me that gift would be as much of a burden or curse as a blessing. But he rejected his Creator and went to Hell = separation from God. IDK, I don't think the poor guy ever had a chance!

    • @bigbaz8314
      @bigbaz8314 Před 5 lety +1

      The bible is a man made philosophy, a re written one at that.

  • @tommore3263
    @tommore3263 Před 9 lety +1

    Once again Mr Dobson I must thank you for your entertaining , concise and informative treatment of this thinker. It is interesting for me to consider his thought insofar as I understand it once again within the Aristotelian / Thomistic paradigm which to me provides metaphysical criteria wherebye source, purpose and teleology are intelligible concretely. With Nietzsche, if I get him at all, it would be Aristotle's potential that he seems to need for a better hoped-for actuality. And his sense of the divine or absolute, seems a deistic one, not uncommon at that time as opposed to the immediate ground of being and in its perfections of being, love. A disconnectedness once again. But .. I ramble and did mostly wish to thank you for these excellent encapsulations and journeys into thoughts about what really is. Terrific.

  • @mandulathrimanne8400
    @mandulathrimanne8400 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for this summary. Learned many things.

  • @thanongkhanthong3414
    @thanongkhanthong3414 Před 5 lety +7

    How can you become a Higher Man with a will to power? You can only become a Higher Man by having no will to power. When you yearn for power with you will, you are already a slave to your will. A higher man is the one who lets it go -- not holding on to anything.

    • @DerekVanGorder
      @DerekVanGorder Před 5 lety +4

      That would be the Schopenhauer position: asceticism, reject all earthly desire. Nietzsche despised this. He thought people should embrace life. "Power" is a charged word under today's prevailing ethical language, and it may even be a simple mis-translation here. When Nietzsche says Will to Power, imagine instead he is saying: the force of life itself, or the Will to evolve-- which all of us share, which motivates the actions of all living beings. What Nietzsche argued for above all else was simply: respect for Will.
      The truly higher man would never seek to dominate others against their Will-- rather to always seek out stronger competitors & friends. To *enjoy* losing to someone stronger-- seeing it as a lesson on how to improve. And to wish improvement for all around him, so as to build better competitors & friends over time. From this perspective, it's clear to see: any "strength" built atop the weakness of others would be simply: weakness. False power that weakens first any who wield it, not only its victims.
      This weakness inflicted against others is what most people mean when they say "power" today. But this misconception-- this denial of good power along with the bad-- is perhaps what makes weak power so common. This is why Nietzsche rejected asceticism: it denies the better part of our nature along with the worst, and creates a space within which the worst can grow.

    • @DerekVanGorder
      @DerekVanGorder Před 5 lety

      @@alegriart If upon winning a contest, you see others around you fail-- then you are playing the wrong game. Try a new game: where you compete to see how great a victory you can win for others around you. One is defeated only in one's mind-- look on every defeat instead as a lesson, on how to play better, the next time around. And use every victory as an opportunity to teach. Our stay here on this world is short, but there is time enough for many games. Always look forward to the next one.

    • @googleuser2609
      @googleuser2609 Před 5 lety

      This is not what Nietzsche said or believed.

    • @pierrevaneeckhout822
      @pierrevaneeckhout822 Před 3 lety

      Nietszche "will to power" has nothing to do with will nor power in a political or social or buddhist point of view. The will to power is more related to the developement of your body and mind in the same way evolution imprints life. It's not something you can control. That is how he can say "Become who you are" without any contradiction. At least that's my understanding.

    • @thanongkhanthong3414
      @thanongkhanthong3414 Před 3 lety

      Pierre Van Eeckhout what is a will that cannot be controlled?

  • @Jake-kn3xg
    @Jake-kn3xg Před 8 lety +4

    Who's translation of Nietzsche has more clarity? Walter Kaufman or R. J. Hollingdale

  • @TheSpecialJ11
    @TheSpecialJ11 Před 4 lety

    This is probably the best short summary of Nietzsche you can get. If this interests you, I highly recommend diving into his works, as even though this is a high quality video, it is incapable of achieving the depth of thought found in his works.

  • @EnEvighet7
    @EnEvighet7 Před 7 lety +1

    Great summary! Thanks a lot!

  • @michaelhand8771
    @michaelhand8771 Před 8 lety +66

    I learned more in the comments section than in the first six minutes of the video

  • @fakebrake
    @fakebrake Před 6 lety +4

    Insane by 44!? Never knew that.

  • @adamholm2436
    @adamholm2436 Před 5 lety +2

    Reading Bataille's take on him, thanks for the summary

  • @rajippanti5990
    @rajippanti5990 Před 8 lety

    thanks for putting central stream of thoughts of nietzsche concisely.have been reading nietzsche sparsely now n then.this helps as overview anchor esp for a experimental & multifaceted phil......

  • @PHANTOMZ0NE
    @PHANTOMZ0NE Před 8 lety +75

    Nietzsche had a good understanding of time-space with his eternal recurrence idea.
    Time being absolute, where the past, present, and future are one and the same.
    We are constantly being born, experiencing life and dyeing infinitely.
    However we can only perceive this in the past, present, and future.
    Then again it could all be bullshit.

    • @simontaylor3312
      @simontaylor3312 Před 7 lety +14

      I'd go for the latter.

    • @realtyranny3310
      @realtyranny3310 Před 6 lety +3

      And you "phantomzone", have such a firm mental grasp and working knowledge of time and space that you are qualified to judge his understanding "good".

    • @niklassamuelsson2702
      @niklassamuelsson2702 Před 6 lety

      PHANTOMZ0NE bjj

    • @akmonra
      @akmonra Před 6 lety +6

      Nietzshe meant this more as a thought experiment than an actual assertion.

    • @akmonra
      @akmonra Před 6 lety

      From what we know, space/time is flat, not circular.

  • @ligayabarlow5077
    @ligayabarlow5077 Před 4 lety +20

    "No one quite lies the way the morally indignant do."

  • @hollyh-zw1yb
    @hollyh-zw1yb Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks, made it pleasant to take in. I get it a bit better now.

  • @rrcaniglia
    @rrcaniglia Před 6 lety +1

    I’ve got a masters in philosophy and wish I had seen this video when I started to read N. My professor didn’t do nearly as good a job outlining what we were going to be reading. Thanks for producing this outline. i will share it.

  • @pantslizard
    @pantslizard Před 7 lety +38

    This guy knows how to pronounce, "Nietzsche". :>)

    • @randykuhns4515
      @randykuhns4515 Před 5 lety +1

      WOW!

    • @eppiehemsley6556
      @eppiehemsley6556 Před 5 lety +2

      There's nothing Nietzsche couldn't teach ya about the raising of the wrist.

    • @Nickpaintbrush
      @Nickpaintbrush Před 5 lety +1

      Rhymes with Jack Reacher

    • @boogathon
      @boogathon Před 5 lety +4

      Like, "Neetcha... ?" Er, maybe...
      _Gneet-juh?_
      Huh? ...EVER-BODY! ALL TOGETHER NOW!!..."
      _"Yer my Peach-a, I'll nevah Beet-cha... Get cold I'll Heet-cha, Let's lunch, I'll Meet-cha,
      Cuz yore muh... NEE-E-E-T - CHA CHA CHA!"_
      W00t!

  • @danhourahine1032
    @danhourahine1032 Před 4 lety +3

    And know we have something to cling to, imagination.

  • @courtcomposer
    @courtcomposer Před 6 lety

    Bravo. You sir did a wonderful job. Helped clarify some ideas I was confused about.

  • @tudorrenegade7052
    @tudorrenegade7052 Před 7 lety +2

    Deep stuff, much apreciated !!

  • @JenoPaciano
    @JenoPaciano Před 7 lety +4

    The concept of giving up this life for the next is flawed, but sacrifice makes sense. If I give up something I want now, I may be able to get something for it in the future. Everything worth doing requires, in the least, a sacrifice of time. That is not unique to Christianity, but Christianity focuses heavily upon sacrifice.

  • @markadams7597
    @markadams7597 Před 5 lety +5

    Fascinating. Great vid. Ty. Maybe Nietzsche was crazy...uber-crazy...hahahahahahaha.

  • @soni3085
    @soni3085 Před 3 lety

    Excellent work Eric!!!

  • @eviealexander7527
    @eviealexander7527 Před 8 lety

    Eric.......I love u!
    just saw this, and became quite excited as your info/presentation was sooooo cool! I will watch ALL your videos and
    I hope I meet someone as interesting as u!

  • @themistoklestheodosopoulos6253

    "The spirit is strong but the flesh is weak"

    • @atlasdm
      @atlasdm Před 4 lety +1

      The spirit is willing, but the flesh is spongy and bruised.

  • @ufaceitnow
    @ufaceitnow Před 8 lety +5

    You want to know something? When I was a kid, they told me that I could not lift weights until I was 14 years old. They explained to me something about fundamental integration, or integrity maybe it was. I do think that I comprehended there explanation to be that, I have to have integration and integrity before I was able to accumulate might. But don't tell anyone, it is just something that came in to my mind. Thank you for the read, my dear fellows.

  • @ridiculousrusty
    @ridiculousrusty Před 7 lety +1

    Hello Eric,
    I really like your videos. They are highly stimulating, and seem to me excellent summaries. My sole critique of this video would be your five uses of "consequently". A few as a results or thuses would go far!
    love,
    Mr Rusty

  • @inocentmi
    @inocentmi Před 8 lety +1

    Excellent Eric. Many thanks.

  • @Inky261
    @Inky261 Před 5 lety +17

    1883 Nietzsche said: God is dead. God said 1900: Nietzsche is dead.

  • @gauravagarwal5719
    @gauravagarwal5719 Před 4 lety +7

    Jordan Peterson would bawl over at the title of this video.
    That guy takes 45 minutes on a paragraph.

    • @BM-fz9yc
      @BM-fz9yc Před 3 lety

      Have you seen his biblical lectures? He spent an hour on the first sentence.

  • @wbryalo
    @wbryalo Před 3 lety

    Well done. Thank you for this

  • @johnforest9831
    @johnforest9831 Před 2 lety

    Very helpful. Thank you so much, man.

  • @jwalkin5123
    @jwalkin5123 Před 6 lety +3

    Imagination is as real as reality.

    • @noumenonjohn6136
      @noumenonjohn6136 Před 6 lety

      j walkin This is the truth and is actually what the "logos" is, the human imagination.

  • @TheProgressiveParent
    @TheProgressiveParent Před 9 lety +24

    I think, like many continental philosophers, Nietzsche studied himself and his own inclinations and universalised them to the world. he found that his will to power was the dominant force in his psyche. To me the genealogy of morals is an interesting historical myth, through the lens of which we see one man's attempt to understand why his contemporaries so slavishly accepted the norms of their society without question or critical thought. It must have been hard for Nietzsche. In the introductory passages he acknowledges three, at most four, people who truly influenced and revolutionised his thinking. How lonely for a man so a head of his time to struggle to find mental stimulation and peers in a world that shone a flame so dull in comparison to an intellect that burned so bright.
    For someone hailed as a nihilist, right-winger, or anti-humanist for me his writing is exceedingly humanitarian, exemplified - for me - by the first passages of the untimely meditation on the comparative advantages and disadvantages of history for life. He is a beautiful writer, and I love his secular myth - the Zarathustra.

    • @ericdodson2644
      @ericdodson2644  Před 9 lety +3

      Yeah... to me there's always something comically contradictory about trying to pigeon-hole a thinker as dynamic and protean as Nietzsche is. This seems obviously true (to me) of terms like, "nihilist," "anti-humanist," etc. In my mind, the famous Turin horse tableau would provide a counterweight to all of that. Anyhow, why would a nihilist ever write a book in the first place? However, even a term like "humanitarian" seems a bit constrictive in Nietzsche's case (since he seems to be equally interested in what might succeed "the human"). Hmm... more later... I have to exercise now.... thanks again for your interest in all of this. E.

    • @johnsmith4630
      @johnsmith4630 Před 6 lety

      here here. in another comment thread under this video there is some jackass doing that basically trying to blame the decline of Western civilization and moral relativism or whatever on Nietzsche LOL. Nope anything the decline of Western Civilization is due to an exacerbation of the Christian ethic which like Marxism romanticizes the so-called oppressed, now called minorities and women and trans Whatever by the social justice Warriors, as the morally Superior victim class. an actual fact white males are disadvantaged in our own civilizations but that is another subject. My point is that his observations about the Christian ethic as being the life denying are pathetically coming to true as humanism carries the ethic of Christianity to its terminal conclusions. We really need to get back to our pre-christian roots to a time when excellence or are was sought

    • @calbacoller897
      @calbacoller897 Před 6 lety

      For as long as Nietzsche's books are read and his ideas explored, there will be an army of people trying to reassign the blame for the butchery that ensued when he was done. But doubts will always remain...maybe he DID have something to do with the violent deaths of 80 million people. Ah, but he was a misunderstood soul! Maybe.

    • @carljohnson6264
      @carljohnson6264 Před 5 lety

      TheProgressiveParent thank you for this. I totally agree with your statements. I think it’s even harder in today’s society because of social media. I don’t have Facebook and have found you are shunned when you don’t roll with the Herd. Once again thank you for your input 😊

    • @bloodtimemaximusfullthrott226
      @bloodtimemaximusfullthrott226 Před 5 lety

      Now youre doing what you claim nietzsche was.

  • @gabeux
    @gabeux Před 9 lety +1

    Great video! Thank you for it!

  • @mwilliamson4198
    @mwilliamson4198 Před 4 lety

    Awesome job putting that together!