Daily Philosophy

Daily Philosophy

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Do We Have a Soul?

Do We Have a Soul?

Who Was Aristotle?

Who Was Aristotle?

Channel intro

Channel intro

Islam in 10 minutes

Islam in 10 minutes

Is Football a Religion?

Is Football a Religion?

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  • @niblick616
    @niblick6164 күн бұрын

    Vague words in, vague words out.

  • @goldenraisins
    @goldenraisins7 күн бұрын

    I hope you finish this series! Super helpful

  • @wowtim62
    @wowtim6220 күн бұрын

    What I took away was look at what those people in the past could make or grow. But those people worked from before sunrise till sunset at least six days a week until they couldn't and they died how many people now even work overtime and are our lives so bad off. IQ score isn't everything especially if you aren't happy.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy19 күн бұрын

    We certainly have more free time, but are our lives happier overall? We mostly kill that free time watching TV or consuming social media, which does not make us happier or more fulfilled. In older times they did not have as much "free" time, but much of their "working" time was filled with meaningful, creative work, similar to what we would do today in a crafts class. Perhaps one doesn't need so much free time if one's time is filled with meaningful activity.

  • @ninjuhdelic
    @ninjuhdelic21 күн бұрын

    In my experience 30s, people are smarter than ever, we’re just more diverse with our interests. I no way is memorizing Ancient Greek important to survival, and mastering space time to escape the heat death of the universe. I’m more focused on saving humans and making us a multiversal species. Let’s invent time machines first, then living in that Greek era would do way more for your Greek than studying it in the current era

  • @incedofortis
    @incedofortis21 күн бұрын

    As usual okham razor, what happen during those years. Huge migration from midlle East and afrika. Ta da, explained, of course to be along new party ideology lines the only explanation is that white racis getting dumber

  • @flipalippeentown9361
    @flipalippeentown936122 күн бұрын

    I'm just about to graduate from university (double degree in physics and anthropology), and Im glad i got my education now and not later. This year a lot of the specialty courses in both disciples were cut in favor of a smaller curriculum only focusing on "required" subjects. This meant cutting classes like general relativity, advanced atrophysics, and anthropology special studies. It was a decision that came from the highest levels in the university and none of the students or faculty were happy about it.

  • @antonystringfellow5152
    @antonystringfellow515222 күн бұрын

    That sounds terrible! Especially in the current environment, where most information young people are viewing comes mainly from unregulated and often anonymous sources, containing all kinds of factual inaccuracies, sometimes intentionally. I don't think people appreciate how fragile civilization is. When a society rejects reality, it's on an unsustainable path.

  • @simonblynch
    @simonblynch22 күн бұрын

    Nice video, but too much time taken up with IQ figures (with little attention to the problems with that measure)... Learning ancient Greek or Latin are not definitive signs of intelligence. I think you are over estimating previous students. People have always been dumb, AI just makes it easier to get away with it. Writing a business letter is not a skill. Majority of output from academia in the last 50 years could come from AI (may have less spelling and grammar mistakes and make more sense if so). Because business letters and mediocre academic papers have no value. 😢 Writing something which makes real sense is a skill which cannot easily be replaced by AI. In the same way, it will take a while for AI to be able to tell the difference between trash and value. That is our task, not worrying about what has been lost, or what has changed.

  • @Theodolphe
    @Theodolphe22 күн бұрын

    The great solar flare that will fry all the electronics on earth is humanity's only hope. Joke aside, I've already been trying to learn to do things myself, not because I can't afford those things, but because consumer goods are often low quality. But I too am addicted to my smartphone. In my case, i tend to use the internet as a distraction to manage stress. It's only my personal observation, but the previous generation seems to be better able to manage stress than me. Is a lowered ability to manage chronic stress also a possible factor to explain the drop in IQ and motivation ? I haven't done any research, but i've seen a video about the drop of testosterone levels in men. Maybe there is a link. If I had the motivation, I'd read some papers and learn something. Maybe some day :) By the way, this video wouldn't have been better had you used a narrator. Your face and your voice is also relevant information. I like seeing and hearing the actual human behind the thoughts, it makes more sense.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy19 күн бұрын

    I wonder if the problem with managing stress today has to do with the fact that we don't have any stress-free times in our lives any more. When I grew up, there were no phones, no Internet, and TV had two channels. When there wasn't anything to do, one just did... nothing. As kids, we spent endless time daydreaming, looking out the window, playing with other kids, or reading. In my late middle age, I can still spend an afternoon happily doing nothing at all, just sitting on a sofa and looking out a window. I suspecting that people who grow up with smartphones and social media never have this stress-free experience of empty, relaxing time. Social media are inherently stressful, engaging the viewer in constant scrolling and engagement, in the constant chase of confirmation, likes etc. How can people whose whole lives, including their free time, are full of stress, learn to manage stress?

  • @goldenemperor888
    @goldenemperor88823 күн бұрын

    Is it morally right? It's a human right. Bottom line, like it or not it's just that simple.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy23 күн бұрын

    Thank you for your comment, but I don't quite understand what you mean. Are you saying that prostitution a human right? For whom?

  • @goldenemperor888
    @goldenemperor88823 күн бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy for both the seller of the service and the person buying, absolutely. The terms of one's consent shouldn't be dictated by society or the state.

  • @haman0180
    @haman018024 күн бұрын

    Interesting subject and well researched, but please let someone else do the talking. I would rather listen to nails on a chalkboard than hear you speak. It's way too slow, you have a pretty heavy accent and you use very akward breaks in your speech.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy23 күн бұрын

    Hi, and thank you for your comment! I really appreciate it when comments are honest and point out real issues with the videos. Unfortunately, the problem is not easy to solve. First, it's difficult to find "someone else to do the talking." Who would do this? Should I pay a presenter? This I cannot do, as all my videos currently bring in less than 10 USD each month, together. And my friends and family are, naturally, the same kind of foreigner that I am, so there are no native English speakers among them either. I could use AI, I guess, but then it would have to be a faceless video with AI narration, and this would be an entirely different thing, and KZread is already swamped with those. Despite my bad delivery, I believe that there is a value in connecting in person with a creator, and I would not want to give that up and replace it with AI. That said, I am constantly trying to improve, particularly in the areas you mentioned. I'm already recording endless takes of the same sentence to get the intonation sound as natural as possible and the pauses removed. I've recently changed microphones to improve the quality of the recording itself. And I think I'm improving somewhat over time, although there is still a long way to go. I'm also trying to improve (reduce) my accent, but since I'm now almost sixty, it takes time to change one's speech patterns. So I don't really see what I could do to solve the problem immediately, without going the AI route. I'll keep practicing and hope that eventually my videos will be less painful to listen to. Thanks!

  • @MaDoareNPula
    @MaDoareNPula23 күн бұрын

    ​@@dailyphilosophy personally i find the slower pace of the videos refreshing. Content is getting too fast, too focused on getting our attention just for the sake of it. Also i love the politeness and comprehensiveness of the answer to a rather rude comment. As for the original commenter, maybe look inwards and try to improve your "foreign accent understanding" skills, man's speaking as clearly as he is coherently

  • @harshjoshi1364
    @harshjoshi136424 күн бұрын

    Thank you for this reflection and video.. As a lecturer myself I've observed many young people showing lack of sensitivity or appreciation for the great people/thoughts/things of the time they're not in.. mentions of the likes of Tolstoy, Bach, Kllimt..they seem to hit the walls around them and bounce back. Traveling - visiting places, like many other things, is now done more for the sake of the idea of doing it than to do it out of the sheer want or love for it. And the sum of all this is reflected in the kinds of literature, music, movies, inventions, debates we've seen in the last couple of decades. Sounds like ranting, all this.. but the concerns are not out of place or exaggerated either. Loved the absence of music or sounds in your video by the way. Thanks again for your effort and thoughts.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy23 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much for that! About the music, it's funny because I actually intended to add sound effects and music, but we were on the way to catch a plane for the holidays two days ago and I could just managed to finish the upload before the taxi came to get us to the airport. That's the reason the video does not have any sound effects :) I was feeling bad about it, to put up such a raw and unfinished video, and so I'm particularly pleased that your comment now makes me look like a considerate creator rather than what I am, a hack who was too slow to get his video done in time. But I'll keep this in mind for the future and perhaps cut down on the sounds and music generally. I always thought that they improved the emotional experience and the immersion of the viewer in the video, although I know that they can be troublesome for people with hearing difficulties. About the young people problem, I'm always reluctant to blame them. They really don't have a choice - it's society that raises them in this way, their parents, schools, media -- and these are the things that *we*, the older generations, are supposed to control. I always feel that it's my generation that got things wrong. It was us who developed the Internet as it is now, it was us who ignored climate change and microplastics for decades, it was us who allowed this rampant capitalism to take over... and so on. The question is now, how to fix all that?

  • @harshjoshi1364
    @harshjoshi136423 күн бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy Contrary to what's said in the other comment, I find your way of presenting and speech very clear. But guess that differs from person to person. The lack of sound effects or score makes the whole thing more genuine.. like say the Star Talk channel.. podcast-like.. but you'll know better.. Love your optimism and kindness on the young people issue. I'm an 86-born and the social/behavioural changes I've observed are to me rather sudden and drastic, and guess hence the lack of optimism. But maybe I'll have a better understanding in time..

  • @christerbostroem
    @christerbostroem22 күн бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy I'll blame media, though I guess it's really the brain itself that is at fault. Growing up in the 90's, as a kid, I didn't really watch a lot of kids shows, I loved watching Discovery channel and Animal Planet. They used to do a lot of interesting documentaries from around the world, how things were done among tribal farmers who moved around every year and a lot more. In the 8th grade, we had a verbal test that I hadn't studied for, specifically about tribes, including tribal farmers that move around each year. I got a 4 (out of 6) without reading anything about the topic in school, just from watching Discovery channel and Animal Planet. That said, the format I grew up with isn't "entertaining" enough, people would rather watch quick and funny stuff, it does after all feel good to laugh. There is not enough money in educational content anymore, and why would the media houses invest in quality content that no one watches? Even with interesting areas (such as the mesoamerican pyramids) there's usually some quest to verify some conspiracy theory or a myth, or for good measure, make it about aliens... Predictable profit decides where media invests their money, and our brains enjoy chemicals that make us feel good quickly.

  • @antonystringfellow5152
    @antonystringfellow515222 күн бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy A lot of information and well presented, being clear and easy to follow. I agree with @harshjoshi1364 about the lack of music and sound effects. Although it's not how you wanted to present the video, I found it works very well. With no such distractions, my mind can easily focus not only on what you're saying but also my own thoughts and experiences, simultaneously. It really helps to focus on the subject (without the emotions). I think we automatically lose a few IQ points whenever our emotions kick in and the stronger the emotion, the more points we lose. Please keep up the good work!

  • @sharpiepenfinepoint
    @sharpiepenfinepoint24 күн бұрын

    Do you think if we got rid of grading, students would be more engaged to the concept of writing something meaningful to the subject ? I guess it would only work if they were somewhat passionate about it. How do you make the subject more exciting?

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy23 күн бұрын

    I think that this is a very difficult question to answer. Studies seem to support that intrinsic motivation, that is, working to solve a problem rather than to get a grade, is better for learning. But I don't think that one lecturer or teacher can do that alone, if the rest of the young people's lives are lived chasing grades (or other similar tokens of social approval). One cannot fight this system alone. If a whole school decided to abolish grades (or at least reduce their weight) or if a university tried to emphasise self-motivated learning instead of teaching to the exam, then perhaps it might work. There are some institutions (Montessori schools or the old Summerhill experiment come to mind) which have tried this. Depending on how you evaluate the results, some people see them as successful, others as failures. The problem is that after school, these same people will go on to work in competitive job markets, where again they will be subject to numerical performance evaluations, only now they will be unprepared to succeed in those. Perhaps the creator economy might offer a way out of this competitive school-workplace cage life? It's also competitive, but at least it focuses on actual productivity and results rather than empty performance numbers. Who knows. Thank you for your comment!

  • @sebastianradlmeier8922
    @sebastianradlmeier892222 күн бұрын

    If we got rid of grades, we'd leave learning to the own kid's choice. And we all know what choices children make. Let them chose between ice cream and math homework, you already know what's gonna happen. Humans are not born civilized, curious and edcuated. No grading would simply accelerate the intelligence decline. You are right about passion. And that's precisely why the no-grades idea doesn't work. Passion in some sense is an ability you aquire. You can only passionate about subjects you've already built some competence around. In order to gain such competence, you need to go through boring, mundane studying no one wants. How do you make kids go through such boring tasks? You punish or reward them with grades. No grades, no competence, no passion. With respect to Montessori schools: In my experience they fail. Anytime I have met someone from Montessori, they joke about how they don't do learn anything in those schools, how it's a complete joke. I had classmates, who had come to us from Montessori. They said it's completely different. They actually were somewhat happy that now, attending a normal school, they could learn something.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy19 күн бұрын

    I've heard similar stories. But it's sad, isn't it, that we need to be forced with grades and threats to learn. The basic idea of Montessori was that children are naturally curious and eager to learn. Is this wrong, or is it that today's children in particular have lost their natural curiosity, perhaps due to the overuse of smartphones, computer games etc?

  • @sharpiepenfinepoint
    @sharpiepenfinepoint6 күн бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy I think if the knowledge that was allowed was meaningful and productive no matter the subject matter could be beneficial to learn. SOMEONE has to study ice cream, otherwise you wouldn’t have good ice cream. SOMEONE has to study math, because we need math in life. I enjoyed going to a Montessori school for my 6th grade year, being able to use your own time to get the work done was great. We still had lectures, but we were allowed to go at our own pace and if we needed help we could ask. I would love an educational system where all world knowledge is available to students, like what we see on KZread. You might think learning about “how ants farm fungus” or “how to weave a 15th century basket” is useless information, but I happen to think otherwise. Knowledge comes from different perspectives, you gotta look or experiment outside the box to evolve. Definitely still required to learn basics, and definitely still required to practice writing. But I think learning other “useless” information should be okay too. As long as they’re spending their time productively learning. Teach cooking, cleaning, how to use tools, how to budget, taking care of plants and animals, childcare, etc. If the student wants to specialize in something they like, then give them ALL the resources. Let them learn as much as they can.. But I digress, I love to learn.. some people dont. Some people do need that extra push, but if the push is towards their special interests you’ll find that it’s easier to push.

  • @PixPunxel
    @PixPunxel25 күн бұрын

    Great video again 👍

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy25 күн бұрын

    @@PixPunxel Great comment again! 👍

  • @PixPunxel
    @PixPunxel24 күн бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy Hehe. Sorry it was low effort. But I think you said all that was needed to be said 😄

  • @MAC12345181
    @MAC1234518126 күн бұрын

    What a great video Dr. Matthias! Thank you for all the effort you put into your videos. I'd have loved to have attended to philosophy classes like yours when I was in highschool or college, it would have made my journey easier in grad school 😅. Your explanation between the two types of monisms (material and immaterial) and the dualism between soul and body made me remember Dr. David Hoffman's Interface Theory of Perception. Would Dr. Hoffman's position be similar to that of Berkeley then, but with an actual attempt to come up with a way to prove, mathematically first, experimentally later, the fundamental existence of a non material reality that gives rise to what we perceive as our physical world? I just discovered his theory recently, so I'm not sure whether or not that's the case.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy25 күн бұрын

    Sorry for the late reply and thank you so much for your kind words! I'm traveling right now, so I cannot immediately answer you on the Interface theory, but I'll do that within the next few days. Thanks!

  • @psterud
    @psterudАй бұрын

    Fascinating. While I appreciate efficiency, I very much decry our world becoming modular, for then it loses its capacity for uniqueness and character and charm. The majority of people are themselves modular without being aware of it, working in jobs in which they are easily replaceable, wearing the same clothes and driving the same cars and eating the same food, etc., as most others. Worse, they yearn for it. Still worse, they've been indoctrinated from an early age to yearn for it by opportunists who are making big money from this modularity, this manufactured yearning to conform. That said, I would submit that this trait in humans, that the majority are conformists, is of biological necessity, since that majority is the glue that holds society together. They're the ones doing the majority of the actual work, and doing the majority of the consuming, and making the majority of the babies, to keep the system running. In that sense we are merely perpetuating our pre-existing humanity.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophyАй бұрын

    I agree with everything you say. Erich Fromm, by the the way, about whom I made a video recently, says something very similar. But he thinks that it is industrial capitalism that encourages conformity. If we have these factories that churn out thousands of identical pieces of clothing every hour, then we must also have thousands of customers who are all willing to wear the exact same clothes. And the same applies to every mass-produced item. Of course, we must admit that mass-production has also brought unparalleled material wealth to most citizens of industrialised societies. Even the poor today have vastly better access to material goods than, say, the poor of the middle ages. So I'm not sure that we would want to give that up. What do you think?

  • @psterud
    @psterudАй бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy I like Fromm, the little I know so far. While I would agree that industrial capitalism encourages conformity, I would go a little further and opine that industrial capitalism caters to our most fundamental and primitive traits as social animals. Among these traits is the need for a larger share of our population to conform in order to have social cohesion, thus ensuring our continued survival and success. Mass non-conformity would destroy our species. Therefore, one could, with a straight face, say that one's opinion about conformity correlates with one's opinion regarding whether or not humans deserve to exist. Either way, industrial capitalism, like everything else, has a limited lifespan. Some say it's currently in the winter of its life. If that's true and it goes away, we'll still finagle a new way for the majority of us to conform, and we'll insist we had a choice in the matter.

  • @investthestockpile
    @investthestockpileАй бұрын

    Trying to use my chat-GPT-created resume to impress my employers who are reading my resume with chat-GPT.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophyАй бұрын

    And your prospective employers probably are using ChatGPT to scan the job applications... So in the end it's robots talking to robots to decide on your future. Isn't this scary?

  • @madhusudan
    @madhusudanАй бұрын

    Institutions are the death of creativity. Even when designed with the best intentions to promote free thought, over time the nature of an institution takes control.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophyАй бұрын

    I agree - but can we do without institutions? For example, how could a society make sure that dangerous jobs like doctors and pilots are done by people who have the relevant education and experience if there weren't any institutions in charge of delivering this education?

  • @madhusudan
    @madhusudanАй бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy First, let me thank you for this video. You articulate amorphous feelings/ideas that motivate me, but that I was unable to clarify because I'm not very self-aware. I work for a university as a cog despite being someone who has always fallen afoul of institutions. Anyhow, I've thought about your questions and I suppose it's a choice of the lesser evil, but those with independent unbroken spirits who also possess some degree of competence above average (natural aristocracy?) should prefer fewer institutional guarantees and greater onus on bearing personal responsibility for vetting those professions through other means. We can see one example of the unmitigated failure of an institution in the recent virus hysteria, so we know that even the guarantees themselves are not always reliable. I'm curious about your own opinion on the questions you posed if you're not too busy.

  • @hughmuir3063
    @hughmuir3063Ай бұрын

    What is wrong with marking the papers ? Are you going to have AI teaching next ?

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophyАй бұрын

    Just to be clear: I'm not advocating to use AI for that. But I think the thought is that it would improve the efficiency of the marking (most years I'm making hundreds of exams over Christmas) and that it would also make sure that grades given by different instructors are really comparable and fair. This is always a problem with human instructors who may have very different standards and expectations when marking a piece of student work.

  • @PixPunxel
    @PixPunxelАй бұрын

    Very completely right. As it was so nicely put in "Player Piano" by Kurt Vonnegut. Automatisation, machines, AI will not be our slaves, we will be slaves of theirs.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophyАй бұрын

    Vonnegut said many wonderful things. I'm just reading Cat's Cradle again. It's all so true about the craziness of human nature. Unfortunately, he isn't much read today outside the scifi world...

  • @PixPunxel
    @PixPunxelАй бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy “Tiger got to hunt, bird got to fly; Man got to sit and wonder 'why, why, why?' Tiger got to sleep, bird got to land; Man got to tell himself he understand.” Cat Cradle is my favorite Vonnegut novel, indeed. And yes, I completely agree - and regardless people need to read more :)

  • @marcosfreijeiro8763
    @marcosfreijeiro8763Ай бұрын

    Great thought provoking content, love this content. I'm sorry I don't always have something great to say other than I like very much this channel. As always thank you very much

  • @vladfromoslo2518
    @vladfromoslo2518Ай бұрын

    Academia is the problem, not a solution....keeping the chair safe, makes academics passive and corrupt, supporting wrong ideas and not having the right solution....you guys are just useless, unless you end up in Tavistoc or some other intelligence....that's why they breed you for actually and as afraid dogs you just tail down and band over...there you go....

  • @jackiecatterwell8719
    @jackiecatterwell8719Ай бұрын

    Excellent, as always. Several random thoughts. Plato's universal and human soul in the Timaeus are triadic. an intermediate combination of mind-related number and body related energy and changes in it. The two are interdependent though not equal in value or power. Consciousness and the processing brain also seem to be interdependent on some views. The brain receives variable signals and converts them to steady, reliable, representations of the world. So, some say, colours are made in the mind - light comes from objects, is received by eye receptors, and the brain makes decisions on what colour shade is actually seen. So it takes signals and converts them into best guesses based on experiences. Colours also depend on the shapes we see. So, it is quite like an info-processing machine but the output is not always the same but depends on the experiencer. Other interesting recent ideas I have heard are does the universe think and do we need to start from the inside of the universe and work outwards to understand things, which I believe means start from the changing quantum state and particles, the smaller, and gradually work out to the bigger. So, based on this, could the soul be quantum information?? Anyway, I look forward to your next post as, being a Platonist, I love anything about the nature of soul, body, and their relationship!😀

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophyАй бұрын

    Thank you so much for this and your kind words! Unfortunately, I don't (yet) know much about Plato's ideas about the soul -- I will look into it. About the colours, there are many examples for how our optical system can be cheated to perceive colours differently. There was, I think, something about a blue/golden dress on the Internet (you can google it) that shows how differently the same photograph can be perceived. Also, when you look at a coloured spot and then quickly away, you see the complementary colour as a ghost image etc. So it's truly as you say that our perception is to some extent constructed by the brain. About quantum states I don't understand much, unfortunately. I wish I had been paying more attention to physics when I had the opportunity. Now it's too late, I guess. But I've also heard this theory that consciousness can be seen as a fundamental feature of the universe. This would be interesting to explore in a future video. Thanks again!

  • @robertlight5227
    @robertlight5227Ай бұрын

    When the music starts the baloney begins.

  • @MrRational59
    @MrRational59Ай бұрын

    Im a materialist guy.

  • @tonievecch5235
    @tonievecch5235Ай бұрын

    Excellent

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophyАй бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @thestandupphilosophers
    @thestandupphilosophersАй бұрын

    I'm convinced that I'd previously posted a comment on this video, but nevermind, I really enjoyed. I highly recommend the works of Carl Jung and Bernardo Kastrup who wrote a book on the Metaphysics of Carl Jung, highly recommended reading.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophyАй бұрын

    Thank you! I'll get that book!

  • @andrewcothran8377
    @andrewcothran8377Ай бұрын

    Are we all God . God i hope not 😅

  • @KanielD
    @KanielDАй бұрын

    We’re all cyborgs now

  • @AlmostEthical
    @AlmostEthicalАй бұрын

    That's my first thought - it feels like *this*. We stare at screens for hours, pressing buttons and calling and responding to algorithms. We carry around a small device at all times, without which we would be screwed. If the electricity went off, most of us would be screwed. Yes, the tech is not implanted ... physically ... but that will only be a matter of time. We are early stage borgs. If Neanderthals met us moderns, we'd give them uncanny valley vibes.

  • @tartertoot7843
    @tartertoot7843Ай бұрын

    Very good content. Question, i remeber hearing about a case where a person had an implant very similar to the device that allows the person to hear color. From what i remember though is that it was installed on a person that was fully blind, and the way it transmitted information was through vibrations perpetrated through his skull. Is this the same person or a different one?

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophyАй бұрын

    Thank you for your kind comment! About the implants, there is a lot of research going on right now on assistive devices for the blind. This includes both devices that transform images into sound and implants that directly stimulate the visual areas of the brain, allowing the patient to actually see something like flashes of light that correspond to things in the environment. I am not sure which particular case you mean, but you can find much research online, for example: www.tue.nl/en/news-and-events/news-overview/04-05-2022-allowing-blind-people-to-see-again-with-a-wireless-implant www.technologyreview.com/2020/02/06/844908/a-new-implant-for-blind-people-jacks-directly-into-the-brain/ www.npr.org/2021/10/23/1048699230/scientists-used-a-tiny-brain-implant-to-help-a-blind-teacher-see-letters-again www.seeingwithsound.com/ The last one really looks like something out of Star Trek TNG :) Let's hope that humans will use these technologies for healing rather than (once again) to create weapons of war and new means of control and domination of others.

  • @user-dv5sn2xv2y
    @user-dv5sn2xv2y2 ай бұрын

    Atheism is the same thought of Greece, Rome, China, France, Britain, Africa, Asia, the Australia, Democratic Party, Communist Party, Nazis, Labor Party, German SPD, and HAMAS, and it is the cause of war, may LORD has mercy on people.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophyАй бұрын

    So is anyone left who finds your approval?

  • @user-dv5sn2xv2y
    @user-dv5sn2xv2yАй бұрын

    ​@@dailyphilosophy From the philosophy principles of Descartes, the planetary physics theories and mathematical formulas of Copernicus and Kepler, Newton's theory of universal gravitation, to Heisenberg's philosophy of quantum theory, we know that Ten Commandments are eternal moral laws; physical-chemical laws are part of the scientific knowledge that determined by LORD. So philosophy scholars should be humble before LORD, confess sin and repent to LORD, lest they teach more people to be Democrats, Nazis, and Communists.

  • @smileycourtney5643
    @smileycourtney56432 ай бұрын

    What about ownership? Most of the discussion applies to public funded monuments, but what about private property? If I fly a Ukranian flag in my yard, that I bought, and someone of Russian ancestry drives by and is offended, do they have the right to come onto my land and tear down the flag? Also, the importance of history is a two-edged sword. Yes, heroes who did memorable things also had flaws - they too were human. Is this not something worth remembering, especially from a philosophical perspective?

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    Thank you for pointing out these additional issues! You are right that there are many other points worth discussing. Here we focused on public monuments because in this case, every citizen can claim to have a right to be involved in their choice. With private displays, this is not the case. In your example, the passing Russian person does not have a claim to regulate what you do in your yard. But when your local council puts up a Ukrainian flag on a public square, the same Russian person could reasonably object (assuming they are a citizen of that place, pay taxes and so on). Your point about the flawed historical persons is also very relevant. As you say, it is human to be flawed. But of course, we don't want to put up monuments to flawed people per se -- this would glorify bad behaviour, and this is generally not what we want as a society. We don't put up monuments to thieves, murderers and other flawed people. But then, even the "best" among us can be flawed, and historical "greatness" is often the direct result of these flaws. If Napoleon had been more considerate and Stoic, he might not have become the Napoleon we know. If Mother Teresa had been more compomising about her faith, she might not have achieved what she did. And so on. So it's all quite difficult to sort out. The interview did not aim to give the final answers, just to provide some points to think about -- like all philosophy. In the end, every one of us must arrive at their own conclusions. Thanks again!

  • @smileycourtney5643
    @smileycourtney56432 ай бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy I see no difference-in-kind between Issis defacing / destroying Persian monuments and students defacing / destroying Confederate monuments. Every moralistic justification I hear smacks of post-hoc rationalization based subjective / temporal viewpoints. It is disingenuous, even societal self-delusional to take one particular, narrow, and unaccommodating view of what those before us thought / did - something which your guest alluded to. For a less-politicized example; tour a museum of Pompe - you will see none of the ubiquitous street lamps that were there two thousand years ago. They are all locked away from public view, because they are of the Roman good luck image of a phallus. Something we find offensive today. Yet, can we say we honestly study the past if we are selective about what we study?

  • @artemiuselani
    @artemiuselani2 ай бұрын

    I think as with the rest of our reality, we create narratives or stories to understand things. This applies to things that are real and we know to be observable or tangible in a way that fiction is not. We equally are able to follow and relate to narratives even when we know they are fiction. Humans evolved to have mirror neurons that allow us to feel and respond to that we are not directly experiencing. This allows us to learn from other people 's experiences, as well as to have feelings about experiences that are not directly our own. We can see this when being told about the death of a relative, despite not observing the deceased ourselves. This still elicits an emotional response, and if one were to be told that the relative were not in fact dead we would then process that information and that narrative and adjust our emotions accordingly.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your comment! I agree with everything you say, it's just so upsetting for philosophers to have to admit that we are much less rational than we think we are. Because, in the final consequence, the talk of mirror neurons and us reacting via these mechanisms, means that our behaviour is not controlled, as Kant would have wanted, by our autonomy and rationality, but by some basic biological process that probably predates even the development of our higher brain functions. I do believe that this is the case, but it kind of destroys any hopes that we might be able to organise our societies in rational ways, create rational legislation and so on. On the other hand, if compassion is biologically programmed into our nervous systems, then perhaps this is a good thing too, a guardrail against the excesses of possibly cruel rational conclusions (eg what utilitarianism sometimes offers). But, looking for example at Ukraine and Palestine, the mirror neurons don't always seem to work that reliably either. Thanks!

  • @frederickanderson1860
    @frederickanderson18602 ай бұрын

    0:46 the greek for God is theos, rearrange the letter's you have ethos.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    That's a nice idea, but unfortunately wouldn't actually work in Greek, where it's θεός and ήθος (one with epsilon, the other with eta).

  • @frederickanderson1860
    @frederickanderson18602 ай бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy true but if u do change the letters it does spell ethos theos, and ethos could denote his character. Like in poetry the 2 words would rhyme agreed

  • @psterud
    @psterud2 ай бұрын

    Fascinating. I'm an artist and an observer surrounded by materialists who would rather have nice disposable things than know how to see the world around them. It really bothers me, this requirement to have, have, have with no limit, because it is so destructive, so transient, so blind, so poor. I have to wonder which philosopher saw this potential rot in humans first. My guess would be a Hindu, long before the Greeks.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    In earlier times, when people were struggling to survive and material goods were scarce, it is understandable that humans developed a preference for material security which, among other things, suggests accumulating stuff that could be useful or life-saving in the future. So I wouldn't necessarily blame the ancients. It is only in recent decades and in affluent places that capitalism has created this empty and meaningless race to own more things, although nobody's survival is dependent on them today. Unfortunately, I don't know much about Hindu philosophy, but among the Greeks, Epicurus comes to mind. But probably, as you say, there were earlier critics of meaningless hoarding. Thank you for your comment!

  • @psterud
    @psterud2 ай бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy It wouldn't surprise me if hoarding and greed have been present with us for our entire existence and beyond. Even some [other] animals exhibit these qualities. Yes, seems to be related to instances of a combination of excess and fear. Doomsday Preppers are a poignant example of this. Or the Great Depression grannies with overflowing pantries. I ordered a copy of Fromm's first book on having and being. Thank you for the video.

  • @jackiecatterwell8719
    @jackiecatterwell87192 ай бұрын

    Very informative and beautifully presented, as usual. I agree with the conclusion, and most of the comments. I have read the Hesse, Castaneda, and art of motorcycle books and they both stimulated my imagination and an interest in further exploring their subjects and fields for myself. I found them enriching and expanding rather than impoverishing and. restrictive. In addition, within the cultures they describe I am sure there are many different interpretations/understandings of what is supposed to be culturally appropriated.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    Thank you, Jackie! That's interesting what you said there at the end: perhaps we're wrong to even be judging cultural appropriation with a rigid set of criteria derived from contemporary US ethics. Perhaps we should indeed look more at how the cultures we're taking content from would judge the act of taking according to their own moral standards. Thanks!

  • @avethebraves2727
    @avethebraves27272 ай бұрын

    Like 45. Very informative and beautiful video. New subscriber please stay in touch 😊

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @starglitter3341
    @starglitter33412 ай бұрын

    Excellent questions! New Subscriber! Please stay connected! 🕊

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much!

  • @Sweetie-zf3ss
    @Sweetie-zf3ss2 ай бұрын

    Absolutely not ghost of taismia was praised by Japanese developers and they said that it was a game they should have made . If we all stuck to our own cultures it would be a stale world indeed. But what always amazes me with this woke mob is that they can appropriate all they want but if we do it’s the end of the world an were racist . I’ve literally seen vids where someone has bought a Chinese style dress from a seller that was Chinese themselves plus the dress was made in china shipped here to be sold to anyone that has the wonga 💰 and some idiot who’s not even Chinese is telling them they have to do research into the culture and that their racist 0:11 sod that malarkey . Now what would these fools say if I said that anyone black can’t have access to anything invented by the west or east…. I’d be strung up it’s just double standards ❤️

  • @billyo3850
    @billyo38502 ай бұрын

    Promo>SM 💃

  • @smileycourtney5643
    @smileycourtney56432 ай бұрын

    If I marry someone of a different culture / race, and we have a child, then my offspring has genes that are NOT mine. Could I make any claim to that culture? Human genetics are, in a way, like human culture - while endlessly variable, they also belong to all of humanity. The species is richer for the many expressions. Pretending to be another culture - like those recently who have profited from pretending to be of a different ethnicity, is morally wrong. But so is pretending to be a licensed contractor and taking advantage of people who hire you. Deception is often morally wrong, but because it is deception, not because it is cultural appropriation. But please, let me enjoy my taco without being accused of cultural appropriation.

  • @CaseyWadeLaForte
    @CaseyWadeLaForte2 ай бұрын

    How about I do whatever I want to do and you mind your own business.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    As a philosopher, this *is* my business! 😂

  • @jdlcdn
    @jdlcdn2 ай бұрын

    The just man is the happy man. Plato

  • @charlescassier3199
    @charlescassier31992 ай бұрын

    I never understood the whole virtue signaling that is cultural appropriation denunciation. From my point of view it is only toxic to denounce cultural appropriation. First of all it's premise is that geography and ethnic can be separated and enclosed witch share way too many similarities with the premises of all the racist and nationalism ideas. Secondly it assumes that everyone from the same ethnic and geographic origin share the same culture and that those cultures are immovables. That's plain stupid as I don't think I share most of my culture with my great grand parents or even half of my country for what matters. Social background will also play a lot in once culture. And assuming that one belong to a culture is kinda racism. Third culture evolve all the time and prosper/adapt to new world and morales by adding new views, members and taking from other cultures. That even the whole premise of a melting pot culture. Saying that let say Chinese culture should be reserved to Chinese (and please find me a non xenophobic/racist definition of what Chinese are in a cultural sense) has the pervert effect of slowing Chinese cultural influence and growth. From my point of view people acknowledging and adopting foreign culture is just a heathy thing to appen for this culture and for humanity as a whole.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this great comment! I absolutely agree with you that the topic is very complex, and you have many valid points. Sharing culture on equal terms and motivated by love for that culture is one thing. But if you look at the case of Castaneda, discussed in the video, who took cultural bits and pieces from a small tribe and made millions selling books about these topics, without giving anything back to that tribe, doesn't this look a bit more shady? Maybe we shouldn't give it a special name, like "cultural appropriation", but just call such cases "commercial exploitation" and exempt other cases that reuse or adapt cultural content in good faith and without commercial motives. One could make another whole video about these questions! Thanks!

  • @charlescassier3199
    @charlescassier31992 ай бұрын

    @@dailyphilosophy I would agree on the more shady aspect of those case that you describe. But for me it looks like those case fall into those category because of there deceptive nature more than because of their "cultural appropriation" element. Would Castaneda as preface his book with, this is a fiction inspired by my view and understanding of this tribe, the whole discussion would be way different. Because one is allowed to reflex and share his reflection regarding a foreign culture.

  • @stevenrenfro5064
    @stevenrenfro50642 ай бұрын

    I'm so glad youtube finally recommends smaller channels. I get to discover gems like this.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for your kind comment! If you know others who might be interested, you can help the channel get more visibility by sharing the videos you like. Thanks again!

  • @sixfigureskibum
    @sixfigureskibum2 ай бұрын

    Devolution? Isolationism? Or progression and foward development? The book Sidartha has opened the doors of perception in western materialists. Making the world a better place. Here you are apropriating the value it created for your own. Crazy how you became the very thing you are attacking . None of this has any real benifit to anyone but you 😂

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your comment! An academic discussion is not appropriation, and I don't quite understand what you mean with this video having "real benefit to me". It cost me a week of my life to make, and it will earn me less than one US dollar this month. Education has a value for the community, not for the creator. Things change, of course, if one is Mr Beast, but you're certainly overestimating the value of these videos to small creators. It's a work of love, not something we do for any tangible benefit.

  • @dashlamb9318
    @dashlamb93182 ай бұрын

    I can agree with the analysis, but products of the imagination are free to those with an imagination. We should always have the freedom to dream and imagine.

  • @martindiaries
    @martindiaries2 ай бұрын

    Great topic! For me Cultural appropriation seems like a very Western, mostly US thing. It can't exists here in the Balkans or in China. Is baklava turkish or greek? Who knows! Is a greek making so called turkish sweets stealing turkish culture? Can the turk prove that they are turkish? Is a turkish person playing a buzuki stealing greek culture? Can a greek or bulgarian prove that tambura is theirs only? The lines are so blurry that it is impossible! Every tribe has influenced another tribe and has been influenced by a third one. Colonial countries like the US have no original culture so to say (poor natives have been decimated) since they are an agglomeration of different (mostly european and african) immigrants. So they emphasize Cultural Appropriation as virtue signaling. If you are using other peoples customs or music or whatever, just do it with respect to make yourself or others happy - that's all, there's nothing too complicated.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    I agree with you, especially when cultures are so close to each other like the Greek and the Turkish one. But even then, I guess, you could get into trouble if you order a Greek coffee in Ankara or a Turkish coffee in Athens? Sometimes people are very protective of their cultural assets, and I can understand that too. Our culture is a big part of our identity as individuals, and the animosity between Greeks and Turkish people shows that quite well. It doesn't help that they share much of their cultures. They still insist on the differences in order to forge their unique identities. China is actually another example. It is a big country with a great cultural diversity, and when it was unified over the course of history, many small cultures within it were in danger of being assimilated and losing their cultural identities. Although, as you say, they probably wouldn't put it in terms of cultural appropriation, the loss of cultural identity is a problem for many cultures. Thanks!

  • @sixfigureskibum
    @sixfigureskibum2 ай бұрын

    ??? Cell phones television and blue jeans are purely American western coultereal phenomenon. Air conditioning and processed foods. Automobiles and corn... you don't have potatoes ? Bananas? Or coffee? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @sixfigureskibum
    @sixfigureskibum2 ай бұрын

    ​@@dailyphilosophycoffee is American. All other cpulters have appropriated it.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    ​@@sixfigureskibum Unfortunately, that's incorrect. Coffee originated in Yemen or Ethiopia (there's some uncertainty about that) and was popular in Europe already in the 17th century, particularly in England, from where it was brought to the Americas. We may credit the US with the invention of Starbucks, though. Thank you for your comment!

  • @marcosfreijeiro8763
    @marcosfreijeiro87632 ай бұрын

    I agree with you ,and 23:22 I have not been accused of or have been victim of cultural appropriation that I'm aware of Thank you as always can't wait for the next video.

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for your kind comment!

  • @dailyphilosophy
    @dailyphilosophy2 ай бұрын

    What do YOU think? Have you made any experiences with cultural appropriation yourself? Have you been accused of it? Or have you been a victim? Tell us right here! Thanks!

  • @allangilchrist5938
    @allangilchrist59383 ай бұрын

    I agree with Schopenhauer when he claimed that Pantheism is merely a euphemism for Atheism. I have listened to Pantheists try to distinguish between the two and it comes across to me as do much waffle.