Brothers Karamazov-Dostoevsky's Ultimate Message to the World

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  • čas přidán 25. 10. 2021
  • Brothers Karamazov is considered one of the greatest and most profound Russian novels of all time. But what’s is story? Why is it important? What are the three main philosophies discussed? What was Dostoevsky’s purpose in writing it? And why Vladimir Putin calls it his favourite novel? And what are some of its weaknesses? And finally what’s it really about?
    This is a summary and analysis of the Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky. Often called his magnum opus, Brothers Karamazov was Dostoevsky’s last novel-published one year before his death in 1881, but it’s also his longest novel, almost twice the length of his other famous novel Crime and Punishment, which I have already summarised here. First I will give a full summary and then give a few points of analysis, mainly the three major philosophies that run through the novel. At the end I will tell you Dostoevsky’s main purpose in writing this novel, which might surprise you.
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Komentáře • 470

  • @madinaamanova6716
    @madinaamanova6716 Před 2 lety +322

    Some facts u could have missed, I read it in original and read some literature about Dostoevsky:
    • in Dostoevsky’s diaries when he made his first notes of the story and he hadn’t even given names to his characters, he called one character just “a murderer” later this character was given a name - Ivan;
    • the Brothers Karamazov may seem like a classical complete novel, but some philologists claim that the story might have been continued, there could be another novels connected by the main character Alyosha(in the prologue Dostoevsky makes it clear that the main character is Alyosha) and this epic novel(just as epic as War and Peace) could have had a name “The life of a great sinner” (Житие выликого грешника) - it is a very popular hypothesis.
    • Grusha( or Grushenka) is one of the most common female characters of Dostoevsky novels: infernal woman/femme fatale. It’s may be noticed that the author doesn’t like her, he even writes something like: “She is just a simple Russian woman, that blossoms at her 20s and when she turns 30 this charm disappears immediately.
    • The demon of Ivan Karamazov and actually their dialogue is one of the best moments of the story, STILL neither readers nor even philologists cannot surely tell if the demon is real or just imaginary. This is pretty curious.
    • I don’t know if this is relevant to foreign Dostoevsky fans but Russians distinguish five his novels and call it “Dostoevsky”s Pentateuch”, these novels are: Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, Demons/Possessed, the Adolescent and The Brothers Karamazov. These novels considered as something you should definitely read
    BTW thank you for your analysis 😌

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety +28

      This is awesome, Marina! I’m always interested to hear from Russians so thank you for these great facts.

    • @EphraimSyriacus
      @EphraimSyriacus Před 2 lety +9

      I understood Brothers Karamazov better when I read Notes From the Underground. I still think Notes From the Underground is maybe even his best book.

    • @nicnoel4961
      @nicnoel4961 Před rokem +6

      Yes Ivan’s encounter w the demon was nothing short of incredible

    • @ilan8468
      @ilan8468 Před rokem +1

      Damn i just bought the book but the first sentences kind of spoiled the whole thing no?

    • @madinaamanova6716
      @madinaamanova6716 Před rokem +7

      @@ilan8468 don’t worry, it’s definitely not a spoiler. 😅 the Karamazov brothers is not a typical detective story and FD is a pretty dialogic author, I mean he is in a constant dialogue with a reader: he gives you philosophical concept and his point of view through his characters and storyline…that was his point of view and it doesn’t mean you have to agree with him😬
      Why are you watching the videos about BK if you haven’t read the book yet, there could be a lot of spoilers

  • @Devrominums
    @Devrominums Před 2 lety +328

    I just finished reading this for the first time.
    My perspective is this. I am a former addict and punk rocker who hated religion. Then after a suicide attempt I “found Jesus” at the age of 30. This changed the course of my life and I became a zealot for the Gospel. I have now been working as a minister for 5 years but have become somewhat critical of the Church it’s reason and it’s members. I have also been struggling with might be called a “crisis of faith”.
    Many of the things I am struggling with are explored in depth in this masterpiece.
    I don’t know if anyone cares about my struggle and I don’t know why I mention it here but just know that this novel has not given me clarity but has given me the ability to bare my soul to myself, to God and those around me.
    I hope this novel touches your heart as it touched mine.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety +26

      Thanks for sharing your experience.

    • @rohitchandra4395
      @rohitchandra4395 Před 2 lety +25

      Hello Devon. Thanks for sharing this. Yes, the crisis of faith returns again and again in our lives. It happens so because there's a force in nature which always wants to test our faith whenever we feel comfortable with it. This duality of nature is what we as humans should embrace. Thats what Brothers Karamazov taught me.

    • @patrickhassing120
      @patrickhassing120 Před 2 lety +13

      Hey Devon - I appreciate your openness. It makes me want to be open as well. My path isn’t the same as yours - I went from a religious background, to an atheistic one of hedonism, to now…. A spiritual atheist? Not sure what to call it honestly, but maybe we can relate here still.
      What I take from this book is not a specific way of life or an objective truth. I don’t think Dostoyevsky ever aims at dictum. But he’s constantly pointing out that a heart filled with love, nurtured in our spiritual and creative essence, is where you will find the better angels of our nature. This nature will forever remain formless to us- which is why Dostoyevsky points out the failure of being overly intellectual and analytical (and why Ivan fails even if he wins the debate in Rebellion) - and we should embrace the mystery and ponder it with wonder instead of reason. Let it form art instead of arithmetic.
      That is what I take from it anyway. I think like you it hasn’t given me direct clarity, but I know what you mean by it giving you the ability to bare your soul.
      Have you had the chance to read Solzhenitsyn?

    • @TheArchives111
      @TheArchives111 Před rokem +3

      The bleak and hard periods that comes, can be your teacher. Whatever that seeks to break you, will be your strength if you don't let it overcome you. What is negative now can be your positives in future. Take this time to build your character - expand your views of reality instead of stupid fantasy. Work on Yourself!

    • @matthijsvanemous7046
      @matthijsvanemous7046 Před rokem +1

      If you ever wanna talk about it....

  • @alienspace1
    @alienspace1 Před rokem +81

    Alexei, Lyosha, Alyosha, and so on are forms of the SAME name in Russian. Dostoyevsky uses the standard grammatical morphology that the Russian language allows any speaker to play with words to enrich the emotional definition. Each of these name forms carries a various degree of intimacy. Using the full capacity of the language isn't a weakness of the novel. It's a pleasure to read the original text. It's a challenge to translate but it's not the writer's responsibility.

    • @Kirillissimus
      @Kirillissimus Před rokem +4

      If I had to translate something like this into English then I would not even bother trying to replicate the nuance. I would just call him Alex and call it a day. Even without it the text is still way too complex for my liking.

    • @OLGA_DV
      @OLGA_DV Před 5 měsíci

      Вы правы!

  • @gbw1372
    @gbw1372 Před 11 měsíci +59

    the most emotional part of the novel for me is the wholesome bond between Ilusha(a little boy whose father dmitri offended) and his family and classmates

    • @BlackSailPass_GuitarCovers
      @BlackSailPass_GuitarCovers Před 11 měsíci +15

      The part where the boys who cast stones at him all turned up to his funeral touched me deeply.

    • @mantisfootball918
      @mantisfootball918 Před 9 měsíci +1

      "my dear little fellow"

    • @JohnCox-ut3cv
      @JohnCox-ut3cv Před 5 měsíci

      ⁠@@BlackSailPass_GuitarCoversI want to believe that Aloysha is introduced to us when Illusha throws stones at him in response to his own stoning by his alienated classmates earlier. Also, did not I

    • @JohnCox-ut3cv
      @JohnCox-ut3cv Před 5 měsíci +1

      …the military brother (Ivan???) not earlier beat Illusha’s father outside a tavern with little provocation?
      I do agree this subtext is so strong.

    • @richardghani5458
      @richardghani5458 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@JohnCox-ut3cvnot Ivan but Dmitri. Ivan is the second oldest, the intellectual that shared mother with Alexey.

  • @swil0580
    @swil0580 Před rokem +67

    The devil, Ivan's nightmare, amazing chapter. The way the visitor torments Ivan with his own polarising ideas ( the same ideas that fuel Ivan's belief that he predicated the chain of events that led to his father's murder ).

  • @nikhilreji9334
    @nikhilreji9334 Před 2 lety +163

    The Grand Inquisitor chapter in The Brother's Karamazov was sooo good!

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety +20

      I have to honest, on my first reading I enjoyed that part the least but on my second reading I enjoyed it more.

    • @alizaidi2743
      @alizaidi2743 Před 2 lety +6

      being non-religious I found it really boring. But after watching this video and getting a clearer intent behind it, I'm inclined to read it again.

    • @SamAntics4
      @SamAntics4 Před 2 lety +2

      Another perspective on this chapter is that FD used this story to mask his criticism of the Russian Orthodox Church ….

    • @zagi02
      @zagi02 Před 2 lety +8

      @@SamAntics4 Bro, the chaptet is literally about the Catholic Church.

    • @IosebDzhugashvili
      @IosebDzhugashvili Před 2 lety

      I couldn't understand that chapter

  • @mohammedhanif6780
    @mohammedhanif6780 Před rokem +223

    Rubbish! Alyosha was not naive and stupid. Just read the ending with the children where Dostoevsky brings him into his own. Dostoevsky was criticising intellectualism and not intelligence.

    • @walterhoenig6569
      @walterhoenig6569 Před 11 měsíci +7

      I agree.

    • @caram6061
      @caram6061 Před 10 měsíci +15

      Alyosha played the fool who is actually clever and self aware child like and honest this it utter garbage when he says he is stupid shows how not in-depth an understanding this person has of the book! Agree

    • @Lunch_Meat
      @Lunch_Meat Před 10 měsíci +22

      You're both wrong. Alyosha is the pinnacle of being open hearted. This means he is both clever, knowledgeable, wise, and observant but also forgiving, fool hearted, sympathetic, and simple.
      He's like the old saints who let a poor man into their home only to find the man robbed them only to then either bring that man the goods he left behind or let him back into his home again. Not because he is stupid, but because he is loving.

    • @mohammedhanif6780
      @mohammedhanif6780 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @Lunch_Meat I agree with you!

    • @Godsglory777
      @Godsglory777 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Amen! Alyosha is the pinnacle of the story. He is the ideal man as far is Dostoyevsky is concerned. He is the "holy fool" that confounds the truly foolish wisdom of the world.

  • @Danaluni59
    @Danaluni59 Před 2 lety +89

    The novel was the prototype for the modern soap opera, perhaps in the best way possible… a bunch of morally bankrupt and wounded characters in webworks of love triangles… one vaguely heroic protagonist who suffers trying to be the peacemaker… some interesting side characters… all set in imperial Russia

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety +2

      Agree it is a great novel.

    • @indicatoker420
      @indicatoker420 Před rokem +2

      The UK soap 'Coronation Street' references 'The Idiot' from time to time. A character called 'Ken Barlow' who has been on the soap since the very first episode in the 60s and still on there now is the one that mentions it. He has 3 translations of it and enthusiastically reads a different translation of it in a retirement home he spent a short time in.

    • @edwarddavidson9144
      @edwarddavidson9144 Před rokem

      @@Fiction_Beast I was captivated from the start by this novel as an American teenager. It was the tone of the narrator that drew me in, hard to describe but like I was reading a "Tales from the Crypt" comic with the "Crypt Keeper" telling a tale. Doubt this would come off that way in the original language. But otherwise, so many memorable scenes.

    • @j0nnyism
      @j0nnyism Před rokem +1

      I’ve always considered dickens to be the prototype for the soap opera. Partly in the way the books were originally published (in parts) and partly for the emphasis on characterisation over plot

    • @indicatoker420
      @indicatoker420 Před rokem +2

      Greek tragedies too. 'Eastenders' do for sure.

  • @Seaviewsystems1
    @Seaviewsystems1 Před rokem +6

    Thank you for this summary. As one who grew up in the teachings of the Anglican Christian religion and subsequently turned away, finding the secular and rational the most approachable explanation to our condition, it is refreshing and reassuring that I am not alone and that no other than Fyodor Dostoevsky shared these same doubts. Recent events in the world of finance and even cryptocurrency have shown me that the best and brightest are not above the basest of human desires and the cleverest are not necessarily the best. I think The Brothers Karamazov helps us understand that it is not enough to exceed, but we must exceed with intention and not at the expense of our humanity. Without our humanity, all is lost.

  • @debanjanchowdhury4397
    @debanjanchowdhury4397 Před rokem +27

    I am just reading this masterpiece. It's absolutely terrific, completely wrapped with suspenseful bend along with hugely enthralling and profoundly significant. Dostoevsky's sojourn into religion, psychology, philosophy, morality, relationship between human individuals is absolutely a breathtaking one. The book's abysmal depth will draw you deep down. It's an absolutely enthralling and fascinating voyage I am taking.

  • @jaye2491
    @jaye2491 Před rokem +18

    I cannot every see any novel surpassing this one for me. The feelings I had when reading Ivan's fever dream, and the chapters of the Trial, I was just blown away that that can be done with writing. In a class of his own, Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, Notes from the underground, all masterpieces (I am postponing reading Demons).

    • @OLGA_DV
      @OLGA_DV Před 5 měsíci +1

      "Бесы" - супер!

    • @kazimierzgaska5304
      @kazimierzgaska5304 Před 4 měsíci

      @@OLGA_DV Nu da, mozhno mnogo uznat' pro korni i mentalitet russkih biesov tipa Lenin, Stalin, Yezhov, Beria, Putin, Patrushev...

  • @chengcangelosi6418
    @chengcangelosi6418 Před rokem +6

    Wow, I had never read Brothers Karamavos, but thank you for telling the story, very interesting on how the story was put forth by you.

  • @georgeblazhev
    @georgeblazhev Před rokem +7

    I'm happy and thankful I read this book. I see a part of myself in the three brothers. The ending, the funeral really affected me.

  • @eduardoruano8649
    @eduardoruano8649 Před rokem +4

    The best analysis about Brothers Karamazov that I ever heard. Excellent stuff.

  • @gazrater1820
    @gazrater1820 Před 2 lety +11

    Thank you for doing this exactly what I required in the undimmed eye of day to get to the nuts and bolts. Thank you for your perspective on this Magnum opus a great critique.

  • @joevanderen64
    @joevanderen64 Před 2 lety +7

    I appreciate this analysis. I read this book on my own and ran into some difficulties and the unfortunate idea that I will want to reread it at some point to fully appreciate the novel. Sad that it will be another 1000 page endeavor!

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety +1

      It's a challenging book so you're not alone. Good luck and let me know how you get on.

  • @sergeyperetyatko6520
    @sergeyperetyatko6520 Před rokem +13

    the thing about dostoyevsky is that his language in his novels and his way of storytelling is extremly fun to read...in russian...that may be lost in translation...the fun...and the funniness...there are monents that made me laugh hard ...but i dont know if its as funny in translation....the moments when grushenka, which is a,name fot tiny pair btw...the name is fun in itself...so the moment when she comes to visit...forgot her name the other woman in the book...and theyre all like lovedovy..with each other...and the other woman is like oh grushenka, youre an anfel ...why didnt i know you before...i could kiss your legs for eternity....now wont yoy kiss my leg henxe i've kissed yours...and grushenka goes ....you know what, im not gonna kiss your leg....and the other woan goes like...but why? i kissed yours!...and grushenka says, because i dont feel like it.....and then the other woman starts yelling at her...you beast! get out of my house!....that scene was hilarious!...dostoyevsky was so ahead of his time in writing what basically could be a netflix tv show

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před rokem +1

      I agree. His comedy is the best.

    • @onceamusician5408
      @onceamusician5408 Před rokem +2

      i do not know Russian. I am old and tired and lack the patience to learn it. but i am informed by my russian emigre friends that Dostoyevsky is very lyrical in the original russian,
      whereas in english he comes out as a screaming fanatic.
      your thoughts on this idea?
      i read him over 40 years ago but these days i am no longer interested in agonizing over ideas

    • @mantisfootball918
      @mantisfootball918 Před 9 měsíci

      No one can make me laugh like Dostoyevksy. Even the drunks and characters of the lowest education, upbringing, and status speak with greater refinement, intelligence, and eloquence than anyone in my "America" (as Mitenka calls it and where he once lived with Grushenka) even after having been translated into English.

    • @kazimierzgaska5304
      @kazimierzgaska5304 Před 4 měsíci

      *grushenka =tiny pear (not "pair")!

    • @mikeoglen6848
      @mikeoglen6848 Před 3 měsíci

      I fail to see anything amusing in this episode...

  • @jornspirit
    @jornspirit Před rokem +3

    ...never read the book (well, to this day) but always felt I should know at least more of what it is about... this is a very good, succinct description and analysis - from other comments I take that the way D writes can hook and spell-bound you (although there are lenghty parts and side-tracks, which can test your patience), so for checking that I will actually have to start reading... very fascinating to learn that this is Putin's favourite novel and your thoughts on that... I think that makes it such an essential read - to understand not only Putin, but in general the 'Russian soul' a bit better... thank you very much for this blog!

  • @trinabaker3186
    @trinabaker3186 Před rokem

    Thank you for simplifying this story for me. Thank you.

  • @winskypinsky
    @winskypinsky Před rokem +14

    This explanation is vapid and surface. Firstly, the chapter of the Putrid Smell made me stagger. When I finally, finally understood why this was written and what it meant did I finally exclaim “Oh my God! That’s brilliant.” The Fr. Zosima was transmitting a message to Alyousha “Beware. Danger.” Ivan’s nightmare far exceeded the Grand Inquisitor. The visitation from the Devil had me howling with laughter. Anyway, it’s a mighty book written by a mighty man and deserves hours if not days of discussion. And why drag in Vladimir Putin? You’re going to sum up this brilliant piece of literature and the current geo-political conflict in a CZcams chat? Grow up.

  • @johnstebbins6262
    @johnstebbins6262 Před rokem +7

    Good summary of the facts, but I would classify Dmitry as a Romantic, not a hedonist. He is passionate but authentic. Also I really don't think the Novel is about a "return to childhood". It's about FAITH, which alone has power to bear fruit, while rational cynicism leads sterility and despair, and in the book, even murder. I suppose, though, unfortunately, many people consider faith and a return to childhood the same thing. But precisely such people are represented by Ivan, in that they confound faith with childhood and naïveté, and therefore reject faith.

  • @leematthews6812
    @leematthews6812 Před rokem +13

    Thanks, very useful. I finished reading this a couple of weeks ago, and found it a little overwhelming tbh. Not as much as Thus Spake Zarathustra, though. I've never been a huge literature reader, but I'm trying to catch up a bit in my later years....

  • @elliotwalton6159
    @elliotwalton6159 Před rokem +19

    It is my understanding that Dostoevsky had twenty years worth of novels planned out for later in life, occupying him into his 70s, which included sequels to both Crime and Punishment and Karamazov Brothers, so I'm not so sure he knew he was either dying or that this would be his last novel. It just so happened that it was. Definitive statements about the novels have to include the notion that they are 'incomplete' and merely first chapters in longer narratives. Dostoevsky hoped that Russian Christianity would triumph over collectivism and nihilism and spread brotherhood across the globe. Sadly his nightmare came true, though only his last wife survived to witness it. His warnings still reach out to us today.

  • @_p_5764
    @_p_5764 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Elder Zosima's letter to Alyosha is a treasure trove of profound wisdom

  • @johntorri9172
    @johntorri9172 Před 2 lety +17

    This was awesome! Thank you for the breakdown! Didn't know that this was Putins favorite book.

  • @ekulda
    @ekulda Před rokem

    Thank you for your efforts in making us understand dostoeysky's novel "Brothers karamazov". Quiet an observation by Dostoevsky.

  • @seanl6478
    @seanl6478 Před rokem +3

    While I don't agree with hedonism, I actually felt really bad for Fyodor. He may be a mean drunk and not the best dad, I don't think he deserved to die lol. Dmitri was by far my favorite character. Alyosha was a sweetheart. Awesome book, I'll have to read it again in a few years.

  • @mumsow
    @mumsow Před 2 lety +3

    This is such a brilliant channel 💜

  • @russellmarra8520
    @russellmarra8520 Před rokem +12

    I am nearly 70 years old and have read literally thousands of books. This is one of the very best that I have read. I enjoyed your break down and analysis. That being said, couldn't you have found a copy that didn't have so many loose pages?

    • @youngman7600
      @youngman7600 Před rokem

      What's your favorite top 5?

    • @russellmarra8520
      @russellmarra8520 Před rokem +12

      @@youngman7600 -Not an easy thing to do. I assume you mean in addition to Dostoyevsky. Here's a few of my favorites. How about: the Count of Monte Cristo. All quiet on the western front. Wake of the Red Witch. Lord of the Rings. (I know it's three books, but one story) Morte de Arthur. Stranger in a strange land. Hound of the Baskervilles. The Godfather. Picture of Dorian Grey. The Shining. Dracula. Heart of Darkness. Wake of the Red Witch. Dune.
      Sorry I can't pare it down to five. I know they may not all be great literature, but I enjoyed them enough to read them more than once. I read for pleasure, but it's been several years since I've read many novels. I worked maintenance all of my life. If nothing broke down there wasn't much for me to do, so I always had a couple of books with me.

    • @jwylde2
      @jwylde2 Před rokem

      what translation(s) did you read

    • @youngman7600
      @youngman7600 Před rokem

      @@jwylde2 You looking for a good translation of Dostoevsky?

    • @youngman7600
      @youngman7600 Před rokem

      @@russellmarra8520 Thanks Russel!

  • @moshefabrikant1
    @moshefabrikant1 Před 2 lety +8

    13:00
    Knowing too much makes your life tougher, that i believe because we expand the lense of the absurd
    15:00
    Religious fate gives you power, why people don't want extra power in absurd hard universe
    18:00
    The ultimate message
    of Brothers Karamazov is this. It’s better to be naïve or even stupid but good than smart,
    successful but bad
    19:00
    When you see it you can't unsee it, and sometimes its for the best.
    a better life it is

  • @punchis5662
    @punchis5662 Před 3 měsíci

    Your channel is the best. Thank you infinitely!

  • @darbara16
    @darbara16 Před rokem +5

    Alyosha has 2 father's, his biological father Fyodor and his spiritual father, Zosimov when he takes birth in the Christian faith.

  • @fanciulladelsouth
    @fanciulladelsouth Před rokem +4

    @Fiction Beast - Enjoyed your analysis and found agreement with much of it (also would have preferred to leave contemporary politics out, as some others suggested). Now how about letting us in on your recurring imagery of the damaged paperback copy, attempting to stand it upright, re-insert the loose pages, etc. Спасибо!

  • @forgetfulangel1875
    @forgetfulangel1875 Před rokem

    Thank you for your summary and analysis. I just read this book but was unable to clearly understand the deeper meanings behind the characters.

  • @sanjaysaksena619
    @sanjaysaksena619 Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent. Analysis and Philosophies are spot on.

  • @dmtdreamz7706
    @dmtdreamz7706 Před 8 měsíci +2

    How do you comunicate so much beauty? It's Incredible. I just read it and it brings me to tears. Because I'm reading it and I'm reading about myself. Yeah you've never really read Dostojevskij until you've read it on 5meo DMT. Until you recognize that it's you and that's basically what Infinity is. Sort of like I love you, no I love you, no I love you, no I love you, no I love you more, I love you more, I love you more. Who can love who more? And whoever can love who more is God. You see that long laundry list of stuff about you that you don't love. God loves all of it. I'm sorry for not loving more, that's the only thing you have to be sorry about. Thank you. Thank You For Love! And at this point you realize that that's it, that's the point. That's the only lesson in life. That's my only job. Is to love. Everything else is idiocy and then what you do is you say I love you. For the first time in your life you say I love you because you really understand what that phrase means and you fall in love with God. But as it throws it out there, it's gentle so he throws it out there but then you say oh I can't love it and then what God will say in return is, it's okay. I love that you are not capable of love. I love that. And when that hits you. That's what fills you with enough love to overcome your resistance to love even that next level thing that you could do. No it can't be love. Of course it's love! what else could it be! It's love! No oh my God this is impossible! Of course it's love how could it be anything else!? How could I be so stupid as to think it's anything else. And God is like of course it's love.

  • @MrMarktrumble
    @MrMarktrumble Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you. I think this was well done.

  • @0xmixo260
    @0xmixo260 Před 7 měsíci

    This was very informative. Thank you.

  • @nithin1729s
    @nithin1729s Před 2 lety +4

    Just completed the novel and came here for your analysis.. I guess I will take up The Idiot now.. Thanks for your brilliant analysis

  • @SodiumWage
    @SodiumWage Před rokem +9

    It's not quite accurate to say Christ came back to tell the Inquisitor and the church to curb their brutality. Christ never speaks a single word in the novel and aside from the miracles he performs at the beginning his only other action is the kiss. Christ came back to (re)inspire the people (including the Inquisitor and the church) and to remind them whom is truly god

  • @MrCementer88
    @MrCementer88 Před 2 lety +1

    Fantastic video and channel. Love it!

  • @hotrodjones74
    @hotrodjones74 Před 2 měsíci

    The Brothers Karamazov was an excellent book. The ideas of Dostoevsky and Putin to question everything from the West seems quite reasonable, especially after all the crap that has happened since November 2019. One tragedy after another. Maybe a little bit of this Russian attitude rubbed off me during my sojourn there (2014-2023).

  • @Takeda_1582
    @Takeda_1582 Před rokem +6

    Hey,thanks for the video.
    Will you please make some videos on Chekhov's philosophy,too?
    Keep up the good work👏

  • @wurmholewizrdree3475
    @wurmholewizrdree3475 Před 7 měsíci

    thanks for this . Im in the middle of it ..and yr video has really helped . there's alot going on in this one .

  • @cappy2282
    @cappy2282 Před 2 lety +15

    Great stuff. The idiot is my favorite book from Dostoyevsky but this one is very good, as well

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety +1

      Awesome. Why you prefer the idiot? I got a video coming out but it would be cool to hear your thoughts.

    • @cappy2282
      @cappy2282 Před 2 lety

      @@Fiction_Beast hey friend, I'm not sure why I prefer the idiot but as a Christian it is very disturbing Dostoevsky's question about the possibility that christ was (or could be) just a moral man. And the dangers of atheism
      I read about Dostoevsky's reaction to that painting. I forget who painted it but it's title is "dead christ" and its mentioned in the book. (Its actually the cover of some editions of the book) but the looks on Christ face is pure death and the feelings christ followers would have felt and maybe experience on seeing that christ was just a moral man, would beyond devastating. It's just a very powerful and dangerous question that most men of faith probably better off not looking at. (Crazy stuff lol)
      2) I always heard that Dostoevsky's books were ment to be read multiple times and I can understand that. His writings are top tier

  • @roloflanagan
    @roloflanagan Před rokem +1

    Best line in the novel " never be afraid" starets Zosima

  • @acynecki
    @acynecki Před rokem +1

    I agree the names and nicknames was the hardest part for me. I could not keep them straight

  • @csk4j
    @csk4j Před rokem

    Nice Summary!

  • @cheri238
    @cheri238 Před rokem

    Thank you again. Love all your videos

  • @patricelauverjon2856
    @patricelauverjon2856 Před rokem

    Destinations can make us forget that the journey can be the purpose, the last thoughts of a person are the last thoughts and, no matter the level of wisdom, do not match the requirements of the 'living.. Many thoughts come as we get older and to let be is as good an alternative as sharing an individual experience. A failure of what goes on now is the need to associate ourselves with a master without considering flying off the nest on our own. Wokeness in America is influencing a country where self-esteem has been deteriorating and deteriorated for decades. Philosophies acquire top values when seen in relation to their timr: this helps value lateral thinking: adapting to our present.

  • @carlorizzo827
    @carlorizzo827 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you, valiant effort. I read it 3 times: when i was 20, 35, and 60 (now i'm 70). Perhaps it defies being capsulized. It's so physical! Reads like a movie script. D was spiritual, yes. That chapter on putrification of Zossima? Yes, disgusting. But also a raucous lampoon of religious folks blindly following, submitting to authority. D advocated a thoughtful introspective faith. I studied Russian language, enjoyed learning the nicknames, what an incredible literary heritage. Is it really necessary to identify "best of...?" What a letdown that Russian political power-grabbers defile that historical treasury with immoral massacre. I don't know Putin, i would venture he's missing the main points in the novel

  • @solid-parker237
    @solid-parker237 Před rokem +1

    I'm seeing some parallels between Dostoevsky and Holden Caulfield from The Catcher and the Rye as well as Kaileena from Prince of Persia. Holden yearns for the innocence that is withering away in adolescence and Kaileena, the Empress of Time, was haunted by visions of being slain by the Prince in her timeline. Neither of them were fond of knowledge.
    Going off tangent, "if you wanna handwrite in microgravity, use a f*kin pencil, Kennedy!" sums up the cultural spirit that some Russians nowadays, such as the idealistic Pussy Riot band, don't share.

  • @fastingcoach9711
    @fastingcoach9711 Před rokem

    Healing and evolution of the mind is only possible on earth
    In the presence of maximal empathy and benevolence cartoons toward each other!

  • @namjoonforpresident1203
    @namjoonforpresident1203 Před měsícem

    My favourite part, being from the field of law myself, was the closing statement by the defence counsel, showing the inevitable and cruel ambivalence of psychology and what is more, the human nature.

  • @tyson6695
    @tyson6695 Před 2 lety +3

    I loved your analysis! Keep up the good work 😊 !

  • @fastingcoach9711
    @fastingcoach9711 Před rokem

    Brillant
    Thank you!!!

  • @pj61114
    @pj61114 Před rokem

    Good Job. The Brothers Cosmo Not a Space Odyssey right here on Earth.

  • @Tato871
    @Tato871 Před 9 měsíci

    What a great channel I found on YT.

  • @IosebDzhugashvili
    @IosebDzhugashvili Před 2 lety +7

    My favorite chapter was The Devil: Ivan's nightmare.

    • @itsnotyouitsme3865
      @itsnotyouitsme3865 Před rokem

      What about this chapter made it your favorite?

    • @IosebDzhugashvili
      @IosebDzhugashvili Před rokem +4

      @@itsnotyouitsme3865 the way he describes the characteristics of the 'devil' and how cunning he is, attending to every person's 'desire & want', which is ultimately what drives us to horrible circumstances.
      Overall complexity, mysticism, messy, and how disturbing the chapter is.

  • @eodghost
    @eodghost Před 4 měsíci

    Great stuff 👏

  • @ravichanana3148
    @ravichanana3148 Před 3 měsíci

    Hard work in the rational world of Science can reveal simplicity of Nature that will keep life simple for the future generations.

  • @mrrakeshmohansinghnegi248

    I did not read the book but got some ideas what it is about. Thanks 🙂

  • @LazlosPlane
    @LazlosPlane Před rokem +1

    The greatest novel, by far.

  • @Skipjack7814
    @Skipjack7814 Před rokem +1

    I like Father Zossima a lot, and Ivans 'Demon' too

  • @sl5311
    @sl5311 Před rokem +3

    Excellent at 12:15. Each generation unknowingly hands power to the sociopaths, malignant narcs, clever psychopaths. These types -given their transactional/not-relational nature, run the government, the security apparatus, the financial system, and of course in our modern world, the corporations. Societies in general are made up of 80% "neurotypical" people who live on the surface, don't like too much seriousness or thinking, are not introspective and are easily manipulated. This group contains the malignant narcs, sociopaths and psychopaths. The rest are 20% neurodivergent types who don't see the point in endless joking and small talk that the neurotypicals use to relate to one another. The neurotypicals, because they live on the surface, don't understand they hand the levers of power to the adults with 2 year old psychological wounds-the malignant narcissists, sociopaths and psychopaths. These pathological types realize they have to mirror the neurotypicals to blend in and once they do, they are able to capture each system. In tribes we knew who these people were and we dealt with them. In the nation-state they are able to hide until it is too late and they do tremendous damage.

  • @AMANKUMARSINGH-yp1qz
    @AMANKUMARSINGH-yp1qz Před rokem

    Subtitles are blessing for a non native like me. 😊

  • @willieluncheonette5843

    " Just a single man, Fyodor Dostoevsky, is enough to defeat all the creative novelists of the world. If one has to decide on 10 great novels in all the languages of the world, one will have to choose at least 3 novels of Dostoevsky in those 10. Dostoevsky’s insight into human beings and their problems is greater than your so-called psychoanalysts, and there are moments where he reaches the heights of great mystics. His book BROTHERS KARAMAZOV is so great in its insights that no BIBLE or KORAN or GITA comes close."

  • @motivationforlife1067
    @motivationforlife1067 Před 2 lety

    Very nice narration, great

  • @hilarydrinkwater5392
    @hilarydrinkwater5392 Před rokem

    Yes, the nerdy looking Lord with the glasses just Sid something similar to his daughter who he observed hurling a Waterford crystal glass at the kitchen wall in 2001. ASIO also observed it through the lens of a transponder fitted into the microwave, but I digress. The nerdy looking Lord said that the action of ruling the glass was unconscious in 2001 but in 2022 it no longer is but that is as far back as he will allow his daughters unconscious memory to go.
    Thanks for the platform

  • @exploreallday8400
    @exploreallday8400 Před rokem +1

    I cried at the last message from ALYOSHA

  • @suballica
    @suballica Před 2 lety +5

    This book is very relevant now in 2022 with Ukraine-Russia War going on, since it is Putin's favorite book,! It somewhat helps us understand the motive behind his attack.

  • @enriquelauni2511
    @enriquelauni2511 Před rokem

    Thanks!

  • @nguyenquang2346
    @nguyenquang2346 Před rokem +2

    Một phân tích và tổng hợp hay nhất về tác phẩm mà tôi biết ! Cám ơn .

  • @cakipankerot6830
    @cakipankerot6830 Před 2 lety

    Bravo! You managed to turn discussion about excellent book, to show us how McCarthyism is still alive!

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety

      MacCathyism?

    • @cakipankerot6830
      @cakipankerot6830 Před 2 lety

      Yes! “ Vladimir Lenin, opsss Putin”! Fact is if someone who can discuss “ Brothers Karamazov”in the same sigh puts Dostoyevsky, Putin and Lenin, says a lot of the orator’s intention. I leave space for the subconscious, which only confirms my assumption. Do you think if someone in Russia would analyze “ An American Tragedy”, they would mention Trump and Lincoln? ( Excuse any miss spellings)!

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety +1

      @@cakipankerot6830 Here is the thing, you read any of the russian novels, they always talk about politics, ideology and Dostoevsky's novels are no different. As a matter of fact, he deals with issues like ethics, Russian values against western ideas (mainly German, French and English back then) and ahteism against religion, which is what? It's political. Now I dont know the political dynamics of your coutnry that well to comment about those individuals you mentioned, but every country's politics follow some underlying values, which happen to be also present in its literature. You said it yourself, the subconscious space is perhaps the very place you find these underlying values more potently expressed. So fiction and reality has collided in Russia. I suggest you read Fathers and Sons by Turgenev and you will see the seeds of Bolsheviks some 70 years before they came to power.

    • @cakipankerot6830
      @cakipankerot6830 Před 2 lety

      @@Fiction_Beast you got a god point, but again i don’t think was necessary to mention Putin in such a discussion because he is a communist (+ dictator), and we all know that communists eat babies for breakfast.

  • @remurraymd
    @remurraymd Před 5 měsíci

    Life is a battle between material and spiritual desire.
    Life is best putting spiritual desire and love
    ahead of material desire which triggers
    MORE craving and increased suffering.

  • @novakvladimir1479
    @novakvladimir1479 Před rokem +1

    Usual but interesting, at times deep analysis of the work. Also, the shallow understanding of Russia being against the west? After millions of victims in Napoleon's and Hitler's wars, only a simple remark of this form misleads the listener and draws him to simplistic conclusions. Also, the presentation of Putin as a necessarily evil person speaks even more about the author's misunderstanding of the state of Russia before Putin and the mistakes of the West that led to the current tragedy.

  • @podoyle
    @podoyle Před rokem +2

    “Women in general heal troubled men”

  • @jorgealves8578
    @jorgealves8578 Před rokem

    I believe that all in all, Brothers Karamazov is a long allegory about the Russian society itself. A people who remained in the Middle Ages until the 20th century, who despised freedom and who lived on servitude and religion, not very different from today, and very similar in 1917, the servitude path continued until the Perestroika when Russia lived a period of some kind of democracy. Now it is what it is. Another leitmotiv in the novel is the fact that most people lie, they are unpredictable, and in the end, Dostoievsky shows us how Justice itself relies upon narrative, and the narratives of the 2 brothers differ and it is impossible to find out who's telling the truth, or perhaps none of them, perhaps it was Pavel who killed the father. The sentence is read just because it had to, but it didn't convince anybody. There's a lot of psychology, naturalism, epicurism, and religion in the novel, but mainly it depicts a country where each one does what he wants, provided he's got the monetary means for it. It also shows a country where lying is always above truth. Ultimately it depicts a society ruled by religion form the outside and which is, on the other hand, an emotionally chaotic and disruptive society from the inside.

  • @jaydorota3625
    @jaydorota3625 Před 2 lety +4

    In my opinion that was a vision of Dostoevsky of four kinds of Russian in his time. .

  • @elijah7939
    @elijah7939 Před rokem

    Ivan was one of my favorite characters.

  • @santanuborah
    @santanuborah Před rokem +1

    I am curious to know, if knowing makes you suffer, if the knowledge is the guilt or the implications by the knower. I believe that knowledge and the knower are neutral, innocent and not guilty. How you imply the knowledge to take action makes you suffer in the long run. The naivety can not be the ultimate goal because life is to experience, although judgement is not compulsory. You live your life for learning both good and bad, not judge it.

    • @Ana-zc9zu
      @Ana-zc9zu Před rokem +2

      I agree with you. Knowledge, as a standalone can't be evil. it's only after it's consumed and filtered through our breans that it has potential to both create more good or evill.
      I see it as dostoevski thinking that more people tend to interpret the knowledge badly, which is why he believes that it's better for them to not have known in the first place, so that evil wouldn't be created. Just how Pavel only managed took the bad "seeds" from Ivan's ideas and implemented them. I mean, i'm sure there were good "seeds" scattered in Ivan's words as well but Pavel only managed to pick up the bad ones, because his "filter" was too weak.

    • @Ana-zc9zu
      @Ana-zc9zu Před rokem

      or smth like that, i mean don't know for sure.

  • @blackcatwhitedog1802
    @blackcatwhitedog1802 Před rokem +1

    The is a good try to analyse Dostoevskiy's internal philosophical conflict. But unfortunately that was not correct to assume that Dostoyevskiy thought that being emotionally intelligent is a disease and not beneficial to people. Opposite he assumed that emotional awareness and empathy can help humanity to develop into kinder, wiser one where people may open up something more dipper inside of them that may let them understand themselves more, therefore they could help other human beings to be better version of themselves. That's why he even brings the women as a good example of finding 'love' inside of yourself and in other people. Also in "Idiot" the main plot is to show that innocence, kindness and pure soul help others, but sometimes doesn't to yourself at the first glance, but definitely will safe your soul in a long run bc went insane is equal to be saint. (there is often a comparison of knyz' Myshking with Jesus Christ which is a very good analogy).

  • @believer7589
    @believer7589 Před 2 lety +2

    Amazing! Thanks a ton Sir, you deserve much more than this! 😁😁😁😁😁

  • @Insatiableviel007
    @Insatiableviel007 Před 2 lety +13

    There's not really any weakness in this grand novel, there might be a problem for some of they read it fast.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety +2

      I agree, it is not an easy novel to read, but a rewarding one.

  • @vickvickson4273
    @vickvickson4273 Před rokem

    The narrator's way of pronouncing Alyosha (as AlyOOsha), Karamazov and Dostoevsky (- both strangely quickly) stuck in my ears and makes me wonder about his mothertongue.

  • @daffidkane8350
    @daffidkane8350 Před rokem +2

    It’s no sin to have a “crisis of faith” if we use it to learn to improve our understanding of the world and strengthen our faith rather than turn against God.

  • @korbaselectah
    @korbaselectah Před rokem

    thank you

  • @pronateceepadm7852
    @pronateceepadm7852 Před 5 měsíci

    Very good sumary. I add the fact that Dostoievysk was try show with your work the scientific´s news, the counscience, remember, Freud write about it years forward. Fiodor perception´s was exactly that, the man has a conscience that become he difference when can be decide make bad or goodnes. But when he choice the bad, the evolution bring back your guilt, your sense of justice and consequences, this appears most powerfull that our desires and willing. Therefore, Dostoivysk show us that superman don´t exists, all man are priosioner of your counscience, desires and willing, he can´t runwawy of this.

  • @karlitagamez_
    @karlitagamez_ Před rokem

    What camera are you using?

  • @sharontheodore8216
    @sharontheodore8216 Před 2 lety +4

    Your comprehensive analysis would have made Dostoevsky very proud of you.
    I guess in the battlefield of emotions and ideas, the human soul finds solace in the clarity of religious guidelines. Thanks a lot.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety +2

      Your comment perfectly sums up most of Dostoevsky's work: "in the battlefield of emotions and ideas, the human soul finds solace in the clarity of religious guidelines."

    • @sharontheodore8216
      @sharontheodore8216 Před 2 lety

      Yehhhhhhhhhhhhhh. I love your videos because although I would not have read the book, I get a very good insight into it which allows me to express an opinion. Many thanks.

  • @eagleeyemind4800
    @eagleeyemind4800 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you for your sacrifice in making this video, and convincing me that this book won’t be worth my time

  • @j0nnyism
    @j0nnyism Před rokem

    I agree with Epicurus that art should be under the umbrella of pleasure. Pleasure and love are the two main replacements for religion

  • @mickdrummer5965
    @mickdrummer5965 Před rokem +1

    Childhood ? Maybe but , resist as best he can, the child remains father of the man !

  • @peterm8788
    @peterm8788 Před rokem +1

    Dostoevsky planned to make the Brothers Karamazov into a series. What do you speculate Dostoevsky planned for the sequels? (potential video idea)

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před rokem +2

      that's an interesting idea. I guess Alyosha growing up, taking a different path to Dostoevsky's own life path? Anything specific were you thinking of?

  • @sachieasamizu4809
    @sachieasamizu4809 Před rokem +1

    Talking of childhood, the three brothers had quite a wretched childhood of absence of their mothers and neglect from their father. It means that the religion saved Alyosha from becoming like their brothers. My question is, what did Alyosha’s fellow monk mean by saying Alyosha is also a Karamazov?

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před rokem +2

      Perhaps that he has all the flaws his others brothers have. In a way we are all karamazov because we all have the demons and saints inside us.

    • @mantisfootball918
      @mantisfootball918 Před 8 měsíci

      Rakitin says the Karamazovs are voluptuaries and holy fools. He may have been warning Alexey about the voluptuary within. I believe Rakitin was a narcissist.

  • @louisjones2653
    @louisjones2653 Před rokem +2

    Just finished this masterpiece. I suppose I now have something in common with Vladimir Putin 😬

  • @jasonzacharias2150
    @jasonzacharias2150 Před 8 měsíci

    This book is the key for all the would be social engineers and future nudgers

  • @YoYo-gt5iq
    @YoYo-gt5iq Před rokem +1

    your final point is making me think about the Dostoevsky novels I've read. are there any good and intelligent people in them? I'm not quite sure. perhaps the detective and crime and punishment?

  • @mpgski9598
    @mpgski9598 Před rokem +1

    The Russian naming was difficult. Also, constructing competing philosophical concepts through characters comes at a cost to their cozy human comfort. Reads conscientious but coldly controlling. Demonstrative of but also contradictory of the novel’s themes.

  • @matthijsvanemous7046
    @matthijsvanemous7046 Před rokem +1

    I am a mix between Ivan and Olyosha. Im christian and devoted. But also intellectual and I tend to overthink everything in life which also causes more suffering. My questioning mind makes it hard to commit fully to God

    • @simonbrownbridge1799
      @simonbrownbridge1799 Před rokem

      I find this exercise useful. The heart informs the head and the head informs the will. Accordingly the will drives the heart forces and so the cycle repeats . You could say the heart between the head and the will (or metabolic system) represents the Christ within. It is the moderating warmth between the coldness of the intellect and the heat of the metabolism. I hold this as an image and it certainly balances overthinking.
      So for this novel Ivan is the head, Alyosha the heart and Dimitri the will, the metabolism. The classic trinity of the human form.
      BTW the Brothers Karamazov is my favourite work of fiction. There is so much to digest and stimulate fine thoughts. Crime and Punishment is pretty good too.