Husserl: Phenomenology and the Life World

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  • čas přidán 28. 04. 2024
  • You can find Husserl's work here amzn.to/3T1Fjnh
    This is the official CZcams channel of Dr. Michael Sugrue.
    Please consider subscribing to be notified of future videos, as we upload Dr. Sugrue's vast archive of lectures.
    Dr. Michael Sugrue earned his BA at the University of Chicago and PhD at Columbia University.

Komentáře • 354

  • @mcmxli-by1tj
    @mcmxli-by1tj Před rokem +184

    You can pay $350,000 for a philosophy major from an ivy league university, and well worth the money, or you can get it free from Professor Sugrue. Thanks so much for your invaluable series of lectures, Professor Sugrue. What a gift!

    • @jeremyesser797
      @jeremyesser797 Před rokem +5

      wonderful comment, this knowledge is incalculable value. Thank you Sugrue for your knowledge and generosity.

    • @robertfrancisburnier6032
      @robertfrancisburnier6032 Před 11 měsíci +11

      I would just say though that Sugrue himself always orients his lectures to suggest you should read the philosophy and intends for students to continue their studies. In other words his lectures are uncommonly accessible and well delivered introductions that really give you a solid orientation, but you don’t thus have an Ivy League education.

    • @KevinsDisobedience
      @KevinsDisobedience Před 9 měsíci +13

      You can get the lectures for free, which I’ll grant you is a lot, but it’s not the reading, which you can and should do yourself, and it’s not the writing, which you can and should do yourself, and it’s not the conversations, which you can and should have yourself, but the guidance is going to be difficult to find outside a university. But yes, humanity degrees are not worth the price tag anymore, unless you need the certification to jump through the hoops of academia to get a job.

    • @ankitnahar2006
      @ankitnahar2006 Před 7 měsíci

      ❤❤❤

    • @anonymoushuman8344
      @anonymoushuman8344 Před 7 měsíci +1

      It seems to me that we get out of philosophy what we put into it by philosophizing (both individually and in dialogue) and by seriously engaging philosophical works. A person who does this earnestly over a period of years, reading widely and thinking hard without enrolling at a college or university, might get more out their studies than many who pay hefty tuition at prestigious institutions. What's needed is a way to get constructive criticism and stay challenged. Listening to lectures like these is a beginning.

  • @vikasbedi82
    @vikasbedi82 Před 2 měsíci +9

    Rest in peace Michael Sugrue you were such a great teacher and philosopher.

  • @WesternHog
    @WesternHog Před 3 lety +193

    I feel like a crack fiend every time I look for a new upload

    • @harveyyoung3423
      @harveyyoung3423 Před 2 lety +5

      Ha Ha I know what you mean. I would say I feel like a Rolling Stones fan, pre mobile phones, roaming around looking for that rumoured secret gig, popping in and out of all the pubs in the area. A pint in each pub, and in the morning can't remember a thing. I can't get no...

    • @anhumblemessengerofthelawo3858
      @anhumblemessengerofthelawo3858 Před 2 lety

      _haha, good sh!t_

    • @maxnul
      @maxnul Před rokem

      Factos

    • @NewHorizonIS1
      @NewHorizonIS1 Před rokem

      So good

    • @AnthonyL0401
      @AnthonyL0401 Před rokem

      Can you share a little

  • @alphablitz1024
    @alphablitz1024 Před 2 měsíci +8

    Nothing is more compelling or illuminating than a teacher whose topic excites him.

  • @SevenRavens007
    @SevenRavens007 Před 2 lety +98

    Stunning intellect. What a pleasure and privilege to listen to these lectures.

  • @Jose-ur7jz
    @Jose-ur7jz Před 2 lety +127

    English isn't my first language but I do understand what the professor says. He's great and I'm really grateful, he's making me life better. Thank you.

    • @benbell9170
      @benbell9170 Před 2 lety +6

      same here!
      and furthermore, I don't come from a country with Western tradition, yet I can take many ideas from Professors lectures.

    • @mutabazimichael8404
      @mutabazimichael8404 Před rokem +8

      If English is your second language and you are able to understand the lecture fully then you are an excellent polyglot 👌🏾

    • @TheSwiftblad3
      @TheSwiftblad3 Před rokem +1

      thank you. your comment made me watch the video and it was so worth it!
      really a good professor.

    • @sixtieralone
      @sixtieralone Před 11 měsíci +2

      Thank you for leaving this comment.
      I was having a bad time of it and it's wonderful to be reminded that people make the world a better place in so many little ways like the sharing of knowledge and the astounding curiosity of so many everyday people.
      It's really wonderful.
      Sorry if this comment is a bit emotional.
      Thank you again

    • @bergy8899
      @bergy8899 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@mutabazimichael8404 polyglot means you know 3 or more languages. But being bilingual is definitely impressive in it's self.

  • @jonathantrautman
    @jonathantrautman Před 2 lety +31

    A true gift to be joined by fellow seekers of wisdom in listening to a great teacher! May we be ever more eloquent and knowledgeable that we may call ourselves the likes of Sugrue!

  • @09Jason11
    @09Jason11 Před rokem +7

    This was the first and absolute best of videos that finally made sense to phenomenology

  • @yddub111
    @yddub111 Před 2 lety +17

    I am able to keep up and I am learning a lot, but man he makes me a little dizzy how much info he is able to insert into my head with every lecture. I feel like I discovered a a gold mine

  • @mattayoubi9829
    @mattayoubi9829 Před 9 měsíci +7

    Professor, you are, in all likelihood, the most gifted educator I’ve ever encountered. Your passion is palpable and your lectures have enriched my life, immeasurably.

  • @Eduscafflearn
    @Eduscafflearn Před rokem +17

    Wish we had lecturers like this.

  • @thattimestampguy
    @thattimestampguy Před 2 lety +58

    0:28 Description
    Background in mathematics
    3:30 Start with What’s Inside, Work to get outside. (Shades of Descartes)
    5:53 Trying to go for all the marbles
    Don Quixote of Philosophy
    Noble Intentions of a Hard To Understand Man
    *Husserl’s Ideas*
    7:22 Certainty &
    7:57 Intuition
    8:33 I Don’t Know, but You Know
    11:20 Self Comes First
    11:57 _Philosophy in the Crisis of European Man_
    12:51 Rescue Us From Materialism
    13:58 Know Ourselves 16:25
    15:17 Dismissed, Fact-Value, Will To Power
    17:03 Suspend The External World, it’s irrelevant
    18:00 _Sift Man out Of The World_
    What is essential to man?
    19:14 Shape of Ego
    21:04 A Priori, Necessary Truths, Definitions
    23:00 CIRCLE ⭕️
    Essentials Formulate Knowledge
    25:34 Truth Conditions
    *Critiquing Husserl*
    27:23 Wittgenstein’s Counter
    30:48 Life World 🗺
    As It Appears
    Human Time is Limited
    33:09 Reality of Other Minds?
    Precision - Domain Sliding Scale
    37:12 Thought Transfer, Verbal Community
    40:20 Tailor’s Suit Example
    Fix the theory, not the Experience
    43:00 Experience
    44:17

  • @MB-ue2rf
    @MB-ue2rf Před rokem +8

    The examined Sugrue lecture makes life worth living. Almost unbearably exciting, thank you sir for the great work.

    • @tbillyjoeroth
      @tbillyjoeroth Před 8 měsíci +1

      Or perhaps the examined life makes Sugrue worth watching?😊

  • @suddenuprising
    @suddenuprising Před 2 lety +55

    Half way through the lecture I thought Sugrue gave a logical though very uncharitable perspective of Husserl that didn't really do his ideas justice. However towards the end Surgue provided a very eloquent account of what Husserl (and phenomenology in general) has to offer. This is a very well balanced, clear and enlightening lecture. Outstanding.

    • @1995yuda
      @1995yuda Před 2 lety

      Husserl is, by far, the most brilliant Phenomenologist the world has ever seen, on top of the fact that he single handedly legitmized and pioneered the field continuing Bertano's legacy. Bertano was also Freud's teacher.

    • @Fruitsnackaddictsoflamonta
      @Fruitsnackaddictsoflamonta Před 2 lety +4

      Y’all don’t have a lot of sex huh

    • @mundusinvisibilis6630
      @mundusinvisibilis6630 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Fruitsnackaddictsoflamonta You surely don’t considering the cute little exaltation you made for Jesus in another comment section. Lucifer will most definitely enjoy the presence of your bottom in his realm of eternal fire. God bless you.

    • @Fruitsnackaddictsoflamonta
      @Fruitsnackaddictsoflamonta Před 2 lety +3

      @@mundusinvisibilis6630 I feel sorry for anyone who has to know you in actual life

    • @1995yuda
      @1995yuda Před 2 lety

      @Xaviar 77versus99 Yup!

  • @ibrahimakbas8605
    @ibrahimakbas8605 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Best video ever on Husserl and Phenomenology. Jackpot!

  • @ShogunOrta
    @ShogunOrta Před 2 lety +9

    One of the things i like most about Dr. Sugrue is that he conveys everything you need to know, and the intellectual level you need to know it, so clearly. No trudging over and over through the same paragraph youve been trying to comprehend, as is the case with a lot of philosophic texts.

    • @usamakhalidi8900
      @usamakhalidi8900 Před 2 lety +2

      He could add a bit more humor in his talk though, but the passion he shows for some ideas or persons comes through.

  • @barrymarshall
    @barrymarshall Před 9 měsíci +2

    The last portion of this lecture is a tour de force on the split between continental and analytic philosophy - and why we need both. Professor Sugrue's lectures are a wonderful endowment to intellectual life.

  • @daneshed2105
    @daneshed2105 Před rokem +2

    The ending with the comparison between the two traditions was just Wow. Couldn't ask for a clearer introduction into this paradigmatic dilemma, reminding me the yin yang symbol. Thanks!!

  • @sonybluraydisk
    @sonybluraydisk Před 3 lety +17

    Thank you soooo much, Dr. Sugrue! The value of your fantastic lectures is truly immessurable.

  • @dimelo58
    @dimelo58 Před rokem +2

    Love that jacket analogy.

  • @amanyaljazwy5281
    @amanyaljazwy5281 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you immensely for your informative and enjoyable lectures.

  • @AndreQueirozLS
    @AndreQueirozLS Před 3 lety +8

    Brilliant as always

  • @frafra2193
    @frafra2193 Před 3 lety +25

    Absolutely amazing, thank you for the upload. I'm feeling much more comfortable and oriented approaching my course on Husserl now that I've seen this.

  • @geoycs
    @geoycs Před 2 lety +3

    He’s such a pleasure to listen to!

  • @spookybuk
    @spookybuk Před 2 lety +5

    These lectures are great. What a great teacher. Thanks!

  • @jw7903
    @jw7903 Před 2 lety +3

    Priceless speech. It helps me a lot in understanding Husserl. Thank you very much!

  • @kwamekyeibaffour9256
    @kwamekyeibaffour9256 Před 2 lety +10

    Stunning clarity, coherence, and fluency.

  • @kevinrombouts3027
    @kevinrombouts3027 Před 3 lety +32

    Although I got a bit list in the middle of this and found attention difficult, I am always impressed with how he ties things up in the end game. Well done. Empiricism ends up being deeply unsatisfactory for living out the existential realities of our personal experience.

    • @benbell9170
      @benbell9170 Před 2 lety +2

      Well, to give the Empiricism its due, we can nowadays register many internal and psychic sensations through scientific experiments like fMRI etc.

    • @prim4681
      @prim4681 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes,
      Honestly I just started learning this shi, so I have no idea what yalls is talkin bout

    • @dharmadefender3932
      @dharmadefender3932 Před 2 lety

      I disagree. And I don't think Husserl contradicts empiricism.

    • @longlivedemocracy10123
      @longlivedemocracy10123 Před rokem +1

      why we stand together and haughtily discount epistemologies that dont find it necessary to cuddle with the sensibilities of one species on one planet out of trillions is beyond me. i think good metaphysics is supposed to be an ALL-explaining masterpiece, not something to make some monkeys feel warm in their hearts

  • @DukeOfChevo
    @DukeOfChevo Před 2 lety +3

    This's a such great work, explained all that complex ideas with simply and common words.

  • @temitope6830
    @temitope6830 Před 3 lety +6

    Best way to start the year

  • @e45127
    @e45127 Před rokem +3

    This guy is simply amazing.

  • @TheEleatic
    @TheEleatic Před 2 lety +2

    Remarkably clear, coherent, and concise.

  • @eternalrecycling8069
    @eternalrecycling8069 Před 2 lety +4

    a great lecture, thank you.

  • @jenniferhamann1173
    @jenniferhamann1173 Před 3 lety +4

    Yes, thank you. Great overview of his projects.

  • @leilakilpa8999
    @leilakilpa8999 Před 2 lety +2

    Omg, I can’t believe I can understand this. Thank you sooooo much.

  • @a.t.3168
    @a.t.3168 Před rokem

    You're a fantastic professor. Thank you.

  • @TravelingPhilosopher
    @TravelingPhilosopher Před rokem +1

    This is my favorite Dr. Sugrue lecture!

  • @harveyjohnny1967
    @harveyjohnny1967 Před 2 lety +3

    This is a great lecture.

  • @danasheys9300
    @danasheys9300 Před 2 lety +17

    Read Husserl in college years ago. I think this video is just as good as the entire course . Excellent stuff

  • @peteschaub7561
    @peteschaub7561 Před 2 lety +8

    Thank you so much professor! I have been struggling with this for a couple of weeks and trying to wrap my mind around some of the essentials in Husserl's work. You have such a gift of clear and interesting lecture.

  • @jajlertil
    @jajlertil Před rokem

    Fantastic lecture and the last point about the primacy of experience is very well made

  • @TheSwiftblad3
    @TheSwiftblad3 Před rokem +1

    really good presentation. i also like his fast and clear speaking and also his hectic walking while speaking. what a character!

  • @jacobdillow2375
    @jacobdillow2375 Před 11 měsíci

    Very well done lecture. Definitely worth a listen.

  • @olm7080
    @olm7080 Před rokem +1

    Amazing lecture, thanks for sharing. Greetings from Mexico.

  • @H.J.G
    @H.J.G Před rokem

    Wow! I had no idea I could watch these lectures!! I have about 5 of them on audible this is great to see!!

  • @user-yw7qc3wr8e
    @user-yw7qc3wr8e Před 8 měsíci +1

    What a wonderful, engaging speaker!

  • @mehdisaissi
    @mehdisaissi Před 3 lety +4

    Thank you.

  • @russv.winkle8764
    @russv.winkle8764 Před 2 lety +1

    Sugrue is legendary.

  • @ecb1979
    @ecb1979 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this upload. Explained lifeworld more easily in a 3 min span that my uni did in 2 weeks.

  • @kimyunmi452
    @kimyunmi452 Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant explainer.

  • @moriyokiri3229
    @moriyokiri3229 Před 3 lety +13

    Thank you, this is a most excellent summatiojn of Husserl!

    • @tonyrandall3146
      @tonyrandall3146 Před 2 lety

      your diction is imprecise, but I understood exactly.

  • @jakespatz4474
    @jakespatz4474 Před rokem +1

    Superb lecture!

  • @martinb.3348
    @martinb.3348 Před rokem +1

    thank you for the free education

  • @BaronM
    @BaronM Před 3 lety +16

    This is great. Thank you. Are you planning to upload professor Sugrue's Machiavelli lectures?

  • @itsawonderfullife4802
    @itsawonderfullife4802 Před 3 lety +4

    PLEASE upload the lecture on Plato's Symposium. Prof. Sugrue argues very passionately there.

  • @karenjohnston9201
    @karenjohnston9201 Před 4 měsíci

    Had never heard of Husseri yet this is the path that was followed- have been learning about my Self for 79 years starting seriously at 27, and now am fascinated about philosophy and history of the world. Another amazing and helpful lecture. Thank you so much.🙏🌹

  • @christopherlord3441
    @christopherlord3441 Před 7 měsíci

    What an excellent lecturer. Knows everything and explains it with such clarity and enthusiasm. An adornment to the human race.

  • @sapientum8
    @sapientum8 Před 2 lety +1

    excellent content

  • @diohasani9762
    @diohasani9762 Před 3 měsíci

    even alone in my room, at work, or anywhere else, when one of these lectures ends i wanna clap out of respect

  • @muzidr969
    @muzidr969 Před rokem

    I had a difficult time understanding Husserl, Thanks to the professor you are incredibly easy to understand

  • @kaf5816
    @kaf5816 Před 5 měsíci +1

    You had me at "are you cogitating with me"🤣

  • @Zeno2Day
    @Zeno2Day Před 2 lety +7

    Mike performed informative cross examination of Husserlian Phenomenology yet, other than hearing oblique comments in the form of questions of a confused understanding towards Husserl’s works. Mike, when he spoke on several oh Husserl’s topics, he built a field of straw-men - to conquer, to backup his bewilderment regarding Husserl’s positions. Mike, your talk is quite enlightening… in the manner that elucidates the swath of folks that hodgepodge their way through Husserl’s published works.

    • @Zeno2Day
      @Zeno2Day Před 2 lety +1

      @@Impaled_Onion-thatsmine continue editing

    • @MasterBoshan
      @MasterBoshan Před 2 lety +1

      Can you elaborate by what you mean by field of straw men?

  • @ClepsidraSideral
    @ClepsidraSideral Před 3 měsíci

    I'm only starting to take interest in philosophy and read a brief introductory text about Hussel because I'd like to read Heidegger. This lecture is very useful for me, and I appreciate the person who uploaded this content. I find the professor clear, conveys (at least for me) complex concepts in a succinct manner without taking away depth of reflection and thought. Much regards.

  • @theory_underground
    @theory_underground Před 2 lety +3

    10:42 I had no idea Freud was also a student of Brentano! 🤯🤯🤯

  • @blairhakamies4132
    @blairhakamies4132 Před 2 lety +1

    Fantastic🌹

  • @ryans3001
    @ryans3001 Před 2 lety

    Thank You!

  • @danielscottburke
    @danielscottburke Před rokem

    Outstanding 💥💨

  • @maryannilagan2265
    @maryannilagan2265 Před 9 měsíci

    thank you sir.

  • @steveschramko2386
    @steveschramko2386 Před 3 lety +11

    All this puts me in mind of a famous passage from Hume's Treatise (I'm paraphrasing from memory): Whenever I enter most intimately into that which I call 'myself'...I cannot help but stumble upon some particular perception or other....of love or hate , pain or pleasure....I never manage to catch 'myself' without some perception or other and never manage to experience anything but the perception....and when all my perceptions should be removed...after the dissolution of my body, I cannot conceive what would by further requisite to make me a complete non-entity.

    • @orangejuice7281
      @orangejuice7281 Před 3 lety +2

      Perhaps the greatest case of self-refutation, notice how many times he says "I" lol

    • @thenowchurch6419
      @thenowchurch6419 Před 2 lety +2

      What Hume did not know or acknowledge is that the removal of all perceptions, as for example in sleep, is ultimately temporary since the
      Absolute Spirit is eternal and all is conditionally part of IT.

    • @dharmadefender3932
      @dharmadefender3932 Před 2 lety +1

      @@orangejuice7281 That's not self refutation.

    • @davidhutchinson7771
      @davidhutchinson7771 Před rokem

      Maybe there's a problem with doing epoche on one's inner being, as thenowchurch kind of indicates below. Maybe the introspection of Hume and Descartes leaves something out because one's inner being, or "mental being," or soul is not fully what it can be without love involving others [it's both one thing AND a group thing...I need to learn more about Husserl's "lebenswelt"]. One wishes to state something flatly and fundamentally on one's own, but actually the transcendental ego is "off" (not fully itself) when it's not connected via these cords to others. In other words, it's not in a state to philosophize! Though of course part of the whole package of "doing philosophy" is sold today academically as something you can do privately and remotely. Without the cost of much taxing involvement with others. There are a lot of types of "others," which could be challenging.

    • @davidhutchinson7771
      @davidhutchinson7771 Před rokem +1

      Sorry, re what thenowchurch wrote ABOVE!

  • @Wulfhartus
    @Wulfhartus Před 2 lety

    Cette vidéo rend les ancêtres fiers.

  • @CBlade0
    @CBlade0 Před rokem +1

    Existential-phrenomenology is now a therapy style, which I've found to be rather refreshing. It seems we've reached that indefinite point in the future :)

  • @maximilyen
    @maximilyen Před 3 lety +4

    Very good

  • @summerkagan6049
    @summerkagan6049 Před 2 lety +1

    I once tried to read Hesserl's book "Ideas" but couldn't make much sense of it. I thought I was dumb. Wish I'd had this lecture back then. It would have made a lot of difference.

  • @MrMarktrumble
    @MrMarktrumble Před 2 lety

    Thank you

  • @drmilimiliy9343
    @drmilimiliy9343 Před 2 lety +1

    wow...this is breathtaking. Wish I could be half as articulate.

    • @drbonesshow1
      @drbonesshow1 Před 2 lety

      It would be better if you talked twice as slow.

  • @plekkchand
    @plekkchand Před 2 lety +2

    (Isnt the accent on the first syllable in Husserl?) Very stimulating and helpful lectures, free of cant.

  • @mattiasorre1718
    @mattiasorre1718 Před 2 lety +1

    I took basically the entire same course but from a more European perspective with mainly European professors, although our main philosphy professor was a Fulbright scholar. Its interesting to see the differences in interpretation

  • @SK-le1gm
    @SK-le1gm Před rokem +1

    “The very idea of the *logos* is that it’s *communicable.* “ - wow 😮 he is right.

  • @anthonynenna1697
    @anthonynenna1697 Před 3 lety +9

    Did Prof. Sugrue ever broach Ralph Waldo Emerson? Would like to hear/read his take on the transcendentalists, even if Kant was a big influence.

  • @sacredsoma
    @sacredsoma Před 2 lety

    good point @21:57 very few examples in Husserl's work of actually doing this

  • @H.J.G
    @H.J.G Před 11 měsíci +1

    I think what often gets missed with Husserl is that is not so much he wanted to find this mystery essence to the human soul as such. Its more to do with how we can become conscious of our time in this world. We literally spend so much time of our precious lives inside the confinement of our minds as opposed to actually being *in* the world. We become merely *of* it. I kniw this is sounding like Heideggers Dasein but he clearly took something Husserl could have easily taken and ran with it. Husserl wanted to put it across that to perceive of something primordially in the physical world, is to both become aware of it and perceive of it - thus, think it is true, that it exists. The body cannot conceive of when a thought is reflecting a thought or when a thought reflects physical reality as the same cognitive factulties are at play within our inner perception, as they are outwardly. Its so easy for time to slip away from us in this sense and we become so overwhelmed with speculative thoughts of the past or future or what we think we can rely on intuitively to be the case with something.
    I think Husserl strayed from this very important factor of his work, leaving it to Heidegger to emply. A lot of his ideas got lost in the breadth of his work.
    It would be interesting to see (if there was a way. But hey! perhaps there is!) When we die, we get some kind of print out statistics of how much time we actually spent inside out heads or on our screens in comparison to how much time was spent actually engaging with our immediate experience of the world. How many hours of conversations were spent in total on the phone, in text, on video calls etc and how may hours were spent engaged in genuine face to face conversation.
    Husserls work may not have been as recognised as he would have liked during his day but the more technology advances and the more time people spend experiemcing the world second hand on their screens.....it will very much be revived into todays mainstream world

  • @quantumfineartsandfossils2152

    24:00+ "Im bad at math" this is his true genius moment !!!!

  • @buya3671
    @buya3671 Před 2 lety +2

    You are never going to find a better introduction to Husserl's thought and philosophy than here. The one problem is that Dr. Sugrue does not really talk very much about Husserl's concept of the Life World and how some of his followers have developed it. He drops the notion of "intersubjectivity" and quickly abandons it right at the conclusion of his talk.

  • @viyye
    @viyye Před 7 měsíci

    GREAT!!

  • @ladykatnip7698
    @ladykatnip7698 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow, I didn't know anything about Husserl before but he sounds very much like me in thought. I see things in an uncannily similar way. I didn't know I was a Continental philosopher. I refused to read philosophers' books before because I didn't want their thoughts to affect my hunt for my own ideology. I only took ethics. That I arrived at such identical thoughts leads me to believe there is some validation for these ideas despite the stance Dr. Sugrue takes. I think it is best to view it as.... the goal of minimalizing the rational aspects of the world in order to operate in a more efficient way. A way of connecting and condensing that hopes to move us towards higher concepts and loosen the limits of what is. We separate and classify sometimes to our own detriment. Once this notion is grasped, then people can focus on living rather than processing and reacting to the world around them. There would be fewer negative psychological effects overall because ideally, they would already know themselves at this point, then they can live in a way that makes them happy and can delve into their emotional sides when it is called for as opposed to reacting to external factors that wouldn't otherwise cause an emotional response....Either that or Husserl has a flawed aspect. I am not sure since this is my first introduction to both parties. To me, anything past the limits of what can be said is then what I call the Tao {the known, the unknown, and the combination of both, and is a part of the spiritual realm. There is an aspect of intuition. If there wasn't then my ideologies would not be so close without ever knowing anything about it. All stemming from a sort of intuitional knowledge.

    • @Robb3348
      @Robb3348 Před 2 lety +1

      ...what "you" call "the Tao"? Really? Please clean up your language and say that "Tao" is a word used for millennia in China for a philosophical concept...and that if you asked 10 different knowledgeable experts on the subject to define "Tao", they would probably all give different answers. IOW please acknowlege that "Tao" has no universally accepted meaning, but that it serves as a kind of placeholder for many different people's different spiritual intuitions. And that, by using it, you intend to somehow give weight to your own (undelineated) use of the word, or to import associations from Chinese philosophy. I ask respectfully. (Your phraseology implies that you invented the word.)

    • @ladykatnip7698
      @ladykatnip7698 Před 2 lety

      @@Robb3348 I know where it comes from and what it refers to. My statement does not imply I invented the concept. I am simply giving name to the nameless. You know what it is so clearly you didn't misinterpret my words as to mean I invented it. You are merely bothered by the way I wrote a comment. I ask that you reflect upon your own comment and ask if it is written to perfection. This is afterall a technology forum, not a published article. I put only about 5% effort into the comments I make on here. While I do not mind changing something someone finds disrespectful. I think in this case you are reading too much into it.

  • @michaeldao2249
    @michaeldao2249 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks much for these uploads, they are excellent. Do you have any Merleau-Ponty??

  • @emilianopastor956
    @emilianopastor956 Před 3 lety +9

    Thanks so much for uploading this! It has clarified for me a lot about continental vs angloamerican tradition. I'm watching all of the lessons. Please, upload more! Or where can we find the rest of the course? I am very very interested in taking the whole course. He mentions in first class that there are 64 lessons. I could pay for it.

  • @luker.6967
    @luker.6967 Před rokem

    Quite fascinating are the similarities between Husserl’s epache and Vipassana meditation.

  • @prangyasamal7939
    @prangyasamal7939 Před 3 lety +1

    Hello Sir, can you please make a video lecture on existentialism, focusing on Albert Camus , will love to get some clarity regarding existential philosophy.

  • @tatsumakisempyukaku
    @tatsumakisempyukaku Před 3 lety +5

    My friend got his degree in philosophy at Fordham. He had a professor, John Drummond I believe, who said that husserl is not an idealist. And apparently Drummond is an expert on husserl, even wrote a dictionary of sorts regarding the neologisms.
    So, it seems if Drummond is correct, if husserl is not an idealist, then that presumption may lead to errors in interpreting husserl. And sugrue I think mentioned husserl as an idealist, though I’d have to listen again.

    • @brynbstn
      @brynbstn Před 2 lety

      It's a worthy point. The first step would be to get "Idealism" defined: "In philosophy, idealism is a diverse group of metaphysical views which all assert that "reality" is in some way indistinguishable or inseparable from human perception and/or understanding, that it is in some sense mentally constructed." From this sense, it seems Husserl is an Idealist.

    • @tatsumakisempyukaku
      @tatsumakisempyukaku Před 2 lety +1

      @@brynbstn but wouldn’t that be just be smuggling in idealism? I’m not too savvy on husserl, but I’m sure he’d say I don’t know what’s mentally constructed because I’ve done this bracketing, the epoche, and I’m just studying experience as it’s given to us. Would that be a valid reply?

    • @brynbstn
      @brynbstn Před 2 lety

      @@tatsumakisempyukaku Perhaps, but it seems conventional now to put Husserl in the Idealist camp. You can split hairs about it though - - Check out Wikipedia as a starting point.

    • @tatsumakisempyukaku
      @tatsumakisempyukaku Před 2 lety

      @@brynbstn convention could be wrong.

    • @joufaxerxes7966
      @joufaxerxes7966 Před 2 lety +4

      @@brynbstn Husserl called himself a transcendental idealist, but made clear that idealism in this term is understood in a merely methodological way, not metaphysical.
      I think (not totally sure) that Husserl just like the Vienna Circle would say that the realism/idealism debate is meaningless. Phenomenology is concerned with meaning and how meaning is constructed (that's the sole reason for Husserl being idealistic), so Husserl would say that phenomenology is about finding out what we mean when we speak about spacial-temporal things, an existing world, etc. and how we can make this way of speaking radically intelligible, proofing that there are good reasons for these language conventions (this is where he's different to Vienna Circle: No, we can't choose between idealist and realist language like we want). How things itself fundamentally are is on a totally different paper - both realist and idealist stances are combinable with Husserl's basic insights and ideas.

  • @itsawonderfullife4802
    @itsawonderfullife4802 Před 3 lety +7

    QUESTION: Do you have professor Sugrue's lecture on existentialism in the "Great Minds" series titled " The Existential Insight Sartre and Heidegger" on your list of future uploads? Thanks.

  • @CromCruachTheElderK
    @CromCruachTheElderK Před rokem

    Strangely enough, this felt like the most enlightenment liberal intro clip I have ever seen.

  • @HardyJap
    @HardyJap Před 3 lety +6

    I understand that the family is handling this channel. How is Michael's health?

    • @ErnestRamaj
      @ErnestRamaj Před 3 lety +2

      How old is he? Couldn't find it.

  • @davidfost5777
    @davidfost5777 Před 2 lety

    I'm always looking for new interesting lectures on Psychology/Philosophy, please let me know if you guys have any recommendations, would be highly appreciated

  • @hippodino4965
    @hippodino4965 Před rokem +1

    No slides. No blackboard. THis man really likes to be a teacher. Everything is in his brain... or mind if it s a concern.

  • @bradleyholder2770
    @bradleyholder2770 Před 2 lety

    19:36 Finally!

  • @stuarthicks2696
    @stuarthicks2696 Před 2 lety

    Nice.

  • @emile7549
    @emile7549 Před 2 měsíci

    Rest in peace professor.

  • @dmitriiisakov6470
    @dmitriiisakov6470 Před 8 měsíci

    I have recently started reading Husserl and decided to check out this lecture.
    I must say, that despite the fact that the professor is obviously knowledgable and highly intellectual, he seems to not understand Husserl, and he even said so that he had troubles understanding his theories in this lecture. It is true that it's not an easy read and I do come back to the same paragraphs time and time again because the idea keeps eluding me, but the fact is that phenomenology is not exactly "just another type of philosophy".
    Yes, the idea of the essences is hard, but it has nothing to do with the language and the reference to Wittgenstein is not apropos.
    One example I can give based on what I've read and learned so far: all empirical sciences (like physics) base their theories and discoveries on Eidetic (or Ideal, Essential) sciences like logic, and moreover, the empirical sciences cannot exist without the Eidetic sciences, e.g. you can't study the outer world without having an Ideal framework to deal with it, like the laws of logic (not empirical), mathematical axioms (math is an eidetic/ideal science, not empirical). So in short, the study of the outer world must be based on some non-empirical axioms.
    It's just one of the things Husserl discusses.

  • @starhaze3593
    @starhaze3593 Před 3 lety +4

    Ludwig Wittgenstein truly shines when compared to Husserl since escaping the entrapment into devolving into endless debate of essences helps predicate a more clearly defined transmission of communication based on creating pictures in the minds of others, which Wittgenstein later refined towards communication as a form of game that people play and understanding true communication with someone is comprehending the game that one is playing.

    • @starhaze3593
      @starhaze3593 Před 3 lety +1

      The lectures by Dr. Sugrue have me thinking that after Wittgenstein's work where he believes he solves the more pressing issues of Philosophy, I have been pondering that the next logic step for Philosophy is the final Capstone (if you will) of Philosophy which is the creation of a Utopian society akin to some modified versions of Plato's Republic or Thomas More's Utopia. Utilizing some harmonic blend of Communist elements and Capitalism, instead of the binary interpretations of 'either/or'. If there is a worthy intellectual exercise in the modern age it would be to create a society with a solid social safety net but political Philosopher Kings ruling over it.
      czcams.com/video/VU8Wi9eAvog/video.html

    • @moriyokiri3229
      @moriyokiri3229 Před 3 lety +1

      What happens if you replace the word "game" with "language" (lowercase sense of language) and you ask what is language? If you reply by saying language is comprised of many different languages with different rules, we still seemingly have no answered the question of what makes all these mini-languages a language at all. We haven't solved the original problem.

    • @brynbstn
      @brynbstn Před 2 lety +1

      @@moriyokiri3229 If you listened to the Wittgenstein lecture, then you know that trying to define Language is futile - - that is the illusion of mathematical thinking applied to language, of Plato and that crowd. However you can describe features of language... One obvious feature of language is that it's a product of the human mind, and looking at it anthropologically, it grew out of the need/will for humans to communicate with each other - it's an intrinsically social product.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před rokem

      >helps predicate a more clearly defined transmission of communication
      That's nonsense.
      I think what you probably tried to express is "communicates more clearly".