The John David Ebert Channel

The John David Ebert Channel

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  • @dixonpinfold2582
    @dixonpinfold258218 сағат бұрын

    Morphology and homology explained: It's morphology that refers to form. Homology refers to similarity of relation, structure, or relative position. The leg of a mosquito is profoundly homologous to that of a human, but shares only the faintest morphology.

  • @SeedsofJoy
    @SeedsofJoy21 сағат бұрын

    the invention of the ship coincides with the invention of the shipwreck. love it!

  • @jennhrbek7959
    @jennhrbek7959Күн бұрын

    Thank you very much my friend!!

  • @ritaceron7329
    @ritaceron73293 күн бұрын

    who’s here in 2024 will 😅

  • @ritaceron7329
    @ritaceron73293 күн бұрын

    here IAM here 2925

  • @tirig6346
    @tirig63464 күн бұрын

    Part 2 coming soon?

  • @aek12
    @aek124 күн бұрын

    Indian Scammers.

  • @aek12
    @aek124 күн бұрын

    Lunatics| That is fake

  • @reysawareness
    @reysawareness5 күн бұрын

    Grateful to have found your work! I’ve been immersed in Steiner for the last 6 years

  • @giuoco
    @giuoco6 күн бұрын

    This is like the next level of Indian phone telephone scammers. I love it

  • @user-hd2wg9ms4n
    @user-hd2wg9ms4n7 күн бұрын

    I admire you for delving into the concept of time and space through Bergson’s perspective. I want to share a novel field of study called noosology emerged in Japan. Although the English version of the website is still under development, you can visit there and read some articles kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZGF_t7CmiM2YZLA.htmlsi=zpnUiShwc4s9UnUD

  • @juankgonzalez6230
    @juankgonzalez623010 күн бұрын

    David you didn't have to spoil the whole ending like that. Especially when the chapters before refer to the European analyst as "God's spoilers"

  • @GigachadMMA69
    @GigachadMMA6911 күн бұрын

    JDE is the most interesting man on youtube

  • @knighterrant7212
    @knighterrant721214 күн бұрын

    Beautiful exposition. Thank you.

  • @Catholic-Perennialist
    @Catholic-Perennialist15 күн бұрын

    Excellent work!

  • @Neapoleone-Buonaparte
    @Neapoleone-Buonaparte16 күн бұрын

    A TERRIBLE AUDIO. TO HELL WITH THIS CHANNEL!

  • @Michaelmas68
    @Michaelmas6822 күн бұрын

    SEA level rise? 😷

  • @bonbon_nextlevel
    @bonbon_nextlevel25 күн бұрын

    John, just quick question. With the upcoming Pluto return on July 15th or 16th, when do you expect America's fortune to start to become better? In what year?

  • @deleteduser121
    @deleteduser12126 күн бұрын

    That celebrities more like Dead CIA agents. That's what celebrities are CIA agents who fake their deaths

  • @petermoore7796
    @petermoore779627 күн бұрын

    very excited about this. i recently stumbled on your channel because of your expert analysis on the crying of lot 49. i’ve always wanted to read moby dick and i’m happy to have a reason to give it a real try

  • @Clockwork.Lemon854
    @Clockwork.Lemon85428 күн бұрын

    Hi John, love your work as always. Have you seen the John Huston Film Adaption? Also Orson Welles did a legendary stage version of Moby Dick in London, which unfortunately was never recorder but stills of the production exist and they look incredible. Also what do you think about Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man & The Sea as a counterpart to Moby Dick if you have read it. Finally I've been dipping back into your work on cinema, one filmmaker I have never heard you talk about is Paul Thomas Anderson. I am curious particularly into what you think of There Will Be Blood & The Master. I love The Master although it's very slow and meanders. Some consider it a very subtle adaption of Thomas Pynchon's V because it's about a sailor coming home from WW2 and being drawn into a conspiracy. Another youtuber made a great video on it. I also re-watched There Will Be Blood recently and for me it is possibly a top 5 film of all time. A visual tone poem on the relationship between Capitalism & Religion at the turn of 19th/20th century America. Regards.

  • @elizabethquintero777
    @elizabethquintero777Ай бұрын

    Excerpt from "Arnold Toynbee, Who Charted Civilizations" in the New York Times: Rejecting “the dogma that life is just one damned thing after another,'” Mr. Toynbee argued that the end of history is the Kingdom of God and that history is “God revealing Himself.” He wrote about a dream he once had of himself. (The dream was in Latin, but it could well have been in Greek, for he dreamed fluently in these languages as well as in English.) In the vision, the historian saw himself holding on to crucifix above the altar of a Benedictine abbey in Yorkshire as a voice cried out, “Amplexus expecta [Cling and wait]!”

  • @8lostfox8
    @8lostfox8Ай бұрын

    Waiting for part 2

  • @DevastationMtrsports
    @DevastationMtrsportsАй бұрын

    Interesting review, who has seen Godzila Minus one?? I thought it was excellent.

  • @gnosis555
    @gnosis555Ай бұрын

    This book transformed my understanding of popular media, celebrity and social media. It was very fun to read too. Like reading Ballard or watching Cronenberg.

  • @JohnnyGolightly-wy9ff
    @JohnnyGolightly-wy9ffАй бұрын

    No it hasn't. tell me one thing you learned from it?

  • @deleteduser121
    @deleteduser121Ай бұрын

    Why does PLuto have the dog Pluto on it?

  • @Michael-17172
    @Michael-17172Ай бұрын

    Love this

  • @me_mo_ry
    @me_mo_ryАй бұрын

    Fascinating to hear about Gebser’s criticism(s) of Jung… did Jung have any thoughts on Gebser?

  • @ip-sum
    @ip-sumАй бұрын

    Years of academy training wasted!

  • @facilitiesmaintenance
    @facilitiesmaintenanceАй бұрын

    The first 627 pages were very difficult, but after that, it was OK.

  • @oddpersona22
    @oddpersona22Ай бұрын

    👍

  • @slov1098
    @slov1098Ай бұрын

    A bit late to reading Pynchon and watching these videos. I just randomly decided to just start reading Pynchon at V. and boy am I glad I did. You were right. You cannot just start at GR like everyone says. All of these are thematic sequels to each other. This is some of the best bit of knowledge that anyone has given me in my studies. I’m currently enrolled in a university and no professor has passed along wisdom such as this or anything else in these lecture videos. You were wise to make these sort of read alongs worth money for your college, my friend. This kind of work information is worth a fortune. Thank you for your hard work and your years of insights. (P.S. please do a lecture series for Mason & Dixon and Against the Day. I would be saddened to not have you along for the journey. I wouldn’t mind paying for it.)

  • @John-qi9cj
    @John-qi9cjАй бұрын

    JDE is the greatest living intellect. Thank you for your work sir

  • @mohammadataei689
    @mohammadataei689Ай бұрын

    any videos on slavoj žižek or alain badiou?

  • @j_r_junior
    @j_r_juniorАй бұрын

    Capitalism’s Court Jester

  • @mohammadataei689
    @mohammadataei689Ай бұрын

    @@j_r_junior what ?

  • @j_r_junior
    @j_r_juniorАй бұрын

    @@mohammadataei689zizek =

  • @eskybakzu712
    @eskybakzu712Ай бұрын

    Badiou cannot read Plato for the life of him and Zizek is often made fun of for writing the same book over and over and diverting attention to some weird film analysis instead of dealing with anything worthy

  • @mohammadataei689
    @mohammadataei689Ай бұрын

    ​​@@eskybakzu712thanks . do you have any recommendations?

  • @Fawn-hv7mx
    @Fawn-hv7mxАй бұрын

    Sure. And Sade's video of "Cherish the Day", released on 9-11-93 is nothing but a Sade video. Spare me.

  • @neo-filthyfrank1347
    @neo-filthyfrank1347Ай бұрын

    The bit about godzilla being a response to the atomic bomb/industrialization as opposed to the bomb itself is insightful, and I agree. However you're wrong about the 70s films as they're some of the most imaginative and hilarious of the films out there. In any case any series that's gone on for that long is inevitably going to radiate in tone and meaning.

  • @johnebert5627
    @johnebert5627Ай бұрын

    There's truth to that.

  • @DevastationMtrsports
    @DevastationMtrsportsАй бұрын

    Sure but hilarious is definitely far away from the original tone Ebert mentions.

  • @neo-filthyfrank1347
    @neo-filthyfrank1347Ай бұрын

    @@DevastationMtrsports lol nice 4th gen anyway idk it's still pretty funny sometimes

  • @oumod_
    @oumod_Ай бұрын

    Cool!

  • @bathcat3759
    @bathcat3759Ай бұрын

    Another great video, John. May have to pick up this course!

  • @TruSoleSeven
    @TruSoleSevenАй бұрын

    Great work as always, John. Would you ever consider making a video on William T. Vollmann?

  • @johndavidebert
    @johndavidebertАй бұрын

    Possibly. I remember who he was but I never read him. Is he good? What's his best book?

  • @williamgass9242
    @williamgass9242Ай бұрын

    The ice shirt is a good book

  • @johnebert5627
    @johnebert5627Ай бұрын

    @@williamgass9242 It looks pretty good. Hmm. Maybe, maybe. Thanks for the tip.

  • @TruSoleSeven
    @TruSoleSevenАй бұрын

    @@johndavidebert knowing that you love and admire Pynchon, I would STRONGLY recommend Vollmann. He’s underrated as hell. One of the great, encyclopedically learned PoMo writers. I’d start with You Bright and Risen Angels, but everything from his Seven Dreams series is also pure protein.

  • @eskybakzu712
    @eskybakzu712Ай бұрын

    @@johndavidebert His nonfiction \Rising Up and Rising Down: Some Thoughts on Violence, Freedom and Urgent Means\ (7 Vols) forced me to reconsider the idea of violence. He goes over many historical figures (His essays on Trotsky, de Sade and Lycurgus and Cortés are exemplary) and uses years of experience as a conflict-reporter in an attempt to understand or arrive at an "ethic of violence" and eventually what he calls a moral calculus. The seven volume set is unfortunately expensive and hard to find.

  • @gnosis555
    @gnosis555Ай бұрын

    Thank you John

  • @johnebert5627
    @johnebert5627Ай бұрын

    You're welcome!

  • @xherxhim3546
    @xherxhim3546Ай бұрын

    Incredible

  • @jtcornpone
    @jtcornponeАй бұрын

    excellent interpretation......in the next incarnation our guy really will destroy civilization and the monstrous species that unleashed the nuclear horror on the world

  • @oumod_
    @oumod_Ай бұрын

    Interesting I remember reading in the Pali Cannon that the Buddha talked about a past Buddha in an earlier epoch who taught his disciples his teachings through directly though transfer into their minds. But, left no physical or verbal teaching whatsoever so his dharma did not spread widely. I wonder if he was making reference to the same period as Steiner’s Atlantis.

  • @superpizzasauce
    @superpizzasauceАй бұрын

    Very rich. Nice to hear Mark Fisher mentioned.

  • @facilitiesmaintenance
    @facilitiesmaintenanceАй бұрын

    Extremely helpful! I'm devouring all free resources as I enter the Wake.

  • @smokymountainangoras
    @smokymountainangorasАй бұрын

    I believe you mean insemination* instead of ‘orga(ni)sm’ btw.

  • @johndavidebert
    @johndavidebertАй бұрын

    No I do not. When the virus is squirting its genes into a host cell, I can promise you that it is experiencing an orgasm, no matter what ridiculous thing "science" says.

  • @ip-sum
    @ip-sumАй бұрын

    JDE AND JB

  • @ip-sum
    @ip-sumАй бұрын

    BROOO

  • @jeffreykalb9752
    @jeffreykalb9752Ай бұрын

    Russia is NOT passionately religious. As one visiting several times from the U.S., not just the large cities, but the Motherland, I was shocked at its indifference to religion, which had largely been replaced by tribalism over the course of the U.S.S.R. It is today something like the corrupt confusion of Irish patriotism and Catholicism before the late 20th century... which has now all but disintegrated. Russia WILL become religious in the true sense, but it must suffer unspeakably first, more than in all its history.

  • @johndavidebert
    @johndavidebertАй бұрын

    Totally wrong. You obviously haven't read Spengler and you have no idea what you're talking about. Dostoyevski is pure mysticism through and through. So is Andrei Bely.

  • @bonbon_nextlevel
    @bonbon_nextlevelАй бұрын

    It's a very worrying development. Can I ask some quick questions, 3 related and 1 less related? I'd appreciate your input on at least some of them. 1. Why don't all countries go through a Pluto return chaos (e.g. Nubian Kingdom) 2. Does the fact that we are entering the Age of Aquarius have any impact on what the Pluto cycle actually does? 3. How do you suggest we deal with this and do you think it will spread over the world? 4. Why were Aztecs able to be atheistic (as described by some scholars), megalopolitan, philosophical, etc. but still maintain their birth rates despite all this? Spengler said that they were a young, virile and barbarous race (despite being the equivalent of Romans for their civilization) with an INSATIABLE Will to Power! 5. Do you think its possible to restore a decaying race's virility and youth by destroying all its history and giving it a more virile and barbarous religion?

  • @johnebert5627
    @johnebert5627Ай бұрын

    These are all good questions. I did research the Pluto returns for the Austro-Hungarian Empire but somehow I've misplaced my notes and can't find them. The astrologer Ray Grasse has written about the Pluto returns for both England and Rome and gotten similar results. It probably is universal. I don't know anything about the Nubian kingdom, but astrology is democratic, it applies universally, but is inflected locally as it depends on geographic longitude and latitude for each respective society. I'm not sure about the Age of Aquarius but I doubt that it will effect any of the Pluto returns. The way to deal with it is to just know that what's happening all around us isn't random, it's happening for a cosmic reason and therefore is happening because it MUST happen. The Aztecs do fit Spengler's model perfectly. As to birth rates, I would have to zero in on that and do some more research, which I may at some point. Hope this helps.

  • @bonbon_nextlevel
    @bonbon_nextlevelАй бұрын

    @@johnebert5627 Thank you Mr. Ebert, it's immensely helpful. I wish to avoid the negative effects of the Pluto so I wonder if there is some place in the world that will be safe. For Aztecs, my speculation is that because their metaphysics required blood (I learned this from you!), and therefore so did their rational-materialistic system of causality, they were constantly exposed to death and fear of dying and needed to get more people for sacrifices which made them militaristic and therefore in need to organize society to produce warriors and reproduce due to constant fear of death against other societies. I don't think it's repeatable for other high cultures. I would still like to get your thoughts on whether you think it's possible to restore a decaying race's virility and youth by destroying all its history and giving it a more virile and barbarous religion. I'm asking this because it seems that in Late Roman Empire, many seemed to have been quite sick of the decadence and decay of the megalopolis, but they ironically adopted another I think almost degenerate religion instead (Christianity for second religiousness) which didn't help them, but perhaps there was no choice anyway. Also I just want to tell you that KZread seems to be shadowbanning you. On both the latest video, and on this one, your replies are invisible and you have to go to "Sort by" on the video and change it to "Newest First" in order to see them at all. For your reply, I didn't get any notification, I had to manually check the video. Thank you again for all your insight!

  • @johnebert5627
    @johnebert5627Ай бұрын

    @@bonbon_nextlevel You're welcome!