I like how so many are complaining over a squeaky chair; even though they're getting a free university lecture!
@ZombieLincoln666
2 жыл бұрын
I used to carry a little can of WD40 with me to lectures for this reason lol
@louie9373
2 жыл бұрын
You like that or academia has trained you to understate all of your negative opinions so as to save face while allowing you to partake in a small release of misery?
@MauricioACB
2 жыл бұрын
It seems squeaky chair beats philosophy lecture, who would have known...
@mrloop1530
2 жыл бұрын
I'm in Denmark. All university lectures are free here.
@graemelaubach3106
Жыл бұрын
Yeah for sure, but did you notice that squeaky chair tho??
@akhileshm.s7888 Жыл бұрын
Moral of the story - please be more like Analytic Philosophers, see what there is, then think about it and figure things out but don't forget to that it is a _theory_ and be open to changes to it. Don't instead start with preconceived ideas and expectations and then become Existentialists when the world turns out different to the extent of seeming cruelly indifferent and very baffling.
@TheCupCakeMaker67 жыл бұрын
This man is great! He is passionate about his lectures and trying to explain it in a way that students who don't really care for the class can relate to and understand.
@asaadalabody6444
5 жыл бұрын
lbaca222 Can we say existentialism is a movement called for peace and justice ?
@jkgkjgkijk
4 жыл бұрын
Go back to sleep
@koroglurustem1722
2 жыл бұрын
I can relate to that, baby, what's your name ?
@gerardo49078
2 жыл бұрын
@@koroglurustem1722 Keep it in your pants, man
@edplunk600
2 жыл бұрын
If you don't care for class then flip burgers
@tonyyounan90139 жыл бұрын
Great professor, great lecture.
@krister61602 жыл бұрын
You're the professor I am deprived of meeting in my entire university life. Glad to hear you on KZread. Thanks!
@nickk.9111 Жыл бұрын
The way in which Daniel Bonevac explains Albert Camus' philosophy is so powerful, clear and inspiring. Thank you for sharing these ideas in such a crystal clear and passionate fashion.
@samychingon4 жыл бұрын
Oh captain my captain! I've been watching these videos since Quarantine started.
@theaggrotravelersbucketlis5470
3 жыл бұрын
D'oh
@daviddawson1718
2 жыл бұрын
Easy Walt
@ytrichardsenior2 жыл бұрын
Alienation is something you either do or do not feel 'existentially'. It's unlikely a university professor will feel alienation, they spend their time amongst people very like them. But what if one day a university philosophy professor finds himself living amongst ordinary high school dropouts and working at McDonalds. People do not really become aware that life is absurd until the absurdity of life becomes impossible to ignore, often because of circumstance.
@gepisar8 жыл бұрын
The stages listed in The Stranger are similar to the stages of loss: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression and Acceptance. Just noticed that!
@sinisamajetic8 жыл бұрын
Students squeaking w chairs on purpose, they're like: "we paid so much money to listen to this and you f'ing youtubers want for free"
@michaelsteven1090
6 жыл бұрын
wow, real great, helpful comment..your supposed to listen to the lecture f'ing moron.
@deeplorable8988
4 жыл бұрын
@@michaelsteven1090 It was a great comment, punk...
@hendynz6358
4 жыл бұрын
excellent lecture but the noise is extremely distracting
@llallogan
3 жыл бұрын
Having taken classes in this room back in the day, the chairs are made so if you just barely move it squeaks lol it is annoying even in the room
@Tsuruthargay
3 жыл бұрын
Lol
@NoZAutonomy9 жыл бұрын
Wow, you are a great teacher/professor, thanks for the free lecture
@simonsjoquist68627 жыл бұрын
Halfway through and I just have to say how fantastic I think this is. A proffessor with such passion for what he does. Would be awesome to have a teacher like that. Thanks, this inspired me.
@mattetherington62103 жыл бұрын
I know I already made a comment, but that was part-way into the lecture. I've now finished it, and I have to say it's the clearest, most understandable coverage of existentialism that I've ever seen. And delivered with such obvious passion! Bravo, Prof. Bonevac! I'm a teacher myself, and I could have listened to you delivering a lecture 3x longer. Have a subscription :)
@emilysmallwood38038 жыл бұрын
that was absolutely fabulous!
@tanmaybanerjee27733 жыл бұрын
"Next monday no class. Wednesday we come back and talk. " That was deep.
@susannec6594 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this I've always grappled with the meaning of existentialism when really the word exist is in it. I can remember in French class we learned about this and it went over our heads
@cscott1929 жыл бұрын
Those damn chairs......
@AizwellOfficial
8 жыл бұрын
Emptier than my essenceless soul.
@TheReaMrBurntSausage
8 жыл бұрын
+Ha Kou well at least this video managed to add 40 000 more people sitting in those chairs
@canadiannuclearman
6 жыл бұрын
cscott Greas the chairs
@julioenergy
6 жыл бұрын
unwatchable because of all the shuffling around sounds. FACK!
@williamsawyer9894
5 жыл бұрын
@@julioenergy If a pin dropped during this lecture and no one heard it, would it really exist?
@NobleAristotelian6 жыл бұрын
I wish my professor were like this guy he teaches so great! My philosophy professor used to be a cop in Jersey. He’s a very militant guy screams most of the time, super strict, and it feels like philosophy boot camp in the literal sense almost haha.
@invisibleguest7708 жыл бұрын
this is surely so helpful, I must say. Thank you for posting this....... :)
@marineloosthuizen92952 жыл бұрын
This presentation had me fascinated from start to finish. Your enthusiasm for philosophy and your sense of humor is admirable. Thank you for sharing.
@harshdhillon3567 жыл бұрын
Loving these videos. So much knowledge u have shared. Thanks :)
@JohnE2B11 ай бұрын
I enjoy Bonevac’s lectures very much. They are some of my favorites right now on youtube, and there are so many 👍🏻
@schaturvedi7293 жыл бұрын
I loved the lucidity, the very simple way a profound subject was explained and of course the intermittent humour! Thank you, Sir.
@mattetherington62103 жыл бұрын
I've read and watched plenty about existentialism, and this is the first time ever that someone has defined "essence" in a way that makes sense - intrinsic function. Humans have biological and perhaps psychological characteristics, but we have no intrinsic function *in the world*. This is why we must choose our own function. Thankyou, professor, for finally clarifying this!
@sharmashiva62176 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much sir for this really fascinating presentation, indeed its very organized and comprehending
@fustian8 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the lectures, Dr. Bonevac. For me, alienation to the circumstances of one's life as a result of being thrown into existence in a particular time and place is a consequence of knowing that the attachment that we feel to our circumstances is reflexive and not deliberate, since if we had been thrown into an utterly different time and place, we would reflexively feel an attachment to those circumstances as well. This part of existentialism to me seems to follow directly from the scientific image you like to start your lectures with, an image where earth is just another planet among many, sol another star among many, and my consciousness another consciousness among many, with no special status for me to appreciate intellectually and then find reasons to endorse. The fact of alienation in existentialism seems to me to be a requisite idea for understanding why existence is said by many existentialist philosophers to be absurd.
@CheeseDota10 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot for the lecture! ^^
@Jaguadarte__6 жыл бұрын
Such a great lecture! Cheers from Brazil
@ahmadrezaei44663 жыл бұрын
Wow, such a great presentation. Thank You so much :)
@johnnyroycerichardsoniii32733 жыл бұрын
Excellent lecture! Great professor!
@xDemonTech8 жыл бұрын
Thanks! You're a fun teacher.
@Alaknanda20079 жыл бұрын
Loved this lecture and very excited to discover your channel.
@jamieryan46663 жыл бұрын
Love your passion for this!
@curtcarpenter26772 жыл бұрын
Existentialism is primarily a reaction (in my view) to the loss of certainty which began with the Copernican revolution -- and a broad recognition of the necessity of choice as the price each of us must pay for our short-term lease on existence. You are radically free, but the freedom is not unlimited: there is no escape, for example, from the need to make choices -- to love, to hate, to establish the "brotherhood of man" as an axiom to live by in a world of uncertainty and value pluralism. Let this good lecture be a starting point, not an ending, of your _own_ journey.
@Quest49Meaning4 жыл бұрын
You are a great professor... making the concept easy to understand.. I would love to be in your class for a day...
@alteredstates9278 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this.
@user-us1wg7zo8c6 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed the lecture. Many thanks
@elijahmadar6459 жыл бұрын
Daniel Bonevac is a great teacher and a great speaker I really enjoyed this speech
@simeon248 жыл бұрын
Great lecture, thanks for posting! Those chair squeaks though... :[
@JoshuaJohnson7778 жыл бұрын
Amazing! I recently went through a series of life changing events and stumbled upon your lectures at a very unique time. Thank you for sharing!
@sangitabiswas22246 жыл бұрын
Wow .It was so helpful .You made it so easy .Thank you sir.You are my new favourite professor.
@overrooftopsКүн бұрын
Great lecture. Annoying squeaking desk. So may times I was getting into what you said, there's this squeaking desk(chair?)! Get rid of that thing... or are all the desks that way?
@williamosinski108210 жыл бұрын
Great lecture! Thank you!
@meghachoudhary50164 жыл бұрын
Indebted to you professor..amazing lectures. Thank you so much!
@cidneewalker45329 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed your lecture. I'm studying for my Psych GRE Subject Test and was trying to better understand existentialism. You really helped. THANKS! :D
@rohxn6988
3 жыл бұрын
did u finish it?
@alialrahahleh6762 жыл бұрын
Thank you, really simple and clean lecture
@teestaghosh99356 жыл бұрын
Sir, YOU are a great inspiration..Regards at YOUR feet
@waynemoss81456 жыл бұрын
This guy is a great orator. And that's a good thing, because I had to watch this 4 times to understand what he;s saying. Now I want to hear him talk about free-will.
@dominick86564 жыл бұрын
Great lecture, thank you!
@K-gp3mz3 жыл бұрын
Very nice video, thankyou for this
@michellefrempong14963 жыл бұрын
Oh my God ..Such a great deliver 💕💕..I am in love with his choices of words and his delivery 😫🥺💕..Thanks a lot professor
@louiselarc9180
Жыл бұрын
LMAOOO
@drvn810 ай бұрын
Fantastic lecture, very clear and engaging!
@philip89086 жыл бұрын
The squeaky chairs have no intrinsic meaning, only the meaning you give them. Sisyphus smiled while carrying the rock.
@covalentbros9 жыл бұрын
This was an amazing lecture. I'm currently working on a research project based on Existentialism, and this lecture gave me a massive insight as to what Existentialism is as well as the important figures who played a role in the movement. Thank you very much for this magnificent video!
@zainullahkhan35743 жыл бұрын
great teacher,
@liammurphy27252 жыл бұрын
The chair cries out in pain, as it listens again and again.
@ryue65
29 күн бұрын
Excellent.
@susannec6594 жыл бұрын
We all struggle with the conflict between expansion and contraction meaning we are all one but then we have to have our boundaries for survival.
@apostalote5 жыл бұрын
Kierkegaard and Nietzsche do affirm that we have no essence and that it is up to the individual to affirm themselves through pathos. For Kierkegaard this is Christianity, for Nietzsche this is artistic self expression. You could maybe call Kant or Hegel a proto-existentialist, but Kierkegaard and Nietzsche are certainly focused on the question of existence and the intrinsic meaning of existence
@stephansmith76309 жыл бұрын
You explained Camus' call to revolt against the absurd beautifully. I didn't quite understand what he meant by that before.
@vloraboy20197 жыл бұрын
If I was in that lecture, I would feel like clapping in the end.
@AbhiBass963 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't even miss a day of your lecture if I was enrolled there :D Love all your videos :D
@PhiloofAlexandria
3 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@AbhiBass96
3 жыл бұрын
@@PhiloofAlexandria Most welcome, sir! Your lectures are very inspiring. Can't wait to watch more of them during my Christmas break :)
@nietzschescodes2 жыл бұрын
wow, i didn't know that channel Henri le Chat Noir. I have just watched some. I love it! thanks for the suggestion! (You said it was a cat with a French accent? The videos that I just saw were actually all in French with an English accent)
@bro_truth9 жыл бұрын
Them damn chairs!!!
@abhi40003 жыл бұрын
Lol. That student who sighed "Everyday" when the professor said something about how we all feel like "I don't want to this anymore" or something like that. I can relate. x')
@fixedhint7963 жыл бұрын
Honestly I think Aristotle view on existentialism is smarter. OK, we are free to define our lives and give it whatever meaning we want, but what happens when we fail (our plans fail)? Some existentialists might be frustrated and commit suicide. But most of them don't. And here is Aristotle's essence: we might have failed very bad, but we might choose to continue because we seek something else, way inferior to our initial plan - we failed to accomplish the great things but i still want to taste that BigMc at Mc'Donalds or see that movie or football match etc. And this is the essence we see in all people, no matter if existentialists or not. Is always there, in every human. And it is the thing that prevents the majority of existentialists of commiting suicide after a big fail. Many many thanks for your videos!
@ipdavid10436 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much Professor...wonderful lecture...and funny (banana)
@santillanmusic Жыл бұрын
If I only had these types of Teachers as a kid...
@danielmondorez891110 жыл бұрын
good lecturer , enjoyed it !
@hussamshamma33198 жыл бұрын
!It was an honor to meet your Passion for who you really are
@bigdoggs66292 жыл бұрын
Great Great job
@doyourealise4 жыл бұрын
have you ever been to NEPAL? amazing talk!
@ivi0nk3y366 жыл бұрын
no class monday was the best thing i heard and it was a good lecture
@UYAelmo765878 жыл бұрын
great lecture
@cesarrodriguez88938 жыл бұрын
Awesome vid! Subscribed!
@TheDHCBO23 жыл бұрын
His hand movements actually help keep up with his longer points.
@madmaxbocka9 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this for free
@BobbySidhu1017 жыл бұрын
Great video. If Sartre and Camus felt that the right response to a meaningless world was to create our own meaning, avoid ‘bad faith’, and do as we please, does this not run the risk of individuals engaging in immoral behaviour? There was talk of Camus’ love letters and his desire for several women for example, but of course this is not good behaviour. If we create our own meaning in life, where does morality stand, and what did Camus/Sartre say? I have tried reading Sartre and struggle to understand him. Camus I don’t think morality is mentioned in The Myth Of Sisyphus.
@edgarl18378 жыл бұрын
nicely done
@freedomworks39763 жыл бұрын
One of the best talks on existencialism I've heard. Short quick right to the point.
@pabloroblesgastelum70138 жыл бұрын
any thoughts on Jaden Smith?
@shaggystone63973 жыл бұрын
Reading thru Heidegger's " being & time" u will realize that Sartre's " being & nothingness" is almost at certain points direct plagiarism of ideas. Sartre however adds an awsome level when he talks about the social dimension with " the look" & hell is other people. The other defines us & steals my freedom so i make the other realise themselves as being defined by me. All social relationships are based in conflict. Especially love. Thia professor is cool & it would be fun to go thru being & nothingness line by line to get a really good understanding of this. He only gets to skim the surface with this lecture but its still fun tho.
@3dprintertrainer2046 жыл бұрын
Brilliant Daniek Truly Talented speaker!! However the existential crisis in the room is the chair squeeking does it show that others aren't aware truly of their free will and that humans are unconscious beings squeaking in an auditorium, surely if not we they would be aware of the impact of their self awareness to be present and SIT bloody still!! Who am I really I am a squeaker!!!
@gypsygypsy71852 жыл бұрын
thank you for this
@machinamonsterproductions92308 жыл бұрын
Didn't Camus himself say he wasn't an existentialist? I was always thought that he believed life is inherently devoid of any meaning, and trying to give it meaning would fail, and that the existentialists thought that meaning in life had to be assigned by the self, not any outside entity.
@nolongeranihilist1659
7 жыл бұрын
MachinaMonsterProductions Camus called himself a nihilist.
@upchhaya Жыл бұрын
After reading the 'Idiot', i have reached to the previous lacture after some googling and then to here. Very useful to make head and tail of Dostoevsky and some of my personal questions regarding being and nothingness.
@denizcokugras1582 жыл бұрын
He's just a simply amazing professor. Too bad when you're 20 you're too full of yourself to appreciate this kind of a lecture. I would have loved to hear the parts he skipped in detail as well. Totally brilliant!
@LD-kz3ms
2 жыл бұрын
"when I was 20 I was too full of myself to appreciate this kind of a lecture" Fixed that for you
@denizcokugras158
2 жыл бұрын
@@LD-kz3ms i was actually talking about the students who were playing with their chairs throughout the lecture but why not jump on an opportunity to criticize someone online when you have the chance, right? too bad there's no age limit for being a douchebag. there, i fixed it for both of us. :)
@mikeoglen6848
Жыл бұрын
Yes, I found irt irritating that he skips some slides. Why does he do that, I wonder?
@samanehzandi46862 жыл бұрын
that was great :))))
@rgaleny10 жыл бұрын
The TAO is a a principal of Moderation and Temperance. Aristotle talks of the "Golden Mean" in judgement. Quality is the measure of all things.
@reverendsteveii5 жыл бұрын
"I now have every discworld book." Sub'd
@Crazeyfor67
3 жыл бұрын
Explain what you mean please. Isn't Discworld a sci-fi book?
@susannec6594 жыл бұрын
Wiw so interesting when he talks about Epicurius and the pleasure of anonymity of being a secret never thought about that before but it has a residence for me. Maybe that's why I dislike social media like here I am this is my show look at me
@saidabed467510 жыл бұрын
I paused to go watch Henri the cat ^^
@MrMarktrumble9 жыл бұрын
Ironically, I passionately choose rationalism, behaviouristically act rationally, train for logic with litanies of examples, and, acting like a pretentious French waiter become a stoic and a contemplative, creating the essence that Aristotle would assert was given before I was born as my final end. Good lecture. Thank you.
@ev4757 Жыл бұрын
great video but I have to ask, is it sped up or is he on speed?
@PhiloofAlexandria
Жыл бұрын
I’m from Pittsburgh. I talk fast.
@RakeshYadav-kf6he6 жыл бұрын
Hi Daniel!! If it is possible, make videos on Indian Philosophy too!!
@PhiloofAlexandria
6 жыл бұрын
Rakesh Yadav I’ll be doing that this fall! Steve Phillips and I will be team teaching two courses-Ethics and Enlightenment and Natural Theology East and West-and I’m planning to record both.
@RakeshYadav-kf6he
6 жыл бұрын
Thank You Daniel!!
@maxmusti81013 жыл бұрын
12:30 Feeling alienated is nothing one can decide. "Why should..?" could thus only mean for what purpose. It is for the purpose of making situations important. One thinks about them more often.
@queenethedoziem5473 Жыл бұрын
Can anyone suggest a good journal or book where I can research on this existentialism for my final research work?
@cafefresh1238 жыл бұрын
This class sounds sooo interesting!!!! What is it called?
@kalyanarc4467
8 жыл бұрын
philosophy class ??
@kencarey34776 жыл бұрын
i am. let go. just observe this moment with no judgement. act from your heart not your ego driven mind. totale freedom
@rgaleny10 жыл бұрын
The knowledge of Good and Evil takes us out of the world, the relinking to life puts us back. "Let us tend to our garden." from Voltaire's Candide.
@paladinsorcerer67 Жыл бұрын
Do we have the ability to define our own essence, if we don't have free will? I had a dream when I was young that before I was born, I was given the choice of the person I would be born as, so that my life has meaning because I must have choosen this particular life for a reason, which counters what Heidigger is saying. I think that we feel alienated existentially when we haven't yet chosen the meaning of our life, or when we feel lonely.
Пікірлер: 354
I like how so many are complaining over a squeaky chair; even though they're getting a free university lecture!
@ZombieLincoln666
2 жыл бұрын
I used to carry a little can of WD40 with me to lectures for this reason lol
@louie9373
2 жыл бұрын
You like that or academia has trained you to understate all of your negative opinions so as to save face while allowing you to partake in a small release of misery?
@MauricioACB
2 жыл бұрын
It seems squeaky chair beats philosophy lecture, who would have known...
@mrloop1530
2 жыл бұрын
I'm in Denmark. All university lectures are free here.
@graemelaubach3106
Жыл бұрын
Yeah for sure, but did you notice that squeaky chair tho??
Moral of the story - please be more like Analytic Philosophers, see what there is, then think about it and figure things out but don't forget to that it is a _theory_ and be open to changes to it. Don't instead start with preconceived ideas and expectations and then become Existentialists when the world turns out different to the extent of seeming cruelly indifferent and very baffling.
This man is great! He is passionate about his lectures and trying to explain it in a way that students who don't really care for the class can relate to and understand.
@asaadalabody6444
5 жыл бұрын
lbaca222 Can we say existentialism is a movement called for peace and justice ?
@jkgkjgkijk
4 жыл бұрын
Go back to sleep
@koroglurustem1722
2 жыл бұрын
I can relate to that, baby, what's your name ?
@gerardo49078
2 жыл бұрын
@@koroglurustem1722 Keep it in your pants, man
@edplunk600
2 жыл бұрын
If you don't care for class then flip burgers
Great professor, great lecture.
You're the professor I am deprived of meeting in my entire university life. Glad to hear you on KZread. Thanks!
The way in which Daniel Bonevac explains Albert Camus' philosophy is so powerful, clear and inspiring. Thank you for sharing these ideas in such a crystal clear and passionate fashion.
Oh captain my captain! I've been watching these videos since Quarantine started.
@theaggrotravelersbucketlis5470
3 жыл бұрын
D'oh
@daviddawson1718
2 жыл бұрын
Easy Walt
Alienation is something you either do or do not feel 'existentially'. It's unlikely a university professor will feel alienation, they spend their time amongst people very like them. But what if one day a university philosophy professor finds himself living amongst ordinary high school dropouts and working at McDonalds. People do not really become aware that life is absurd until the absurdity of life becomes impossible to ignore, often because of circumstance.
The stages listed in The Stranger are similar to the stages of loss: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression and Acceptance. Just noticed that!
Students squeaking w chairs on purpose, they're like: "we paid so much money to listen to this and you f'ing youtubers want for free"
@michaelsteven1090
6 жыл бұрын
wow, real great, helpful comment..your supposed to listen to the lecture f'ing moron.
@deeplorable8988
4 жыл бұрын
@@michaelsteven1090 It was a great comment, punk...
@hendynz6358
4 жыл бұрын
excellent lecture but the noise is extremely distracting
@llallogan
3 жыл бұрын
Having taken classes in this room back in the day, the chairs are made so if you just barely move it squeaks lol it is annoying even in the room
@Tsuruthargay
3 жыл бұрын
Lol
Wow, you are a great teacher/professor, thanks for the free lecture
Halfway through and I just have to say how fantastic I think this is. A proffessor with such passion for what he does. Would be awesome to have a teacher like that. Thanks, this inspired me.
I know I already made a comment, but that was part-way into the lecture. I've now finished it, and I have to say it's the clearest, most understandable coverage of existentialism that I've ever seen. And delivered with such obvious passion! Bravo, Prof. Bonevac! I'm a teacher myself, and I could have listened to you delivering a lecture 3x longer. Have a subscription :)
that was absolutely fabulous!
"Next monday no class. Wednesday we come back and talk. " That was deep.
Thank you for this I've always grappled with the meaning of existentialism when really the word exist is in it. I can remember in French class we learned about this and it went over our heads
Those damn chairs......
@AizwellOfficial
8 жыл бұрын
Emptier than my essenceless soul.
@TheReaMrBurntSausage
8 жыл бұрын
+Ha Kou well at least this video managed to add 40 000 more people sitting in those chairs
@canadiannuclearman
6 жыл бұрын
cscott Greas the chairs
@julioenergy
6 жыл бұрын
unwatchable because of all the shuffling around sounds. FACK!
@williamsawyer9894
5 жыл бұрын
@@julioenergy If a pin dropped during this lecture and no one heard it, would it really exist?
I wish my professor were like this guy he teaches so great! My philosophy professor used to be a cop in Jersey. He’s a very militant guy screams most of the time, super strict, and it feels like philosophy boot camp in the literal sense almost haha.
this is surely so helpful, I must say. Thank you for posting this....... :)
This presentation had me fascinated from start to finish. Your enthusiasm for philosophy and your sense of humor is admirable. Thank you for sharing.
Loving these videos. So much knowledge u have shared. Thanks :)
I enjoy Bonevac’s lectures very much. They are some of my favorites right now on youtube, and there are so many 👍🏻
I loved the lucidity, the very simple way a profound subject was explained and of course the intermittent humour! Thank you, Sir.
I've read and watched plenty about existentialism, and this is the first time ever that someone has defined "essence" in a way that makes sense - intrinsic function. Humans have biological and perhaps psychological characteristics, but we have no intrinsic function *in the world*. This is why we must choose our own function. Thankyou, professor, for finally clarifying this!
Thank you so much sir for this really fascinating presentation, indeed its very organized and comprehending
Thanks for the lectures, Dr. Bonevac. For me, alienation to the circumstances of one's life as a result of being thrown into existence in a particular time and place is a consequence of knowing that the attachment that we feel to our circumstances is reflexive and not deliberate, since if we had been thrown into an utterly different time and place, we would reflexively feel an attachment to those circumstances as well. This part of existentialism to me seems to follow directly from the scientific image you like to start your lectures with, an image where earth is just another planet among many, sol another star among many, and my consciousness another consciousness among many, with no special status for me to appreciate intellectually and then find reasons to endorse. The fact of alienation in existentialism seems to me to be a requisite idea for understanding why existence is said by many existentialist philosophers to be absurd.
Thanks a lot for the lecture! ^^
Such a great lecture! Cheers from Brazil
Wow, such a great presentation. Thank You so much :)
Excellent lecture! Great professor!
Thanks! You're a fun teacher.
Loved this lecture and very excited to discover your channel.
Love your passion for this!
Existentialism is primarily a reaction (in my view) to the loss of certainty which began with the Copernican revolution -- and a broad recognition of the necessity of choice as the price each of us must pay for our short-term lease on existence. You are radically free, but the freedom is not unlimited: there is no escape, for example, from the need to make choices -- to love, to hate, to establish the "brotherhood of man" as an axiom to live by in a world of uncertainty and value pluralism. Let this good lecture be a starting point, not an ending, of your _own_ journey.
You are a great professor... making the concept easy to understand.. I would love to be in your class for a day...
Thank you for sharing this.
I really enjoyed the lecture. Many thanks
Daniel Bonevac is a great teacher and a great speaker I really enjoyed this speech
Great lecture, thanks for posting! Those chair squeaks though... :[
Amazing! I recently went through a series of life changing events and stumbled upon your lectures at a very unique time. Thank you for sharing!
Wow .It was so helpful .You made it so easy .Thank you sir.You are my new favourite professor.
Great lecture. Annoying squeaking desk. So may times I was getting into what you said, there's this squeaking desk(chair?)! Get rid of that thing... or are all the desks that way?
Great lecture! Thank you!
Indebted to you professor..amazing lectures. Thank you so much!
Really enjoyed your lecture. I'm studying for my Psych GRE Subject Test and was trying to better understand existentialism. You really helped. THANKS! :D
@rohxn6988
3 жыл бұрын
did u finish it?
Thank you, really simple and clean lecture
Sir, YOU are a great inspiration..Regards at YOUR feet
This guy is a great orator. And that's a good thing, because I had to watch this 4 times to understand what he;s saying. Now I want to hear him talk about free-will.
Great lecture, thank you!
Very nice video, thankyou for this
Oh my God ..Such a great deliver 💕💕..I am in love with his choices of words and his delivery 😫🥺💕..Thanks a lot professor
@louiselarc9180
Жыл бұрын
LMAOOO
Fantastic lecture, very clear and engaging!
The squeaky chairs have no intrinsic meaning, only the meaning you give them. Sisyphus smiled while carrying the rock.
This was an amazing lecture. I'm currently working on a research project based on Existentialism, and this lecture gave me a massive insight as to what Existentialism is as well as the important figures who played a role in the movement. Thank you very much for this magnificent video!
great teacher,
The chair cries out in pain, as it listens again and again.
@ryue65
29 күн бұрын
Excellent.
We all struggle with the conflict between expansion and contraction meaning we are all one but then we have to have our boundaries for survival.
Kierkegaard and Nietzsche do affirm that we have no essence and that it is up to the individual to affirm themselves through pathos. For Kierkegaard this is Christianity, for Nietzsche this is artistic self expression. You could maybe call Kant or Hegel a proto-existentialist, but Kierkegaard and Nietzsche are certainly focused on the question of existence and the intrinsic meaning of existence
You explained Camus' call to revolt against the absurd beautifully. I didn't quite understand what he meant by that before.
If I was in that lecture, I would feel like clapping in the end.
I wouldn't even miss a day of your lecture if I was enrolled there :D Love all your videos :D
@PhiloofAlexandria
3 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@AbhiBass96
3 жыл бұрын
@@PhiloofAlexandria Most welcome, sir! Your lectures are very inspiring. Can't wait to watch more of them during my Christmas break :)
wow, i didn't know that channel Henri le Chat Noir. I have just watched some. I love it! thanks for the suggestion! (You said it was a cat with a French accent? The videos that I just saw were actually all in French with an English accent)
Them damn chairs!!!
Lol. That student who sighed "Everyday" when the professor said something about how we all feel like "I don't want to this anymore" or something like that. I can relate. x')
Honestly I think Aristotle view on existentialism is smarter. OK, we are free to define our lives and give it whatever meaning we want, but what happens when we fail (our plans fail)? Some existentialists might be frustrated and commit suicide. But most of them don't. And here is Aristotle's essence: we might have failed very bad, but we might choose to continue because we seek something else, way inferior to our initial plan - we failed to accomplish the great things but i still want to taste that BigMc at Mc'Donalds or see that movie or football match etc. And this is the essence we see in all people, no matter if existentialists or not. Is always there, in every human. And it is the thing that prevents the majority of existentialists of commiting suicide after a big fail. Many many thanks for your videos!
Thank you so much Professor...wonderful lecture...and funny (banana)
If I only had these types of Teachers as a kid...
good lecturer , enjoyed it !
!It was an honor to meet your Passion for who you really are
Great Great job
have you ever been to NEPAL? amazing talk!
no class monday was the best thing i heard and it was a good lecture
great lecture
Awesome vid! Subscribed!
His hand movements actually help keep up with his longer points.
Thanks for posting this for free
Great video. If Sartre and Camus felt that the right response to a meaningless world was to create our own meaning, avoid ‘bad faith’, and do as we please, does this not run the risk of individuals engaging in immoral behaviour? There was talk of Camus’ love letters and his desire for several women for example, but of course this is not good behaviour. If we create our own meaning in life, where does morality stand, and what did Camus/Sartre say? I have tried reading Sartre and struggle to understand him. Camus I don’t think morality is mentioned in The Myth Of Sisyphus.
nicely done
One of the best talks on existencialism I've heard. Short quick right to the point.
any thoughts on Jaden Smith?
Reading thru Heidegger's " being & time" u will realize that Sartre's " being & nothingness" is almost at certain points direct plagiarism of ideas. Sartre however adds an awsome level when he talks about the social dimension with " the look" & hell is other people. The other defines us & steals my freedom so i make the other realise themselves as being defined by me. All social relationships are based in conflict. Especially love. Thia professor is cool & it would be fun to go thru being & nothingness line by line to get a really good understanding of this. He only gets to skim the surface with this lecture but its still fun tho.
Brilliant Daniek Truly Talented speaker!! However the existential crisis in the room is the chair squeeking does it show that others aren't aware truly of their free will and that humans are unconscious beings squeaking in an auditorium, surely if not we they would be aware of the impact of their self awareness to be present and SIT bloody still!! Who am I really I am a squeaker!!!
thank you for this
Didn't Camus himself say he wasn't an existentialist? I was always thought that he believed life is inherently devoid of any meaning, and trying to give it meaning would fail, and that the existentialists thought that meaning in life had to be assigned by the self, not any outside entity.
@nolongeranihilist1659
7 жыл бұрын
MachinaMonsterProductions Camus called himself a nihilist.
After reading the 'Idiot', i have reached to the previous lacture after some googling and then to here. Very useful to make head and tail of Dostoevsky and some of my personal questions regarding being and nothingness.
He's just a simply amazing professor. Too bad when you're 20 you're too full of yourself to appreciate this kind of a lecture. I would have loved to hear the parts he skipped in detail as well. Totally brilliant!
@LD-kz3ms
2 жыл бұрын
"when I was 20 I was too full of myself to appreciate this kind of a lecture" Fixed that for you
@denizcokugras158
2 жыл бұрын
@@LD-kz3ms i was actually talking about the students who were playing with their chairs throughout the lecture but why not jump on an opportunity to criticize someone online when you have the chance, right? too bad there's no age limit for being a douchebag. there, i fixed it for both of us. :)
@mikeoglen6848
Жыл бұрын
Yes, I found irt irritating that he skips some slides. Why does he do that, I wonder?
that was great :))))
The TAO is a a principal of Moderation and Temperance. Aristotle talks of the "Golden Mean" in judgement. Quality is the measure of all things.
"I now have every discworld book." Sub'd
@Crazeyfor67
3 жыл бұрын
Explain what you mean please. Isn't Discworld a sci-fi book?
Wiw so interesting when he talks about Epicurius and the pleasure of anonymity of being a secret never thought about that before but it has a residence for me. Maybe that's why I dislike social media like here I am this is my show look at me
I paused to go watch Henri the cat ^^
Ironically, I passionately choose rationalism, behaviouristically act rationally, train for logic with litanies of examples, and, acting like a pretentious French waiter become a stoic and a contemplative, creating the essence that Aristotle would assert was given before I was born as my final end. Good lecture. Thank you.
great video but I have to ask, is it sped up or is he on speed?
@PhiloofAlexandria
Жыл бұрын
I’m from Pittsburgh. I talk fast.
Hi Daniel!! If it is possible, make videos on Indian Philosophy too!!
@PhiloofAlexandria
6 жыл бұрын
Rakesh Yadav I’ll be doing that this fall! Steve Phillips and I will be team teaching two courses-Ethics and Enlightenment and Natural Theology East and West-and I’m planning to record both.
@RakeshYadav-kf6he
6 жыл бұрын
Thank You Daniel!!
12:30 Feeling alienated is nothing one can decide. "Why should..?" could thus only mean for what purpose. It is for the purpose of making situations important. One thinks about them more often.
Can anyone suggest a good journal or book where I can research on this existentialism for my final research work?
This class sounds sooo interesting!!!! What is it called?
@kalyanarc4467
8 жыл бұрын
philosophy class ??
i am. let go. just observe this moment with no judgement. act from your heart not your ego driven mind. totale freedom
The knowledge of Good and Evil takes us out of the world, the relinking to life puts us back. "Let us tend to our garden." from Voltaire's Candide.
Do we have the ability to define our own essence, if we don't have free will? I had a dream when I was young that before I was born, I was given the choice of the person I would be born as, so that my life has meaning because I must have choosen this particular life for a reason, which counters what Heidigger is saying. I think that we feel alienated existentially when we haven't yet chosen the meaning of our life, or when we feel lonely.