The Individual, Abstraction, and Monstrous Identities

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  • čas přidán 14. 07. 2023
  • Talking about the individual and making a "proper" map with the use of abstractions. When abstractions go out of control they become monsters that eat the individual. A symbol that captures what I'm talking about is the surfer.
    I think I've repeated a lot of what I said in my past videos, but oh well I guess. Things in my mind don't become real until I've repeated myself multiple times in multiple videos.
    This audio, for some reason, was a huge pain to edit; sorry if it sounds disjointed and messy. I was seriously thinking about re-recording it, but I'm just too lazy. For the past 3-4 days I've been trying to finish this video.
    linktr.ee/Kasperanza
    #individualism #abstraction #monsters
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Komentáře • 4

  • @Metamorph2
    @Metamorph2 Před rokem +2

    Your confusion at why ppl would idealize dying on the cross for the sins of others comes from the fact you don't have a natural masochistic disposition and proneness to slave morality. Nietszche describes that well. Its people coping with the fact they have a tendency to being submissive and hating themselves, and a refusal to overcome that weakness. Cuz lets be real, most of the time, enduring pain to make others happy is weakness. Theres s very specific way in can be a heroic act of love, but most of the time is fearfulness and conflict aversion...keeping your pain inside so that you don't "upset" someone. The extreme of that is the dying on the cross. "I will suffer so you don't have to suffer" and who is the you? The master OR someone you love and want to protect, depends on if they respect you or not.

    • @Kasperanzaa
      @Kasperanzaa  Před rokem +3

      Thank you for the input with Nietzsche! I couldn't agree more

    • @unknownhollow4141
      @unknownhollow4141 Před rokem +1

      Every well known anime proves you wrong. Goku > Vegeta. JP argues that bridging the gap between what is now and what could be of higher value requires the right kind of sacrifice, like Kasperanza needed to spend his time, money and effort the right way to actualize his fursuit at the cost of anything else he could've spend his resources on. It's a reminder to value your life, to prioritize, to not half-ass whatever you choose to do, to be conscious that life is an ongoing transaction like that not to be taken lightly. The weak versus strong and master versus slave narrative is a very childish and animalistic demonstration of not transcending your biological programming. It's not superhuman at all. It's conforming to the popular culture of striving for looks, money and status because faith in anything else is lost.

    • @unknownhollow4141
      @unknownhollow4141 Před rokem

      There's huge value and dignity to serve others, to shine someone else's shoes to the best of your ability and satisfaction of the customer, but we don't want to lower ourselves anymore, we want to dominate, exploit, defeat the system, rise above the masses, be independent from others. In other words: we want to be in perpetual competition and conflict. It's not about developping a strong healthy body; no it's about looking better than others. It's not about making beautiful and meaningful art: it's about becoming rich and famous with it or else you're just a delusional pauper with colorful trash no one cares about. It's not about being honest and sharing truth: it's about making others feel good so you can get something from them. That's how ''slave morality'' tihinking is: a disgusting survival of the fittest society. Even prehistoric ancestors were more communistic, but lucky for you they were murdered by the most ruthless inhumane predator in the universe: homo sapiens.