Martin Heidegger | What is Metaphysics | Existentialist Philosophy & Literature

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In this video, we examine Martin Heidegger's seminal lecture "What Is Metaphysics?" We look in particular at various modes of negativity which he discusses, including nihilation, and of course. . . the nothing. We also touch on some key themes for Heidegger, including Dasein, Angst, and the nature of Metaphysics itself
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Пікірлер: 352

  • @cliffordsondrup5809
    @cliffordsondrup58099 жыл бұрын

    The Dude, or one might say he has emerged with dudeness

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    9 жыл бұрын

    Indeed. I probably ought to shoot some stuff dressed like the Dude sometime

  • @salemramdani9950

    @salemramdani9950

    6 жыл бұрын

    Clifford Son drup s

  • @sash0047

    @sash0047

    4 жыл бұрын

    Whats that, some kind of eastern thing?

  • @xstaycold
    @xstaycold10 жыл бұрын

    I watched this lecture recently, and I finally sat down today in my college library and spent 2 hours meticulously reading and highlighting this essay. I feel that watching your lecture definitely helped me piece together my thoughts during my reading.

  • @csedition
    @csedition3 жыл бұрын

    I’ve been reading Heidegger my entire life. Tonight I reread What is Metaphysics, and was trying to look up some of the original German text on-line. In the process I stumbled across this lecture. Just clicked on it out of curiosity, and ended up watching the entire thing. Great stuff. Thank you for posting it.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    3 жыл бұрын

    You're very welcome!

  • @richardkeithbailey8044
    @richardkeithbailey80449 жыл бұрын

    This is astounding. I owe a lot to Heidegger for helping me regulate my emotional life. It whould be practical (not to mention cheaper) for a Cognitive Behavioral Therapist to just tell a patient to read Heidegger, as well as watch these eloquent videos. Thanks a lot for these well-explained, articulate videos.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    9 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome. I'm not sure about prescribing Heidegger - not the easiest read and study for most people, I think!

  • @richardkeithbailey8044

    @richardkeithbailey8044

    9 жыл бұрын

    Gregory B. Sadler The switch was thrown (into the world?) with the realization of this more fundamental interaction with the world aside completely of subjects contemplating objects. I like this idea of being unfolding into a seemingly infinite projection of possibilities pressing ahead into a future. I once had ignorantly presumed mood to play a subordinate role at best to the taskmastering intellect. Affectivity is undeniable to me now in a way not previously concievable prior to Heidegger.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    9 жыл бұрын

    I think the connection between mood, pre-understanding, language, and thrownness -- the four equiprimordials -- that can be something useful. . .

  • @halwag

    @halwag

    7 жыл бұрын

    Would you please repeat all that in some intelligible way.

  • @Oners82

    @Oners82

    6 жыл бұрын

    Richard Keith Bailey Wow, your style of prose is almost as impenetrable as that of Heidegger lol!

  • @roughblooduk
    @roughblooduk10 жыл бұрын

    Dear Dr Sadler, I really did enjoy this video and has filled another gap in my understanding. Thank you so very much.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    10 жыл бұрын

    Glad you found it useful. You're welcome!

  • @TheJoyfulPianist
    @TheJoyfulPianist11 жыл бұрын

    This essay occupied my thoughts and informed by academic work for years. Incredible work.

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    Well, it sure is good that you cleared that up for all of us -- now we needn't waste any more time grappling with Heidegger and his thinking about the nothing and modes of negativity (or Hegel, or Sartre, or Aristotle, or Anselm, or Bergson. . . . . )

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    Good to hear -- yes, Heidegger has got some pretty incredible stuff going on in his thinking.

  • @RobWickline
    @RobWickline2 жыл бұрын

    the way that heidegger goes about his philosophy by getting into an exact thing to make his way to fundamental questions reminds me of epictetus's stressing of the need to put principles into practice and that that is where true progress is made. i felt this same rhythm or technique of heidegger in the origin of the work of art.

  • @mathforphysics
    @mathforphysics11 жыл бұрын

    Excellent lecture. I hope you have and/or will upload more Heiddegger lectures.

  • @heuristicdish
    @heuristicdish6 жыл бұрын

    I'm so delighted at this lecture. Dr. Sandler is a gifted teacher and superb guide to these materials. I don't think any American interested in Heidegger and metaphysics could do any better as an introduction. That the professor is so interactive--responding to nearly every individual comment shows a commitment and tenacity unparalleled to my experience (also, I'd venture, so much of it revealing a considerable degree of....self-aware anxiety ;). I almost never comment, but feel a strong desire for affirmation after listening. The real question, for me, is how might one apply these revelations in life, in coping, in interacting--ethically and otherwise, in 'living toward death,' as it were, etc. Certainly, there is a "scientific" approach here, rigorous method and a keen eye for discovering 'essences' (even if they are only "Existence" in long run), like the other phenomenologists, I always feel like I've been handed the supreme tool of tools--the tool for all tools, so to speak. And, just like science, I feel quickly outclassed, technically inferior and dimwitted because I don't know how to use it. I hope I just made some sense. Thank you for the lecture!

  • @SyntheticFragments
    @SyntheticFragments11 жыл бұрын

    Very well said and this seems to suggest that in so far as we come to understand beings in anyway (through our moods and our cultural paradigms that we are thrown in) we are always beyond our worlds in our relationship to the Nothing.

  • @myla6135
    @myla6135 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for your excellent lecture. I'm working my way through your Heidegger playlist in a slightly back to front manner. And what an eye-opening treat it is. Heidegger's explanation and description of Nothing and beings is reminiscent to me of Absence and Presence that occurs in Chinese classical thought but the way he brings in and develops beings, Dasein and Anxiety is simply brilliant. Pure genius. Thank you for making it possible for people like me to benefit from your work.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    Жыл бұрын

    You're very welcome!

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    It's going to depend in part on the context -- on the types of beings one is "confronting" or which are "confronting" one. Grappling with, examining, trying to "wrap our heads around" various beings which we encounter can be understood as confrontation

  • @UnlearnEverything
    @UnlearnEverything10 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for giving a clear, concise, intelligible breakdown of a challenging reading!

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    10 жыл бұрын

    You're very welcome!

  • @matthewabbott1758
    @matthewabbott17589 жыл бұрын

    I feel much smarter after watching this; thanks Professor Sadler.

  • @chanding

    @chanding

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@lorax121323 how very smart (ass)

  • @MrMarktrumble
    @MrMarktrumble8 жыл бұрын

    here we go again. Finished "The essence of truth" again, now "what is metaphysics." taking notes, and thinking about them is driving me deeper into the essays, and later I will read the texts again. Thank you for these lectures. BY the way, I listened to and read the Essence of technology. IN that book there are more essays: ( one on the danger that H talks about in technology, and another on Nietszche , and another on the world picture. You may like the one on the danger.)

  • @funniensinner
    @funniensinner10 жыл бұрын

    I had no idea what I was getting myself into when i came across this video, this is beyond! Glad I did though, opened my eyes to a totally new perspective. (:

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    That is a great course to follow -- deliberately taking on the challenging courses like that. Reminds me of myself a bit as a grad student (as an undergrad, not so much)

  • @tonyvei7830
    @tonyvei78309 жыл бұрын

    Dr. I love the way that was summed up.

  • @bumpy_lumps
    @bumpy_lumps7 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for helping me understand the anxiety aspect and the holding out inherent in Dasein! was very lost!!

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    7 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome!

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    Yep, again, did it, long back. I used to actually teach Comparative Religions for quite a while. You're pointing out to me stuff that we discussed and debated ad nauseum way back in grad school -- seemingly assuming that because I'm no longer interested in such "connections" or "similarities" that I hadn't examined them earlier on in my carreer

  • @TheTeamsnickers
    @TheTeamsnickers7 жыл бұрын

    I love your lectures, Dr. Sadler!

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Thanks very much! Well, using everyday examples is part and parcel of philosophy, since Socrates' time. Saint Anselm was reputedly a master at deriving examples to aid students in grasping metaphysical and moral matters.

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    You're very welcome! That's some very high praise, which I'm not sure is entirely merited -- but I'll take it

  • @Inconscientious
    @Inconscientious3 жыл бұрын

    Excellent lecture, thank you Dr Sadler.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    3 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome - and thanks!

  • @Xephon212
    @Xephon21211 жыл бұрын

    Greatly appreciate this. Thanks for sharing.

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    I think I did explain anxiety in the video. You'll probably want to read the sections on anxiety (Angst) in Being and Time as well, if you want to try to start comparing Heidegger and Kierkegaard (who has a work, in fact, called The Concept of Anxiety)

  • @paulharris3000
    @paulharris30009 жыл бұрын

    Excellent! I really enjoyed this lecture.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    9 жыл бұрын

    Glad to read it

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome! Glad you liked it

  • @VijayRudraraju0
    @VijayRudraraju011 жыл бұрын

    Very excellent lecture, thank you!

  • @TJSegrest
    @TJSegrest8 жыл бұрын

    This is wonderful stuff. I've struggled a bit with Being and Time and listened to Hubert Dreyfus' lectures on iTunes U, and I find your lecture here to be very illuminating. Makes me want to make another try at reading Heidegger.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    8 жыл бұрын

    +T.J. Segrest That's good to read. Glad the lecture could inspire diving back in. . .

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    That sounds about right -- Hegel, interestingly enough, would also fit that perspective. He tends to be seen in terms of the Absolute and the System -- but he is interested in the individual as well, who is, at any given point (except the "end of history") caught up in such a mix, both within and without

  • @evelynesimon5758
    @evelynesimon57583 жыл бұрын

    Very helpful lecture to introduce a very clever philosopher. Wow!

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Yes, that's precisely the way Heidegger sees it. And, what's interesting from that perspective as well -- what appears alien to us, since we're unfamiliar with it, its "conditioning" as you've put it here, its "structuring" for Heidegger -- what appears alien is quite often just the human, but the differently human.

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    That's a particularly interesting piece as well.

  • @jhoevenguillermo8531
    @jhoevenguillermo853110 жыл бұрын

    thank you Mr. Sadler. It means a lot.

  • @ManaveESulanul
    @ManaveESulanul11 жыл бұрын

    Talk about a tall order! But, thanks for the suggestions; I had some previous exposure to Merleau-Ponty and, though I had thought I had begun to get some idea of what was going on, it seemed otherwise when I discussed it in the phenomenology seminar I took a few years ago.

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Glad you found it useful

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome. Glad you liked it

  • @grndragon7777777
    @grndragon77777779 жыл бұрын

    thank you for all your lectures

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    9 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome!

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    Good to read. I'm glad it helped

  • @electristocracy
    @electristocracy7 жыл бұрын

    It's amazing to listen to that 'shift' with Plotinus in mind, that to say the intellect follows from the One could be challenged with the idea that it first requires the Nothing. It's so incredibly simple in terms of negation too!

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes - it makes one rethink a number of different basic metaphysical schemes

  • @electristocracy

    @electristocracy

    7 жыл бұрын

    Concerning the Demiurge In your "In Quest of the Human, and of Being - Martin Heidegger Glimpses Into Existence Lecture 8" you say how an ex-nihilo creation would allow for a god to know the whole of their creation. I would argue that such a god would actually lack any means of attaining self-knowledge. This might seem like an odd accusation to lay at an 'omniscient' being, but I am imagining creation out of nothing as a first self, whose other is nothingness......lacking the mediation to gain self-knowledge through the other.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes, that would be a more or less Hegelian way of looking at the issue - which of course, would be one option among many for making sense out of divine omniscence

  • @electristocracy

    @electristocracy

    7 жыл бұрын

    Where can I look in Hegel(or elsewhere) to grapple with this idea a little more? I believe that Hegel sees creation(people) as taking on this capacity for self-knowledge on behalf of the creator (though I am probably getting this at least a little bit wrong) and that this is an outcome of the dialectical process. But I am stuck on a gnostic understanding of the creator as being flawed, and this flaw being transcended by the human capacity to become a "we" (able to exist beyond the self-other dichotomy) and that this is something more radical than simply being an outcome of the dialectical process, I would go as far as to say that it is the raw material out of which the dialectic develops, by being the bridge over the opposition. Many Thanks(for your reply and for your videos in general)!

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Yes, I'll be shooting more for the Existentialism series -- at the very least some portions of Being and Time, the Question Concerning Technology, and perhaps some of the Nietzsche lectures. Down the line, later on, I'll shoot some other Heidegger stuff in a more systematic way

  • @akram4139
    @akram41392 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant, Thank you very much.

  • @fernandoaraposo4643
    @fernandoaraposo46439 жыл бұрын

    Fun and interesting lecture Gregory, thanks for putting it up, found it very engaging. The closing 5 mins revealed a well trodden idea that i'd love to hear you expand on. You might enjoy and have a good chuckle by reading the following two books. Firstly 'My Big Toe' (TOE: Theory of Everything) by Thomas W . Campbell, delves in and tries to explaine consciousness as the fundamental, then on to the 'Why', and secondly 'The Screwtape Letters' a novel by C. S. Lewis, an allegory, a senior devil teaching a junior devil the art of devilry, how to corrupt humans....

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    9 жыл бұрын

    Fern Oso I've read the Screwtape Letters many times and enjoyed it. Not sure I'll get to any new readings anytime soon, given how packed my schedule is -- for any given new book, I always have to ask: read this. . . or reread Plato, or Aristotle, or Cicero, or. . . . As to the last 5 minutes, you mean the idea of metaphysics as something unavoidable, but typically misunderstood by those engaging in Philosophy?

  • @fernandoaraposo4643

    @fernandoaraposo4643

    9 жыл бұрын

    In a way yes; metaphysics being a good a title/metaphor as any to head a certain line of enquiry into to the what, why etc…. inherent and unavoidable. But mostly I was referring to the ‘whole’, ‘nothingness’ line of thought in your ending which I'd love to hear you expand on; a great example being the Heart sutra from the 9th century: "form is emptiness, emptiness is form" etc… Glad to hear you liked the Screwtape letters, a classic, should be compulsory reading in all schools. I would definitely give 'My Big Toe' a go, as it uses our newly found and evolving digital concepts and models to try and explain consciousness, intent, why, what etc… By ‘ours’ and ‘new’ I mean the digital revolution of the last 50+ years. If you get past the short and somewhat bent introduction, you’ll find some very interesting meat to chew on, give it a scan read when you can. So many books so little time……

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    No problem -- I've had quite a few people asking me that same kind of question, saying "author" rather than "translator". Not sure why

  • @mattgilbert7347
    @mattgilbert73478 жыл бұрын

    Finished watching the Peter Sellers film "Being There". Much laughter-in-the-world. "All will be well, in the garden". Thanks for these lectures, great stuff.

  • @MiCajaDelIdiota
    @MiCajaDelIdiota Жыл бұрын

    Heidegger's use of the word SCIENCE (common during the 19th century) as any study conducted rigorously & systematically, is something that helped me navigate European philosophy.

  • @mrpoig123
    @mrpoig12310 жыл бұрын

    Metaphysics I think is a very interesting subject. Thank you for posting this.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    10 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome -- and yes, indeed, it is, when we go to the roots of things

  • @KenMikkelsen
    @KenMikkelsen10 жыл бұрын

    Though I originally was somewhat put off by the format, this turned into an excellent and insightful survey into Martin Heidegger's metaphysics. I was about to note the significant similarities between Søren Kierkegaard and Heidegger, but I see there is already a considerable series of videos on S.K by the video-author. Looking forward to checking out the rest of the series on existentialism.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    10 жыл бұрын

    Glad you were able to make it through my off-putting format.

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Well, there's nothing like diving into M-P himself, and trying to understand him on his own grounds. But, I'd say that, if you're looking for which particular authors would be most helpful to have some background in, in order to understand what M-P is up to, I'd say some understanding of Husserl is useful, as well as of Scheler -- two different streams of phenomenology. Knowing some basics of Hegel and Marx are very useful as well -- and Freudian psychoanalysis, and Structural linguistics

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome. Glad what I could say in a comment turned out to be what you were looking for

  • @adrianiacovino7230
    @adrianiacovino723011 жыл бұрын

    I couldn't find anything by you on Question Concerning Technology, have you shot this yet? This video lecture was helpful for an undergraduate paper that I am currently writing.

  • @jasondewitt3142
    @jasondewitt31426 жыл бұрын

    I'm in a reading group covering this text (in Milwaukee!), thanks for the help.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    6 жыл бұрын

    You do know I live right downtown in Milwaukee, right?

  • @DaveWasley
    @DaveWasley6 жыл бұрын

    I read Being and Time in 2013. It was a really good introduction to What Is Metaphysics? 10/10 would recommend. I liked the part when he starts to talk about “temporal ecstatic unities,” it goes on for another 250 pages, you read a page and a half, realize you haven’t been paying attention, go back two pages, try to hang on to each word for dear life, inceptioning the translation with a “what the heck does this particular collection of nonsense words actually say” translation of your very own by filling up an entire notebook, occasionally getting a moment of elated epiphany when a bunch of stuff “clicks,” feeling really smart for a day or two, trying to relate all this cool stuff you’re reading to your friends, realizing you look and sound like you’ve had a psychotic break...I’m still traumatized...recently read Derrida’s 1967 books hasn’t helped, but Heidegger was a reading comprehension trial by fire, so it wasn’t as bad as everyone says. Anyways, read What Is Metaphysics? this morning, now watching this in the bath. Thanks!

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    6 жыл бұрын

    I do some of my best reading and thinking in the bath. I don't live in it, like Churchill apparently did, though. . . And yeah, Heidegger - and Derrida - are slow going. . .

  • @SyntheticFragments
    @SyntheticFragments11 жыл бұрын

    Beyond our worlds in the sense that the way we understand beings is never exhaustive in any particular temporal/historic world. In so far as we relate ourselves to anything we are always conditioning the boundaries of how and in what particular way beings are disclosed.

  • @SyntheticFragments
    @SyntheticFragments11 жыл бұрын

    Excellent video lecture Dr.Sadler. Just a quick question, would you say that this Nothing because it is such a necessary part of Being and ultimately how beings come to reveal themselves to us, does this mean that metaphysics (along with all other fields of inquiry like science,art,history, etc) is essentially and necessarily incomplete

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Well, the good news with M-P is that he digests this stuff and amalgamates it into his own coherent philosophical view -- so if you can figure out precisely what he's saying and up to, you can, as it were, work backwards into some of the sources of his approach

  • @felizginato12
    @felizginato1210 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this. I'm a philosophy minor who made the leap from 100-200 level classes to a 500 level course on 20th Century Philosophy this semester. As you can imagine, I'm a little in over my head when it comes to this stuff (first reading was by Bergson and reading it was like banging my head against concrete) since I have almost no prior experience with writings on metaphysics. Anyways, your summary and explanation really opened up a new way for me to approach my readings.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    10 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome -- that is quite a leap! Glad this video was useful for you. You might also check out the ones I've got on Aristotle's Metaphysics book 1, and a few of the Plato videos

  • @felizginato12

    @felizginato12

    10 жыл бұрын

    Gregory B. Sadler (since I'm not sure where I would ask you this question I'm just going to go ahead and draw out a discussion here.) I'm reading Schopenhauer's "The World as Will and Representation" for my aesthetics class, and I'm wondering if you would know whether or not Schopenhauer's metaphysics was directly influenced by Vedic thought. If so, would his concept of "the Will" be analogous to Brahman as described in the Upanishads? We have to come up with talking points for our in-class discussions on the readings, and I just want to see if I'm drawing the right connections here (since Schopenhauer doesn't explicitly cite Indian philosophy anywhere in his essay.)

  • @felizginato12

    @felizginato12

    10 жыл бұрын

    felizginato12 Sorry, I meant "the Idea", not "the Will" (I think...maybe I'm not fully grasping the text)

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    10 жыл бұрын

    There's quite a bit out there discussing Schopenhauer and Indian philosophy, which was starting to make its way to Germany in his time. Directly influenced? I couldn't really say myself. I suspect that one can get to Schopenhauer from Kant without bringing in any Indian philosophy.

  • @bagussusilo8245
    @bagussusilo824510 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much, you are a super star teacher! When thinking about metaphysics I'd usually associate with topics such as free will, causality, personal identity, and, of course, being. Was Heidegger the first to introduce the "nothing" into metaphysical subject of inquiry? In your opinion, was the essay represents Heidegger's exercise in critical philosophy ala Kant: the "nothing" as the condition of possibility for all inquiries in metaphysics? How does this relate to book on Kant & POM?

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    makes perfect sense to me.

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    Well, I don't know what you mean my doubt/authenticity in Kant, so, not much to say. I'd be careful not to conflate ideas, though: anxiety is definitely not the same as nothingness

  • @Oners82

    @Oners82

    6 жыл бұрын

    Ellington Dart No, it is a methodology, not an interpretation based upon pragmatism.

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Yes, it is among his best, I think

  • @hans-wernerbrussig9130
    @hans-wernerbrussig913011 жыл бұрын

    Dialektik trinity`S....to lift up.. to raise in "absolutely spirit" .just.some termini are different,.... I ` am only an dilettante, but very glad to remark that these legacy, is transmitted by your profound teaching work, learning, now the essential meanings,be coming better froward today, with our common history of spirit being - together with such spirits of history like you, we will change our state in more sensible reason. Right on with best wishes

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    well as to the second, beings "give themselves" to the human being grasping them, they show us sides of themselves, including, if we're attentive, their essences. That's not so difficult to grasp, though not our usual way of talking about them as to the first, Being (per se) is not the same thing as one one single being or any class or type of being. And yet, it is involved in every being and in the totality of beings. Heidegger is interested in the difference between these

  • @SL1991
    @SL199110 жыл бұрын

    Gregory you're a boss. This one video helped me find a point of entry into Heidegger's wild polemics. If this essay i'm writing on his notion of Being gets a high distinction, I'll have you to thank.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    10 жыл бұрын

    Glad it helped you with the -- yes, quite tricky -- Heidegger text.

  • @TheSteinmetzen
    @TheSteinmetzen8 жыл бұрын

    'Sightseeing', by Weather Report, is the best background music for this lecture.

  • @Theo_Theemuts

    @Theo_Theemuts

    7 жыл бұрын

    I tried it. It's very good indeed! Really gets your brain working in a relaxed way.

  • @Oners82

    @Oners82

    6 жыл бұрын

    Listened to it for about 5 seconds before I wanted to tear my hair out! It's bloody awful music!

  • @Pppeeepppiii

    @Pppeeepppiii

    6 жыл бұрын

    Its like musical schizophrenia

  • @mmmmSmegma
    @mmmmSmegma9 жыл бұрын

    I don't know very much at all about philosophy and struggle here and there to grasp some of the things that are said. But yet, I find it interesting.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    9 жыл бұрын

    Well, Heidegger is a pretty tough person to make sense of -- so just keep at it, and hopefully things will get more clear (the same can be said about a number of other philosophers)

  • @mckenna480
    @mckenna48011 жыл бұрын

    Could you explain Heidegger's experience of anxiety in What is Metaphysics? I'm trying to make connections with Heidegger's experience of anxiety and Kierkegard's Knight of Faith.

  • @MrGreen428
    @MrGreen4283 жыл бұрын

    Would you please do a series on Heidegger’s Nietzsche lectures? They’re the most fascinating to me.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    3 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/qJ-MrdaxnMitcZs.html

  • @parnicksmusick
    @parnicksmusick10 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the great overview. I am a post-graduate independent researcher working on a paper detailing the relationship between Leo Strauss's political rationalism and Heidegger's radical historicism. Both philosophers had to, in effect, undermine Comteian positivism (Strauss to discredit theoretical historicism, Heidegger to establish radical historicism as its successor). I would love to find you on Academia.edu and get your feedback on my work.

  • @tamigoldstein
    @tamigoldstein11 жыл бұрын

    i like the lrcture ! its very interesting !!!

  • @charlesprest2203
    @charlesprest22039 жыл бұрын

    would greatly enjoy sitting in on one of your lectures!

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    9 жыл бұрын

    Charles Prest Well, you'll want to watch for events in my FB and G+ pages -- or on the ReasonIO.com website. Alternately, you can always get an organization or institution local to you to bring me in to do a talk.

  • @charlesprest2203

    @charlesprest2203

    9 жыл бұрын

    Well thank you! I'm going to work on that for this upcoming semester, and in the meanwhile, i am going to keep an open eye for your events! Thank you!

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Thanks very much!

  • @00ppium
    @00ppium11 жыл бұрын

    Would you recommend a major in philosophy or physiological for an incoming college freshmen based on difficulties and easy understanding?

  • @funniensinner
    @funniensinner10 жыл бұрын

    Who was the author of the translated version you were citing?

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Glad to read that

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Well, metaphysics will always be to some sense incomplete, so far as it depends on and incorporates the human being -- the Dasein. There will always be the possibility of doing something new, by extending out once again into the Nothing. Of course, most of what gets considered "new" turns out upon examination not to be new at all

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    Жыл бұрын

    @Rebeckah Hall I didn't say nothing is ever new. Glad you enjoy the videos

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Well, I don't worry about that so much when focusing in on unpacking one of his articles. If I was discussing his Rector's address, then perhaps. There's enough ink already spilled over the Heidegger-Nazi issue already, in my view

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    No, I haven't yet shot any new Heidegger videos. Soon, though

  • @MrMarktrumble
    @MrMarktrumble6 жыл бұрын

    Thank you again.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    6 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome

  • @MichaelJimenez416
    @MichaelJimenez4165 жыл бұрын

    Heidegger's vernacular and terminology are endlessly frustrating and hard to unpack. These videos are extremely helpful, Professor Sadler. I wonder if it was appropriate for H to communicate his philosophy through such difficult language, though.

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    5 жыл бұрын

    I think that when it comes to great philosophers, we cut them some slack about the language they choose, and do the best we can to figure out what they're saying. It's not as if Heidegger doesn't make a lot of efforts to explain the neologisms he employs

  • @MichaelJimenez416

    @MichaelJimenez416

    5 жыл бұрын

    Gregory B. Sadler that is actually a very good perspective on things. I suppose it would be inappropriate to impose restrictions and limits on how philosophers should communicate. We might not have gotten Heidegger at all! I think that would have been much worse.

  • @tomasperry
    @tomasperry3 жыл бұрын

    im gonna crush it in my class discussion today

  • @ytugtbk
    @ytugtbk9 жыл бұрын

    Love the train horn at 3:13. Reminded me of "My Cousin Vinnie."

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    9 жыл бұрын

    Hahha! That made my day

  • @kellyjackson7889

    @kellyjackson7889

    9 жыл бұрын

    Are you suuure?

  • @andreasj2429

    @andreasj2429

    4 жыл бұрын

    The horn sounds metaphysical.

  • @ThePainkiller9995

    @ThePainkiller9995

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@andreasj2429 yo momma sounds metaphysical

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    That's a very nice way to put it -- I was just thinking, actually, about Plato, who makes being able to teach a subject the criterion for being said to know it -- but then never really tells us what teaching it involves!

  • @mushkankushwah9067
    @mushkankushwah90673 жыл бұрын

    Can you bring a lecture on Michael Oaekshott..cause i seriously love ur lectures!!!

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    3 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/qJ-MrdaxnMitcZs.html

  • @mandys1505
    @mandys15055 жыл бұрын

    @25 minutes... when you are talking about mood revealing the Nothing--- i have to mention The Doors and their song, Riders On The Storm.... he quotes Heidegger in there....>>>to me, that is the best

  • @mandys1505

    @mandys1505

    5 жыл бұрын

    i would call it, a mood or mode of transcendental awe

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    5 жыл бұрын

    Are you sure that "Into this world we're thrown" is a Heidegger reference? I mean, I love the song, but I'm not sure about that connection

  • @mandys1505

    @mandys1505

    5 жыл бұрын

    i'm not sure! i just always assumed it was... :)

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome

  • @ayserapau
    @ayserapau11 жыл бұрын

    thank You!

  • @scottnster
    @scottnster6 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the enlightening video! Just a question about other manifestations of nothingness according to Heidegger. You mentioned boredom. Is that one? What about forgetfulness or nostalgia - as the past is annihilated?

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    6 жыл бұрын

    Well, in nostalgia, the past isn't really annihilated, is it? You'll find Heidegger listing off a number of nihilitative attitudes in this work

  • @nancytoulouse6973
    @nancytoulouse6973 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you professor for help in understanding Heidegger. What do you suggest I read first?

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    Жыл бұрын

    I start my students with this piece

  • @mathforphysics
    @mathforphysics11 жыл бұрын

    Great. I really struggle his work on truth.

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler11 жыл бұрын

    Oops -- too many windows open at once and multi-tasking while trying to get ready for work! Glad you liked the video!

  • @MrMarktrumble
    @MrMarktrumble11 жыл бұрын

    thank you

  • @ManaveESulanul
    @ManaveESulanul11 жыл бұрын

    What do you suppose IS helpful for understanding Merleau-Ponty?

  • @MrMarktrumble
    @MrMarktrumble9 жыл бұрын

    thank you again

  • @GregoryBSadler

    @GregoryBSadler

    9 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome

  • @bagussusilo8245
    @bagussusilo824510 жыл бұрын

    Now, I'm intrigued, Professor Sadler...Apparently my understanding was off the mark. I thought the "nothing" in the essay was some sort of a transcendental critique of science/ scientism prevalent during the golden age of modern physics back in the 1930's. Also, in Heidegger's latter thoughts, he had a project for overcoming metaphysics--beginning with Nietzsche, Kant, and down to Presocratic. This is why I'm curious to what extent this essay relates to overcoming metaphysics--esp Kant. Thanks!

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    Well. . . I think there are a few surface similarities, including terminology. There's far more important differences, though -- including the conception of the nothing in Heidegger. So, when you dig in and examine them, they're not really as similar as they might first appear.

  • @GregoryBSadler
    @GregoryBSadler10 жыл бұрын

    You mean the second part, the interplay between authenticity and authenticity

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