Thinking about changing the world

Let's think difference.
Then & Now is FAN-FUNDED! Support me on Patreon and pledge as little as $1 per video: patreon.com/user?u=3517018
Or send me a one-off tip of any amount and help me make more videos:
www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr...
Buy on Amazon through this link to support the channel:
amzn.to/2ykJe6L
Follow me on:
Facebook: thethenandnow
Instagram: / thethenandnow
Twitter: / lewlewwaller
Subscribe to the podcast:
podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast...
open.spotify.com/show/1Khac2i...
Sources
Joe Moran, First You Write a Sentence
Stephen King, On Writing: A Memoir
Audre Lorde, The Masters Tools
Todd May, Giles Deleuze
slate.com/human-interest/2016...

Пікірлер: 133

  • @ThenNow
    @ThenNow2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching everyone! Help me out by supporting me on Patreon for scripts, discord, & name in credits, etc: www.patreon.com/thenandnow Get updates from me on Twitter: twitter.com/lewlewwaller

  • @choosecarefully408

    @choosecarefully408

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think that the only thing I can add _here_ is that people would never back down from stopping GMOs let's say out of fatigue or loyalty to Monsanto. It's only once 'Government' even only verbally defends the rights _of_ Monsanto that people back down. You can rally your nation's folk against the people of *other* nations quite easily. Changing what people subconsciously perceive as "Their Own Group" is an entirely different matter. Are people in Britain willing to admit they made a mistake not stopping the Americans from torturing people at Guantanamo Bay? Then they'll also admit their own involvement in that war was a bad thing? No. Not while a single one of "Their Soldiers" who fought because we didn't have that perspective earlier is still alive. Change on the societal level requires a personal maturity that culturally, the West has turned away from recently. I don't think that they'll get it back any time soon.

  • @ownedinc4274

    @ownedinc4274

    2 жыл бұрын

    The five "verbs" are not verbs.

  • @nopasaran191
    @nopasaran1912 жыл бұрын

    This channel is violently, offensively good. The videos are extremely well researched and well produced. Keep it up

  • @Mike_Sunshine

    @Mike_Sunshine

    Жыл бұрын

    I love that description 🤙

  • @yungtgofpwclicc1158

    @yungtgofpwclicc1158

    Жыл бұрын

    I'd say it's the actually THE BEST channel on youtube. Given the topics that he discusses in the Kant and Spinoza videos.. and I think theirs one more..

  • @nopasaran191

    @nopasaran191

    Жыл бұрын

    And Bes. D Marx is another amazing, slept on new channel that’s gonna blow up

  • @wm9904

    @wm9904

    Жыл бұрын

    💯💯

  • @vauchomarx6733
    @vauchomarx67332 жыл бұрын

    My first association that came to mind while watching this video was the Spanish differentiation between "being" as something temporary ("estar"), and essential being ("ser"). If we want to change the world, maybe we have to think more in terms of the former.

  • @porfavoralguemmemata8624
    @porfavoralguemmemata86242 жыл бұрын

    Omg one banger after another! Jesus, ehat superb editing, screen writing, and aesthetic. Holly molly. Got a lot of goosebumps while watching this. I generally don't comment videos, but Jesus... What good art we have here.

  • @jonasnilsson8533
    @jonasnilsson85332 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic! A truly amazing train of though, sound and visuals. Feels highly important somehow. Thanks for making this and all your other content. If I will be a patreon to something one day it will be for your content. All the best.

  • @yeasr7781
    @yeasr77812 жыл бұрын

    I'll listen to this every time I want to write poetry

  • @johnhogendoorn3786
    @johnhogendoorn37869 ай бұрын

    Simply genius. Such a joy to tune in, align, flow, be. Thank you 🙏

  • @baidawibai
    @baidawibai2 жыл бұрын

    In this sense I find myself thinking that some of the best sentences I've ever heard came from rappers. From the opening line of The Message "broken glass everywhere" to Black Thought of The Roots' "still they working all they life, they pushing for the light, giving everything they got to stitch dem swooshes on ya Nikes". One of the main reasons why I love hip-hop is because it emerges from abstraction AND the concrete.

  • @sempressfi

    @sempressfi

    Жыл бұрын

    Great observation. Killer Mike always delivers in that way and rap that addresses sociopolitical or just "political" things in general is on another level.

  • @Intuitioncalling
    @Intuitioncalling2 жыл бұрын

    This is my 3rd video on this channel and I'm planning to binge on all of the or most of the videos tonight. But what's bugging me is such a low count of subscribers. This is Gold.

  • @domdominique2603
    @domdominique26032 жыл бұрын

    Ngl I got very excited seeing your typewriter, that literal notebook, and pens. Thank you! This is an awesome video. Made my day :) Also glad to see the Join button here. Clicked. Some months ago I made a comment about making it possible to contribute here in fewer clicks. Glad to see that, too. 👍

  • @zombiehampster1397
    @zombiehampster13972 жыл бұрын

    I just want to say how much I love your channel. I just stumbled across it recently and I really love the approach/presentation as well as the depth of content, yet still very accessible.

  • @katakana1
    @katakana12 жыл бұрын

    4:32 When you need to reach a word count on an essay

  • @Jack-lw5kh
    @Jack-lw5kh2 жыл бұрын

    A wonderfully executed and formulated essay on life, reflection, action, inaction, identity and energy. So glad to have discovered this channel recently, I can only hope I might use some of the wisdom of this video to foster my own creative direction and motivation.

  • @enzoamaral7721
    @enzoamaral77212 жыл бұрын

    Magnificient. The ending was sublime, thank you and congrats for the great video!

  • @mstran1897
    @mstran18972 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful!

  • @CiroqLee
    @CiroqLee2 жыл бұрын

    Just found your channel. It took just one video and I’ve been binging ever since. Truly amazing content. What you are making is art. Go beyond, brother

  • @ritagreenwood9397
    @ritagreenwood9397 Жыл бұрын

    I am learning so much from this channel, I just wanted to say a heartfelt thank you! 🙏

  • @susanwilliams4953
    @susanwilliams49532 ай бұрын

    I am in astonishment & wonder with your channel. I watch on repeat on purpose!

  • @LighthoofDryden
    @LighthoofDryden2 жыл бұрын

    The sounds you chose are as well-articulated as the thoughts. This has given me a lot to chew on, as you always do. Thank you.

  • @moistbox
    @moistbox2 жыл бұрын

    Kinda blown away by this one. One of my favourites from you, for sure, and that is saying a lot.

  • @NoahMullins
    @NoahMullins2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so so much for this video. I'm going to have to rewatch it a bunch of times to take it all in because it's given me A LOT to think about.

  • @lowkoalatee4033
    @lowkoalatee40332 жыл бұрын

    More of this please just such a unique style with that voice and the atmosphere it’s nice

  • @booksandocha
    @booksandocha2 жыл бұрын

    Great essay, beautifully delivered and very enjoyable to follow.

  • @SteveJones379
    @SteveJones3792 жыл бұрын

    The poetry of this piece moves me. Thank you!!!

  • @RichardMcCrory_Neph
    @RichardMcCrory_Neph2 жыл бұрын

    I immediately though about Candide seeing the thumbnail in my feed. We can, at best, cultivate our own garden, and our humble single thoughts

  • @TheSchleimBonze
    @TheSchleimBonze2 жыл бұрын

    beautifully put, thank you for these words, i do feel-glide what they express, they are healing. Wirte on friend, stretch yourself, so the sunwill of the spring warms a tickle ;)

  • @slaterrox23
    @slaterrox232 жыл бұрын

    ~ For the algorithm ~ But seriously, amazing video. You always make me think, and I'm very grateful for that.

  • @aenghelmarie9732
    @aenghelmarie97322 жыл бұрын

    This video made me reflect. Very impactful. Amazing Production.

  • @christopherbettridge5983
    @christopherbettridge59835 ай бұрын

    "Joy is hope when it leaps and sprints amongst us."

  • @5ivearrows
    @5ivearrows Жыл бұрын

    This is a truly wonderful video. Thank you.

  • @soulmechanics7946
    @soulmechanics7946 Жыл бұрын

    I can see where you altered sentences, refining and sharpening the edge of your depiction. Very well played. Also, Butler's exemplary sentence is just gorgeous.. a spectacle-level show of rhetorical prowess. They knew she deserved an award, they just didn't know why, and it is understandable. They would have been dazzled by the semantic flash-grenade it becomes upon inspection.

  • @gregferguson1386
    @gregferguson1386 Жыл бұрын

    Wow. Brilliant. The words, imagery, music, pace, tone--all beautiful. A work of art. Thank you.

  • @susanwilliams4953

    @susanwilliams4953

    2 ай бұрын

    Beautifully said 🌺..

  • @Phlabberghost
    @Phlabberghost2 жыл бұрын

    On the butler quote: everything until “brought” is a single noun phrase. After brought, you have the predicate, until the appositional phrase begun by “marked.” So “some large conceptually considered situation” brought and marked “two large conceptually considered situations, different from the first and each other.” “Possibility” isn’t a verb. I don’t say that as a corrective, I say it as a note that you’re correct to note that Butlers verbs vanish, but that they vanish so much that you missed them. She is talking about something that “brought” and “marked.” Your point still stands bro. Sorry for the pedantry.

  • @amulyamishra5745
    @amulyamishra57452 жыл бұрын

    Watching this gives me some hope of having a nascent philosopher inside me. I already think like this!

  • @ehfik
    @ehfik2 жыл бұрын

    ah, excellent. keep returning to this topic again and again. thank you for all your work! and THANK YOU for being different and keeping it fan-funded - honestly cant watch another nord vpn, brilliant etc. ad...

  • @E11imist
    @E11imist2 жыл бұрын

    Sick thumbnail man. I'm a long time sub since uni when I first watched your video on Derrida. You do great work and I appreciate you being part of what I consider the very small minority of YT that succeeds at being educational, creative, relevant and often profound. Your videos have helped expand my thinking and knowledge, especially about philosophy.

  • @davidhassall8000
    @davidhassall80002 жыл бұрын

    That was lovely, thanks.

  • @UncleKeith567
    @UncleKeith567 Жыл бұрын

    Wow! 'Thinking about changing the world' a tone poem by Then & Now. Beautiful.

  • @Noms_Chompsky
    @Noms_Chompsky2 жыл бұрын

    Warm shower on a chilly morning my dude, great viddie!

  • @BBQJOE22
    @BBQJOE222 жыл бұрын

    what youtube channel have I stumbled upon, this is brilliant!

  • @penelopehill9710
    @penelopehill97102 жыл бұрын

    Rare to find a Writer's Writer! And rather than my reading what a Writer's Writer has written . . . here the Writer is present to me! Nice!

  • @jadegrace1312
    @jadegrace13122 жыл бұрын

    Another thought: I think it adds greatly to your point to consider why people care about Judith Butler's writing being obtuse and hard to parse for laypeople. We don't expect mathematicians or physicists to explain their complex theorems in easy to understand languages. This would be simply impossible to do with any specificity. I think it reflects the fact that we view speech and language as more personal and intimate than the mathematical symbols used to express mathematical ideas. By further obscuring ideas behind symbols for symbols for speech, rather than symbols for speech, we have an understanding that the knowledge being portrayed is more specialized, more obtuse. We don't want to know or need to know. But when the ideas are expressed through language, we feel that we ought to be able to understand, no matter how "high level" the ideas.

  • @veredit
    @veredit Жыл бұрын

    Really love your channel, but this is the first I truly felt that I have to say it. Saved it to favourites.

  • @Northwest360
    @Northwest360 Жыл бұрын

    Incredible channel! I’d love to hear your thoughts on work, anti work etc, and what you think the future of work looks like. I’m sure you’re a David Graeber fan 😃

  • @amberwebber6060
    @amberwebber60602 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. 🖤

  • @zlag__
    @zlag__2 жыл бұрын

    beautiful man. philosophy is lived not taught. live the moments, moment by moment then you will be the movement

  • @l4l755
    @l4l755 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! I am frequently frustrated with the slow rate of policies and structural solutions to combat climate change and ecological destruction: Life is in the verbs, and we all can do something. Thanks for an informative, and at the same time poetic, video. Keep the verbs flowing in your life ;)

  • @J5L5M6
    @J5L5M62 жыл бұрын

    Beautifully delivered. The style of content that lured me in from the start. Thank you. -Profit Overlord

  • @ozlemdenli7763
    @ozlemdenli7763 Жыл бұрын

    just wonderful

  • @obie2013
    @obie20132 жыл бұрын

    every video you make is a masterpiece

  • @ramblinactivist
    @ramblinactivist2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent words (as usual), some good editing choices, but the rhythms of he music really syncopated will with the ideas on this one :-)

  • @IndustrialBonecraft
    @IndustrialBonecraft2 жыл бұрын

    I see your dense and wordy Judith Butler quote and raise you Nick Land. And then someone will see my Nick Land and raise me Reza Negarestani.

  • @TheCg1999
    @TheCg19992 жыл бұрын

    This is beautiful.

  • @zarkc4
    @zarkc42 жыл бұрын

    Yo, great vid, yet the music is sometimes a little too loud compared to your voice! Thank you for your work!

  • @polybius3609
    @polybius36092 жыл бұрын

    I always leave these videos more contented than I was before I saw them 🥲with a newer sense of purpose

  • @edwardsalim3111
    @edwardsalim31112 жыл бұрын

    Excuse me, what classical does this video use? It is very entrancing😌. Thank you!

  • @stevanivanovski3660
    @stevanivanovski3660 Жыл бұрын

    I loved this video! The music can be too loud and distracting somtimes, but great anyway! Thanks :)

  • @winnluke1976
    @winnluke1976 Жыл бұрын

    They’re not verbs that you circled! 😅Thanks for the video though, the quality has improved a lot recently. I’m always keen to watch them.

  • @readman53
    @readman532 жыл бұрын

    Would you revisit the words you identified as verbs and explain their "verb-ness" in the quotation from Butler. Thanks!

  • @metamorphosis_77
    @metamorphosis_772 жыл бұрын

    Magical and poetic.

  • @wm9904
    @wm9904 Жыл бұрын

    Good shit 💯💯💯💯💯

  • @jimranallo686
    @jimranallo686 Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant!

  • @RedsKinDK23
    @RedsKinDK232 жыл бұрын

    This is poetic.

  • @Ivarius321
    @Ivarius3212 жыл бұрын

    I only watched the first few minutes, but I just wanted to let you know, just like there are people who do not or even cannot think in images, there also also people who barely or don't use auditory thoughts. For these people, thoughts don't start as a sentence. They are able to comtemplate ideas without actual sentences forming in their mind. For these people, the start of a thought feels more like a spark rather than a formation of a sentence.

  • @dougcane4059
    @dougcane40592 жыл бұрын

    The piano background music is too loud .... annoying and hard to understand ...

  • @zuhar2526
    @zuhar2526 Жыл бұрын

    Reminded me of "school of life" mission. The creator of it has faced criticism for deluding great philophers to a simple guidelines for everyday life. But as they stated that the believe in "democratising the intellectuals"

  • @inthemomenttomoment
    @inthemomenttomoment2 жыл бұрын

    The sentence 👀 is: "Change your self before you change the World 🌎. Live Life Now 🎯 The Future is Living Now!🤺

  • @michaelkeefer1471
    @michaelkeefer14712 жыл бұрын

    The problem is, while listening, I want to sit down and take notes. I am at work though. I do however imagine I'm becoming a better person, somehow, by listening.

  • @Zodicus
    @Zodicus Жыл бұрын

    It is a travesty that I have only found your channel today. The only thing I have to say is: thank you.

  • @katakana1
    @katakana12 жыл бұрын

    11:09 Spanish has "estar" which is just for temporary states. He could use that as a replacement. Oh and I guess that means he's a Taoist too

  • @HaxorSerialKiller
    @HaxorSerialKiller2 жыл бұрын

    great!

  • @randstrickfaden4148
    @randstrickfaden4148 Жыл бұрын

    Fabulous channel and videos. Concerning this one, what is ironic to me, is that the critiques of the abstract “pinned down” this is what be notions and perspectives are themselves only abstract ideas. Therefore they are susceptible to their own criticism and thus dissolution. All of these are Poststructural/Postmodern conceptions. I think one can argue factually that they’ve missed the mark of such intellectual undertakings to begin with. This is due to failing to notice something more significant than what the previous philosophies and the like that sought to set in stone or moor, as used in the video, what is, what be, etc. And that is, why they WANT for such a thing. Through all the past eras clear back to our species existing in the hunter/gatherer state, from the primitive spiritual explanations to the more developed pagan and religious, to the renaissance and romantic, to the enlightenment and modern, humans have felt the need to ground themselves, individually and collectively with such overarching perspectives and beliefs regarding truth on such a grandiose scale that they can’t know things as so on smaller more intimate scales. Yet, we still desperately require something to fill that void of what we can question but not rightfully answer. Wrong or right plays little importance to our subconscious regarding this, as it is rather for the sense of security, structure, and as much mainstay of an order as possible. The human psyche, for most anyway, require this in order for those verbs to become manifest, for people to act, “strike that match,” and so on. Aside from the innate curiosity to become familiar with one’s environment prompting action, to explore, even seek adventure beyond that out of the same type of motivation, most require such structural framework in order to act, including create. Of course there are the exceptions, the curious for curious sake with a stronger drive to explore deeper and further, such as those inventors, scientists, explorers, artists, wizards, and alchemists. And these so often seem to be the freer spirits, misfits, eccentrics, iconoclasts, and social critics. But throughout and according to history, these sorts have always been a minority exception, so to imagine all could be this sort to form mass society is just as delusional as any past set in stone type of belief peoples minds have been moored to. Only difference is those past ones could provide the structure needed for human coherence and achievement to occur, be it good or bad achievement, however you decide that, where the poststructural one won’t because it fails to take notice of why these overarching beliefs are desired.

  • @lizzie7138
    @lizzie71382 жыл бұрын

    Anytime a point about accepting “difference” is made suddenly black people appear. We are more than a difference. We are not a tool for analysis but humans in their own right with stories that centre us. Tribalism is deeply embedded in us and very potent. Imagine if we lived in a world where being human is the ONLY thing that mattered to us. But would we be here if we were not tribalist? When do we stop and move past the caveman mentality? So many questions. I love your work btw and deeply enjoy your videos. So don’t take this personally lol

  • @chr13
    @chr13 Жыл бұрын

    4:13 Is it okay to neglect the tar though?

  • @kristis3410
    @kristis3410 Жыл бұрын

    I love Then & Now, have watched many videos. Was surprised to see "shift," "possibility" and "rearticulation" described as verbs. Of course, "shift" can be a verb, but it wasn't in this context. Nitpicky, eh? I'm afraid I don't really see how this illuminates the idea of changing the world, except perhaps in a tangential fashion. Certainly language plays a big role in the way the world changes, but the links between certain types of language and the effects they have on change don't seem to be well-articulated. There are other Then & Now videos that I find more intriguing and insightful...but that's just me!

  • @mainstreet3023
    @mainstreet302311 ай бұрын

    I was sentenced to a Julian Assange. It’s rich to be rich. Little boy, I found a foundling. My mother won’t have a womb. I am mother.

  • @addammadd
    @addammadd2 жыл бұрын

    5:56 is possibility a verb in this vernacular or was this an error?

  • @61757
    @617572 жыл бұрын

    Where do you find archival footage?

  • @danacoleman4007

    @danacoleman4007

    Жыл бұрын

    In the archives

  • @chawaphiri1196
    @chawaphiri11962 жыл бұрын

    Your Spotify link isn't working

  • @myselfapretend
    @myselfapretend2 жыл бұрын

    You should, if you haven't already, check out David Abram's Spell of the Sensuous and Becoming Animal. Though you sound like your taking a cue from Merleau Ponty anyway.

  • @penelopegreene
    @penelopegreene Жыл бұрын

    I want to create a world where rain never falls on streets in black and white neo-noir settings again! WHAO--WAIT 🤔

  • @masoud_a_m
    @masoud_a_m2 жыл бұрын

    You've been getting better and better in presentation, but the quality of content unfortunately seems to go the other way. I absolutely loved your older videos, as were short and to the point, rather than poetic, ambiguous, general, and personal. But that's just my preference, considering how I think we can change the world.

  • @GopalKumar-369
    @GopalKumar-369 Жыл бұрын

    5:40

  • @tpe6444
    @tpe64442 жыл бұрын

    What is a verb to you? I ask not to correct. In your Butler quote, I would consider all of your "verbs" to be nouns in the context of that sentence (including "thinking" as a gerund), and in your Dickens' quote, all your verbs to be adjectives. I suspect you're using a different definition of verb than the one I learned.

  • @androgyme
    @androgyme2 жыл бұрын

    How am I supposed to write a true sentence when truth is merely the illusion of certainty?

  • @porfavoralguemmemata8624

    @porfavoralguemmemata8624

    2 жыл бұрын

    Truth needs to be felt, not thought.

  • @61757
    @617572 жыл бұрын

    Typewriter?

  • @iloveowls8748
    @iloveowls8748 Жыл бұрын

    Is it possible to read your scripts somewhere? :)

  • @TheJayman213
    @TheJayman2132 жыл бұрын

    typo in the description: *Giles* Deleuze missing an L

  • @jazzblue7497
    @jazzblue74972 жыл бұрын

    I just wanted to add that making a sentence is not a trait only humans possess. Sure, we are the only literary species we know of, but animals use complex language themselves. Look at chimpanzees or certain birds for example.

  • @blueoak116
    @blueoak1162 жыл бұрын

    Well done, as usual. All a little too obvious though. But still inspiring.

  • @LucBoeren
    @LucBoeren2 жыл бұрын

    Pretty

  • @darylsprake8617
    @darylsprake8617 Жыл бұрын

    All thoughts ultimately are put there from the outside.they are not indigenous

  • @kennybrhouston
    @kennybrhouston2 жыл бұрын

    one suggestion. The background track is too loud. Need to drop the volume. it's offputting

  • @drivelikej9962
    @drivelikej99622 жыл бұрын

    I often find myself at odds with your political ideas, T&N, but your commitment to maintaining the connection between 'theory' and life is forever to your credit.

  • @bxbank
    @bxbank2 жыл бұрын

    Nothing will empower the world until we move to using a neutral currency. Sent you a tweet. reply back if you are interested. Already, object thinking. Humanity thinks in object when it is disempowered. Listen to your language: polarising. Then again, everyone doers that.

  • @SD-hr4tr
    @SD-hr4tr2 жыл бұрын

    1.5K likes,

  • @keplaris2401
    @keplaris24012 жыл бұрын

    What facts backs up the statement that every action is unique and that how can a humble sentence change the world? This seems like poetry of opinions.. not only are there thoughts but also feelings; trauma, stress, et cetera.. Response?

  • @gabrielpetrouch

    @gabrielpetrouch

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you

  • @MG-gl7gx

    @MG-gl7gx

    2 жыл бұрын

    every action is unique in so much as the world is in a state of becoming. You can repeat the same gesture a thousand times yet every time you do it it will be different from every other time. Any philosophy that doesn´t take time and movement into account is an incomplete one. Go read Bergson or smthn. As to your second point, it´s really easy to think of plenty of examples of humble sentences that have changed the world... Armstrong Landing on the moon: "One small step..." Plenty of examples in Marx which had a massive effect on the world at large... The bible, the koran, even The Lord of the Rings... It´s all a question of scale mate. Think even closer to home, maybe something your mother said to you as a child which affected you deeply... it changed your world, it made you move in different ways, think, feel and see different things, and by changing your world, in whatever minuscule way it also changed the world at large by way of relation, co-implication, affect... Put simply, any conception of existence which is not based on change and conceives of the world as separate discrete entities fails to grasp most of what makes the world interesting. You don't need scientific papers and statistics to show that, poetry is plenty...

  • @keplaris2401

    @keplaris2401

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MG-gl7gx I'm responding since I think it is fun to argue with you. Hope you think that too! Mainly I agree with you, however, of course, the world is more complex... How do we know it is humble sentences that causes change and not other factors? I know people who got inspired by seeing something, like, for example, they may get motivated to say work as a business owner by as a teenager seeing the business owner having a car key to a popular car brand, which somehow inspires them more than their inspiring speeches. "Any conception of existence which is not based on change and conceives of the world as separate discrete entities fails to grasp most of what makes the world interesting." This is a deductive statement similar to: "The sun has always rised. So it will rise tomorrow." If I hold myself to believe in empirism, I can never know for sure until I got it confirmed. As you know, the sun can sometimes not go up the next day. Also, everything is unique when no line to what is unique is drawn. I could write a copy, word by word, of the Harry Potter series. By the imaginative sense, this would be unique, while for the book publishing business it would be plagariarism. Is there any practical sense to time and space in thinking?

  • @keplaris2401

    @keplaris2401

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gabrielpetrouch What for?

  • @MG-gl7gx

    @MG-gl7gx

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@keplaris2401 Wonderful! I like this. I am, by profession, a narrative therapist, which means that I work with people in order to help them understand exactly how language, particularly stories, shape the way they conceptualize and respond to the world. Now obviously this doesn't mean that it's only language which has an effect on how they live, but it does mean that very often, in fact almost always, people rely on language in order to explain the events in their lives. Similarly to what is said in the video, narrative practice looks to find ways to complexify the stories people tell themselves about their lives and about the world (turn noun based stories into verb based stories for instance). An event (seeing the business owner with the nice car) isn't in itself a story, stories, like thoughts, are instead redoublings, attempts at organizing an event post factum into language. So to answer you, although affects (ways of affecting and being affected) can be many and multiple, it is often through language (humble sentences) that we ascribe meaning to them. As to your second point about the deductive statement. I disagree fundamentally, since precisely what I'm trying to say is that change is the only valid principle through which we can analyze a changing reality... Empiricism requires this kind of analysis in order to be useful precisely because "the sun might not rise tomorrow." Your very definition requires change in order for it to make sense. And lastly. You're right, there wouldn't be a "practical" point from a legal standpoint to copying Harry Potter. But this misses the point. The defense of difference as a value in itself is about affirming the creative capacity of the cosmos and all that inhabits it, it's a profoundly pragmatic and vitalist approach to reality since it allows us to conceive of the world as fundamentally maleable (within limits obviously). Deleuze and Guattari (both together and apart) are particularly useful here as they help us think of ourselves and our relationships as processes of differentiation and actualization rather than purely subject to external structures which (pre)determine what we can be. That was a lot, sorry for the rant hehe

  • @LogicGated
    @LogicGated Жыл бұрын

    This is the anti doomer content that I need

  • @scofah
    @scofah2 жыл бұрын

    Hi please consider using less background music. Background music in KZread essays is difficult to listen to, especially for people on the spectrum, people who are hard of hearing, people who speak English as a second language, and others. A tiny bit of music goes a really long way. Thanks for considering.

  • @Ba-pb8ul
    @Ba-pb8ul2 жыл бұрын

    Thoughts are not that important. A sentence is neither basic or foundational (Derrida101). Thoughts come from the gut; they also come from the material substrate of the life around us, call it ideology or lifeworld. What matters as Novalis, and German romanticism tells us more generally is the interrogation of things, through questions and contradictions. By addressing why Titian uses a particular blue in his painting one is forced to reach an understanding which, in turn, addresses and changes the infinite regress of signification in other things. As I noted elsewhere, what matters is to indice moments of contradiction, to brush back history like the hairs of a dog so they stand on end. It's not then that you start with an idea - rather you challenge accepted wisdom. The vague notion of "every day life" untethered from theory, for example. This way you have of not nailing down what you're seeking to say, Lewis, is increasingly performative: you have some sense of accepted normativity that is oddly reactionary; you harbour desires for a post-theoretical world embedded in the experiential like Schiller overlooking his domain. One of your less good essays, imo. Understand your position and state it

  • @user-sl6gn1ss8p

    @user-sl6gn1ss8p

    2 жыл бұрын

    I like the essay, but this was interesting too