Professors Dreyfus and Kelly have started a blog associated with a book they are currently writing titled "All Things Shining." Here is an excerpt from blog's first entry:
How did we go from the intense and meaningful lives of Homer’s world to the sadness and indecision, perhaps even the nihilism, of the current age? And how can we find the shining things once more?
Bert Dreyfus and I are just completing a book on this topic. It is called All Things Shining: Reading the Western Canon To Find Meaning in a Secular Age. As we put the finishing touches on the manuscript this summer, and as we prepare for courses on the topic at Berkeley and Harvard this fall, we hope to use this blog to lay out some of the themes of the project and to generate discussion among a wider group of folks.
You can find it at: http://allthingsshiningbook.wordpress.com/
Dreyfus Webcasts - these helped popularize online philosophy education several years ago!
- Spring 2011: Phil 185 - Heidegger's Being and Time
- Breathless
- Phil 7 Course Handouts
- Phil 189 Course Handouts
- Fall 2007: Phil 185 - Heidegger (Updated from Internet Archive)
- Phil 185 Course Handouts
- Spring 2007: Phil 6 - Man, God, and Society in Western Literature (Updated from Internet Archive)
- Spring 2006: Phil 7 - Existentialism in Literature and Film (Updated from Internet Archive)
- 2005 Seminar: Questioning Efficiency: Human Factors: Existential Phenomenology
- Fall 2005: Phil 185 - Being and Time (DSS format)
- Spring 2005: Phil 188 - Merleau-Ponty's Phenomenology of Perception (requires DSS player)
- 2001 Being and Time Lecture Series (BitTorrent)
- Bryan Magee talks to Hubert Dreyfus on Husserl, Heidegger and Modern Existentialism
- Interview: Full-tilt Boogie
- Interview: Kreisler
- Interview: Andrew Keen
- Interview: noozit interview
- Interview: Mishlove
Dreyfus & Kelly: All Things Shining - the latest Dreyfus project
- WAMC - Sean Kelly interview
- RadioBoston - Sean Kelly interview
- Inquiry: Hubert Dreyfus and Sean Dorrance Kelly: All Things Shining
- Harvard Book Store - Sean Dorrance Kelly discusses All Things Shining
- All Things Shining - Hubert Dreyfus and Wayne Martin in conversation
- Conversations With History - Dreyfus and Kelly
- Being In The World - Movie Website
- All Things Shining Blog
- Sean Kelly - The Sacred and the Secular
- Sean Kelly - Later Heidegger
- Sean Kelly - Being and Time
- Sean Kelly - Existentialism
- KQED Forum interview with Dreyfus and Kelly: 'All Things Shining': Finding Meaning in a Secular Age
- Colbert Report interview with Sean Kelly
Heidegger Resources
- Lee Braver - Grounless Grounds: A Study of Wittgenstein and Heidegger
- Jeff Collins - Introducing Heidegger
- Peninsula College Lecture - Heidegger His Life and Philosophy
- Taylor Carmen - The Heidegger Sessions
- PEL - Heidegger and our Existential Situation
- University of Kent Lecture - The Darkness of the Poem is the Darkness of Death - On Martin Heidegger and Paul Celan
- Tao Raspoli's Film - Being-in-the-World
- Richard Capobianco - Heidegger on Holderlin
- Richard Capobianco - Heidegger and the Greek Experience of Nature
- EGS Lecture - Being and the Artist's Trace. The Origin of the Work of Art
- EGS Lecture - Building Dwelling Thinking
- Gregory Sadler on Heidegger's "Essence of Truth"
- The Catholic University Lecture - Heidegger, Aristotle, and the Legacy of Philosophy
- Lecture on Heidegger's "What is Metaphysics"
- Heidegger on Ontotheology
- Entitled Opinions - Thomas Sheehan on Heidegger and technology
- Barbara Babich Lecture - "The Danger" in Heidegger's Breman Lectures
- The Philosopher's Zone - The Heidegger Way
- Rudolf Makkreel lectures on "Heidegger's Non-Idealistic Reading of Kant's Transcendental Philosophy".
- EGS Lecture - Concealment and Unconcealment
- EGS Lecture - Heidegger, Language and Existence
- Walter Brogan presents a talk on existence and facticity in Heidegger's 'Being and Time'
- Catherine Malabou - Can "Retreat" be a Metaphor? A Reflection on Meaning after Heideger's Withdrawal
- EGS Lecture - Epilogue for "The Orgin of the Work of Art"
- New Books in Philosophy - Groundless Grounds: A Study of Wittgenstein and Heidegger
- Ereignis - films and installation works
- Lecture - Heidegger on philosophy of Being and Langauge
- Film - The Ister
- Richard Capobianco on "Heidegger's Truth of Being"
- On Heidegger's Being and Time
- John David Ebert on Heidegger's Essay "The Turning"
- John David Ebert on Heidegger's History of the Concept of Time
- Cambridge Lecture - Stiegler after Heidegger and Derrida
- William Barrett - Heidegger and Modern Existentialism
- Jeffrey van Davis Film (excerpt) - Heidegger: Only A God Can Save Us
- Mike Wheeler on Heidegger, Cognition and the Transcendental
- George Pattison on Heidegger
- FORA TV - Understanding_the_Concept_of_Time_in_Maharaj and Heidegger
- John David Ebert on Heidegger's "The Thing"
- John David Ebert on Heidegger's "Origin of the Work of Art"
- John David Ebert on Heidegger's "Introduction to Metaphysics"
- John David Ebert on Heidegger's "Question Concerning Technology"
- EGS - Heidegger's Anti-Dialectical Tragedy
- William Richardson on "Being and Time"
- PB Coaching - Heidegger Workshop
- The Catholic University of America Fall 2011 Lecture Series - Heidegger
- Heidegger on the Meaning of Meaning
- Heidegger's Politics and Legacy
- Heidegger on Technology's Threat
- Gianni Vattimo Lecture - Heidegger and Revolution
- EGS - Task, Technology, and Philosophy
- ICI Berlin - Francoise Balibar: What Is a Thing?
- Stony Brook University - Heidegger Colloquium Series
- Boston College - Our dinner with Bill
- William Richardson on Babette Babich's book, Words in Blood, Like Flowers: Philosophy and Poetry, Music and Eros in Holderlin, Nietzsche, Heidegger
- The European Graduate School - Heidegger and the Question of Technology
- Yale lecture - Ways in and out of the Hermeneutic Circle
- Rick Roderick - Heidegger and the Rejection of Humanism
- Heidegger's Critique of Technology
- John Haugland Essay - Heidegger on Truth and Finitude
- Richard Wolin - Are Philosophy and Nazism Compatible? The Troubling Case of Martin Heidegger
- Heidegger's Black Forest
- Markus Hofner - "Back to the future? On Heidegger's reading of Paul's eschatology"
- Jeffrey van Davis on his film "Only A God Can Save Us"
- The Fall of Cartesianism
- The Modern Intellectual Tradition - Heidegger's Being and Time
- EGS Seminar - Arendt, Heidegger & The Role of Thinking
- Planet Debate - Heidegger
- Heidegger on Authenticity
- Norm Friesen - Heidegger What Calls for Thinking? and "The Pedagogical Relation"
- EGS Lecture - Being and the Artist's Trace. The Origin of the Work of Art
- Heidegger's Turn Against Humanism
- Appraising Heidegger's Interpretations of Movement and Time
- Russell Weaver on Heidegger and Hermenuetic Truth
- Graham Harman - On Actors, Networks, and Plasma: Heidegger vs. Latour vs. Heidegger
- The Partially Examined Life - Heidegger: What is "Being?"
- Richardson - Heidegger's Godet
- Graham Harman - Origin of the Work of Art
- McManus - Heidegger, Wittgenstein and the Last Judgement
- Brassier - The Pure and Empty Form of Death: Heidegger and Deleuze
- Wattles (Kent State) - Heidegger's Aesthetics I
- Wattles (Kent State) - Heidegger's Aesthetics II
- Digital Dialogue - Heidegger on Aristotle
- A conversation with Andrew Mitchell on Poetry and Thinking in Martin Heidegger's later work
- A message in a bottle: encounters with Paul Celan and Martin Heidegger
- Entitled Opinions - Thomas Sheehan on "Being and Time"
- Key Thinkers: Barbara Bolt on Martin Heidegger
- Thinking Through Practce: The Ister
- Dartmouth - Martin Heidegger Elective
- Harrison, et al. - Dasein's dying, Moby Dick, etc.
- PEL - Heidegger and our Existential Situation (NEW)
- University of Kent Lecture - The Darkness of the Poem is the Darkness of Death - On Martin Heidegger and Paul Celan (NEW)
Recent (Post-WWII) Continental Philosophy
- PEL - Deleuze on What Philosophy Is (New)
- Melbourne Free University Lecture Series
- The London Graduate School - Reversals and Transformations: Towards a Deconstructive Phenomenology
- Radio National - Bluffer's Guide to Michael Foucault
- Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy Course - What Is Phenomenology
- Entitled Opinions - Hans Sluga on Michael Foucault
- Oxford - Dialogue with Martin Hagglund and Derek Attridge: Derrida's Ideas on Ethics, Hospitality and Radical Atheism
- UNC Charlotte Lecture - Juridical, Disciplinary, and Biopolitical Power: Basic Background on Foucault
- Sartre in 90 MInutes
- Jacques Ranciere - Modernity Revisted
- Jean-Luc Marion - French Culture and Philosophy: Beyond Post-modernism
- The Philosopher's Zone - Mai '68
- University of Warwick - Foucault
- University of London Conference - The Editor's Cut: A view of philosophical research from journal editors
- Entitled Opinions - Thomas Sheehan on Phenomenology
- EGS - Punishment
- PEL - Foucault on Power and Punishment
- PEL - Merleau-Ponty on Perception and Knowledge
- EGS Lecture - The End of Metaphysics
- The Goldstein-Gore International Center for Jewish Thought Conference - Levinas Facing Biblical Figures
- University of Wellington - Foucault, Fearless Speech, and the Notion of Critique
- Philosopher's Zone - The Mind of Jacques Lacan
- Rodolphe Gasche - An Immemorial Remainder: The Legacy of Derrida
- Film - Derrida
- Harvard Course - Social Theory, the Humanties and Philosophy Now - Ethical Reasoning
- Robert Bernasconi Lecture - The Transcendence of Fecundity: Levinas on Alterity and Kinship
- College De France Course - Modern and Contemporary French Literature: History, Criticism, Theory
- Diet Soap Podcast - The Dialectical Imagination: History of the Frankfurt School
- Diet Soap Podcast - Coffeen on Deleuze
- Diet Soap Podcast - Analytic versus Continental Philosophy
- Multimedia Institute Zagreb Conference - to have done with life: vitalism and antivitalism in contemporary philosophy
- British Academy - In Conversation with Julia Kristeva
- CornellCast - Martin Hagglund on Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life
- University of London Conference - Nomos: Carl Schmitt and his Interlocuters
- Birbeck College Conference - The Foucualt Effect 1991-2011
- University of London Conference - Time, Politics and Becoming
- Yale Lecture - The Postmodern Psyche
- Steven Pinker - The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature
- Albert Camus: A Life
- Sartre's Phenomenology
- Camus and the Absurd Hero
- Existentialism - Sartre and de Beauvoir
- Endicott College - Levinas: Sensibility Without Subject
- London Global University - Deconstruction Today
- Works of Merleau-Ponty
- Existentialism: The Philosophical Movement
- Jacques Derrida in Conversation
- Monash University Seminar - Letting Go of Neo-Liberalism (with some help from Michel Foucualt)
- Monash University Seminar - Four or Five Words in Derrida
- Warwick University - MIchel Foucault
- Giorgio Agamben - What is a Paradigm?
- Structuralism, Saussure and Levi-Strauss
- The London Graduate School - Genet after Derrida
- An infographic on existentialism
- DeLanda - Deleuze and the History of Philosophy
- DeLanda - The Philosophy of Gilles Deleuze
- Erractic Thinking - Foucault and Power
- Philosopher's Zone - Who was Gilles Deleuze?
- HARC Symposium - The Philosophy of Literature
- Philoctetes Center Roundtable - Romanticism, Enlightenment, and Counter-Enlightenment
- Existentialism and the Frankfurt School
- The Challenge of Postmodernism
- Existentialism and the Meaning of Life
- Derrida's Deconstruction of Philosophy
- The Frankfurt School
- Vallega-Neu - Rhythm and Animality in Merleau-Ponty's Ontology of the Flesh
- UC Berkeley - Michel Foucault Audio Archive
- Nova Sotheastern University Lectures - Semiotics, Semiology, Sign and Saussure
- Harvard Humanities Center event celebrating the publication of Cavell's "Little Did I Know"
- Philosopher's Zone - Emmanuel Levinas - putting ethics first
- Philosopher's Zone - A tribute to Claude Levi-Strauss
- Philosopher's Zone - Derrida - the father of deconstruction
- Zeillinger - The Other Within Me: The Practice of Deconstruction
- London School of Economics - Rethinking Technological Change in Organizations: The Deleuzian 'Spatium' and 'Becoming'
- London School of Economics - The Harman Review: Bruno Latour's Empirical Metaphysics
- Bruno Latour: Where is res extensa? An Anthropology of Object
- John D. Caputo at Syracuse
- Caputo - Fall 2010 lectures
- Caputo - From Radical Hermeneutics to the Weakness of God
- Caputo - For the Love of the Things Themselves: Derrida's Hyper-Realism
- Robert Solomon - From Existentialim to Postmodernism
- An Introduction to Poststructuralism
- Culture, Hermeneutics and Structuralism
- Stanley Fish - Deconstruction
- Bruno Latour: Where is res extensa? An Anthropology of Object
- The European Graduate School - Video Lectures
- Discourse Notebook
- From Structure to Rhizome - French thought, 1945-the present: Middlesex University Conference
- Seminar - French Theory Today
- Rick Roderick Lectures - Philosophy and Human Values/Nietzsche and the Postmodern Condition/The Self Under Seige
- Colloquium - Phenomenology and the Divine: Understanding the French Theological 'Turn'
- Daniel Smith's lectures - Deleuze & Guattari
- Folds of Multiplicity - Symposium on the philosophy of gilles deleuze
- Deleuze Conference - On Media and Movement
- Ambrose - Deleuze and Francis Bacon: The Diagrammatic
- 49th Street Discussion - Deleuze/Foucault
- Leonard - Noah and Noesis: Derrida Between Greek and Jew
- University of San Diego Course - PHL 274: Introduction to Continental Philosophy (Part 2)
- University of San Diego Course - PHL 274: Introduction to Continental Philosophy (Part 1)
- The Philosopher's Zone - The Great Divide (Continental/Analytic)
- The Philosopher's Zone - Merleau-Ponty and the lived body (Taylor Carman)
- Eleanor MacDonald (Queens College) Lecture - Are We Postmodern?
- Andrew Freenberg - The Essential Marcuse
- Key Thinkers: John Frow on Michel Foucault
- Kingston University London Conference - The Government of Self and Others: On Foucault's Lectures at the College de France, 1982/83
- University of London (Birbeck) Workshop - The Dis/Order of Things: Predisciplinarity After Foucault
- Foucualt and Middle East Studies
- Conference - Foucault Across the Disciplines
- Philosopher's Zone - Michel Foucault's "Madness and Civilization"
- Foucault reads Kafka
- Key Thinkers: Ghassan Hage on Pierre Bourdieu
- Key Thinkers: Justin Clemens on Alain Badiou
- On Maurice Blanchot and the Political
- Slajov Zizek - Masterclass
- De Landa - Topology
- MAmedia Sessions - Structuralism, Post-Structuralism, and Postmodernism
- AfterTV - Interview with Albert Borgmann
- Stanford Conference - Hannah Arendt considered today: Totalitarianism, genocide and the need for thought
- Conference - Empire and Genocide: The Work of Hannah Arendt
- Kaufmann - Existentialism
- Kaufmann - Sartre and the Crisis in Morality
- Routledge Lecture - Iris Murdoch and the Rejection of Existentialism
Modern Philosophy (Enlightenment - WWII)
- University of Kent Lecture - Holderlin's Metaphysics (NEW)
- Simon Critchley - Hamlet, Nietzsche, Joyce - tragedy, lethergy and disgust
- Universty of London Conference - Spinoza and Nietzsche in Dialogue
- University of London Conference - The Actuality of the Absolute: Hegel, Our Untimely Contemporary
- Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy Course - Objective Spirit in Hegel
- Minerva Podcast - Descartes, Technology and Minds
- Oxford Mini-Course - Hume's Central Principles
- Oxford Mini-Course - Introduction to David Hume's Treatise of Human Nature Book One
- University of London Lecture - Leibniz's Law and the Philosophy of Mind
- Karl Marx in 90 Minutes
- Descartes in 90 Minutes
- Kant in 90 MInutes
- David Hume in 90 Minutes
- Rousseau in 90 Minutes
- Spinoza in 90 Minutes
- Kierkegaard in 90 Minutes
- Schopenhauer in 90 Minutes
- Nietzsche in 90 Minutes
- Hegel in 90 Minutes
- Institute of Philosophy Conference - Hume's Legacy
- Fordham University - Schrodinger and Nietzsche on Life: Eternal Return and the Moment
- Digital Dialouge - Emerson and Self-Culture
- The Catholic Univiersity of America Lecture Series - The Modern Turn
- EGS Lecture - Hegel: The Philosopher of Tragedy
- Royal Society of Edinburgh Lecture - The Significance of David Hume: Scepticism, Science, and Superstition
- Philosopher's Zone - Pascal's Wager
- PEL - Moral Sense Theory: Hume and Smith
- Why God Died - Nietzsche's Claim
- Nietzsche's Dream
- Kierkegaard on Subjective Truth
- Kierkegaard - Existential Dialectic
- Kierkegaard's Crisis
- Kierkegaard's Passions
- EGS - Nietzsche and the Event
- Faith and Freethought: The Philosophy of Nietzsche
- CornellCast - Vico, Spinoza and the Imperial Past
- Boston University - Madison's Politics of Religion Revisited
- Boston University - Toleration and Subscription: An Early Enlightenment Debate
- Boston University - From Augustine to Spinoza and Locke: Answering the Christian Case Against Religious Liberty
- Boston University - Hobbes and Locke on Toleration
- PEL - Schleiemacher Defends Religion
- Isaiah Berlin Lecture - Redescription of the Enlightenment
- British Academy Lecture - Montaigne
- Notre Dame Conference - Leibniz's Theodicy: Context and Content
- UCSD Lecture - Art, Science and the Mind
- University of Cambridge - Early Modern Philosophy and Intellectual History
- Francis Bacon and the Authority of Experience
- Boston College - Hobbes versus Spinoza on Human Nature: Political Ramifications
- Fordham University - Babette Babich on Nietzsche and Sculpture
- Harvard Lecture - Kant: Mind Your Motive/The Supreme Principle of Morality
- Harvard Lectures - Bentham and Mill: Putting a Price Tag on Life/How to Measure Pleasure
- Stony Brook University Lecture Series - Karl Marx as Moral Philosopher
- Freud, Weber, and the Mind of Modernity
- The Philosopher's Zone - An atheists God: the paradox of Spinoza
- Film - Spinoza: The Apostle of Reason
- Tate Gallery - In Defense of Philosophy: Mediatations on Spinoza: The Apostle of Reason
- John Stuart MIll: A Biography
- Hegel: A Biography
- Niccolo's Smile: A Biography of Machiavelli
- Hobbes: A Biography
- Betraying Spinoza
- Karl Marx: A Life
- PEL - Locke on Political Power
- Marketplace of Ideas - Michel de Montaigne's examined life, re-examined
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Marx
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Vico
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Hegel, The Philosophy of History
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Hobbes, Leviathan and De Cive
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Kant
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil
- FORA.tv - Keith Ward on Kant's Truimph of Idealism
- Fatal Enlightenment - Discourse on the Origin of Inequality by Rousseau
- Nietzsche on Love
- Nietzsche the Immoralist
- Nietzsche's Conception of Eternal Recurrence
- Locke's Empiricism, Berkeley's Idealism
- Neo-Aristotelians - Spinoza and Leibniz
- Scholasticism and the Scientific Revolution
- The French Revolution and German Idealism
- Hegel and the English Century
- Film - When Nietzsche Wept
- Kierkegaard Lecture - Mt. Moriah Revisited - Saintly Transgression
- A History of Suspicion - Marx, Darwin, Freud
- Enlightenment Patterns of Cultural Mutation
- Nietzsche - The Return of the Tragic Hero
- EGS Lecture - Nietzsche and Ethics
- University of Edinburgh Panel Discussion - Celebrating David Hume's Birthday
- Frederick Copleston on Schopenhauer
- J.P. Stern on Nietzsche
- Peter Singer on Marx and Hegel
- Geoffrey Warnock on Kant
- Anthony Quinton on Spinoza and Leibniz
- Michael Ayers on Locke and Berkeley
- John Passmore on Hume
- Bernard Williams on Descartes
- The Paula Gordon Show - Descartes' Trinities
- PEL - More Hegel on Self-Consciousness
- PEL - Hegel on Self-Consciousness
- PEL - Locke on Political Power
- Philosophy: The Classics
- University of Edinburgh Enlightment Lectures - David Hume: Morality, Reason and Passion in Public Policy
- The Philosopher's Zone - Hume on cause, effect and doubt
- The Philosopher's Zone - The Life of David Hume
- The Marketplace of Ideas - On Hume and Rousseau's quarrel with John T. Scott
- The Marketplace of Ideas - On David Hume with Simon Blackburn
- Voltaire, Candide
- Pascal, Penses
- Oxford Lecture Series - Kant's Critique of Pure Reason
- Roberto Rossellini Film - Cartesius
- Roberto Rossellini Film - Blaise Pascal
- Center for Jewish History - Freud's Jewish World Conference
- The Catholic University of America Fall 2010 Lecture Series - The Modern Turn
- Giants of Philosophy - Nietzsche
- University of Victoria - Post-Enlightenment Thought
- Robert Bernasconi - Race, Slavery, and the Philosophers of the Enlightenment
- Darren Staloff - Hamilton, Adams, Jefferson: The Politics of Enlightenment
- Philoctetes Center Roundtable - Spinoza
- The Rationalism and Dualism of Descartes
- The Radical Skepticism of Hume
- Kant on Freedom and the Forms of Knowledge
- Kant's Copernican Revolution
- The Enlightenment
- Nietzsche's Critique of Morality
- Kierkegaard's Critique of Reason
- Spinoza, Rationalism and the Reverence for Being
- Schopenhauer: The World as Will and Representation
- Hegel - The Last Great System
- Hegel and Historicism
- Husserl and Phenomenology
- Rise of 20th Century Philosophy - Phenomenology
- The Works of Friedrich Nietzsche Discussion
- Open University - David Hume
- Open University Course - Reading Political Philosophy: From Machiavelli to Mill
- Vanderbilt Mini-Course - Great Ideas of the 19th Century
- Essex Philosophy Society - Phenomenology Crash Course
- Steinberg Course - Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit and Encyclopedia Logic
- University of Glascow Course - Kant
- PHIL 416 Course - Hegel and Phenemenology
- University of Georgia Course - Kant's Critique of Pure Reason
- University of Georgia Course - Hegel's Science of Logic
- University of Georgia Course - Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
- Conference - Thinking with Spinoza: Politics, Philosophy and Religion
- Conference - Spinoza and Bodies
- Conference - Spinoza and Texts
- Center for Jewish Studies - From Heretic to Hero: Symposium on the Impact of Baruch Spinoza
- PEL - Montaigne: What Is the Purpose of Philosophy?
- PEL - Descartes Meditations: What Can We Know?
- PEL - Leibniz's Monadology: What Is There?
- Philosopher's Zone - The Universal Genuis - Gottfried Leibniz
- Philosopher's Zone - George Berkeley: The strange birth of Idealism
- Philosophy at Bristol - Rousseau
- PEL - Rousseau: Human Nature vs. Culture
- PEL - Hume's Empiricism: What Can We Know?
- PEL - Kant: What Can We Know?
- Bernstein - Kant
- Bernstein - Hegel
- Bernstein - 3rd Critique
- Conference - Nietzsche on Mind and Nature
- Nietzsche Conference - Rethinking the Genealogy of Morals
- Nietzsche Workshop at Western
- Philosopher's Zone - Nietzsche and the will to power
- Kaufmann - Nietzsche and the Crisis in Philosophy
- Kaufmann - Kierkegaard and the Crisis in Religion
- Hernandez - Kierkegaard Lecture
- The Partially Examined Life - Kierkegaard on the Self
- The Partially Examined Life - Husserl's Phenomenology
- Brough - Consciousness is Not a Bag: Immanence, Transcendence, and Constitution in Husserl's "Idea of Phenomenology"
- Sokolowski - Husserl on First Philosophy
- UC Berkeley Course - History 181B Modern Physics: From the Atom to Big Science
Modern Analytic
- University of Sterling Lecture - The Intertwined Roots of Analytic and Continental Philosophy
- Wittgenstein in 90 Minutes
- PEL - Wittgenstein and Language
- Fourth BWS Annual Conference - Wittgenstein and the Swansea School
- In Our Time - The Continental-Analytic Split
- Philosopher's Zone - Gustav Klimt and Ludwig Wittgenstein
- Wittgenstein and Photography Exhbition at the University of Cambridge
- The Reith Lectures - Bertrand Russell: Authority and the Individual
- Philosopher's Zone - The puzzlement of Ludwig Wittgenstein
- Bled Philosophical Conference - Knowledge, Understanding and Wisdom
- New Trends in Logic, Vienna - On Godel's General Philosophy
- University of Cambridge - Russell v Wittgenstein
- University of Cambridge - Radical Translation: Analytic Philosophy in America
- University of Cambridge - G.E. Moore and Cambridge Philosophy
- University of Cambridge - 'Better than Stars': A Radio Portrait of F.P. Ramsey
- ICI Berlin - Sara Fortuna: Il giallo di Wittgenstein
- Harvard Book Store - Companion Stars: Einstein and Godel at Princeton
- Harvard Book Store - Logicomex: An Epic Search For Truth
- Tate Gallery - In Defense of Philosophy: Derek Jarman - Wittgenstein
- Panal Discussion in Memory to William James - What Makes Life Significant?
- Genuine Reality: A Life of William James
- The Metaphysical Club
- The Education of John Dewey: A Biography
- PEL - Bertrand Russell on Math and Logic
- Emergence and Whitehead
- Sidney Morgenbesser on the American Pragmatists
- In Conversation: W.V. Quine
- Ayer on Frege and Russell
- Logical Positivism and its Legacy
- Anthony Quinton on Wittgenstein
- John Searle on Wittgenstein
- On the Ideas of Quine
- Classical Empiricism and Logical Positivism
- The Rise of Logical Positivism
- The Fall of Logical Positivism
- Slought Foundation - Wittgenstein's Voice: The Sound of the Unsystematic
- Logic Lane: Gilbert Ryle and J.O. Urmson discuss philosophy of mind
- Logic Lane: Oxford Philosophy in the 1930s and J.L. Austin
- Logic Lane: A Philosophical Retrospective
- British Wittgenstein Society - Lectures
- Wittgenstein's Vienna
- PEL - Frege on the Logic of Language
- Physics, Positivism and the Early Wittgenstein
- Rise of 20th Century Philosophy - Pragmatism
- Rise of 20th Century Philosophy - Analysis
- Dewey's American Naturalism
- Quine and the End of Positivism
- Wittgenstein's Turn to Ordinary Language
- Rorty and the End of Philosophy
- Wittgenstein's Poker
- Wittgenstein Podcast Lectures
- Wittgenstein - A Film by Derek Jarman
- Einstein Forum workshop on 'The Future of Analytical Philosophy' - Juliet Floyd lecture "Future Pasts"
- Oxford (David Chalmers) - Constructing the World Lecture Series
- Center for the Study of Mind in Nature Lecture - What Frege got wrong (with some help from Quine)
- CUNY Course - Reading Marx's Capital with David Harvey
- University of Pittsburgh Course - Analytic Philosophy: Wilfrid Sellers
- Conference - Wittgenstein and Aesthetics
- Conference - Wittgenstein and Naturalism
- Conference - Wittgenstein Research Revisted
- University of Bergen - Views into Wittgenstein research
- PEL - Wittgenstein's Tractatus: What is There and Can We Talk About It?
- PEL - Wittgenstein's Tractatus (and Carnap): What We Can Legitimately Talk About
- In Our Time - Wittgenstein
- Conference - Rorty and the Mirror of Nature
- Menand - Pragmatism's Three Moments
- Dewey Center - Perspectives of Pragmatism
- PEL - Pragmatism (Peirce & James)
- PEL - More James's Pragmitism: Is Faith Justified? What is Truth?
- Ray Monk - Philosophy Circa 1905
- Charles Taylor and A Secular Age
- PEL - What is Mind (Turing, et al)
Ancient and Medieval
- Catholic School of America 2013 Lecture Series - Philosophy in Islamic Lands
- Catholic School of America 2012 Lecture Series - Aristotle's "De Anima" (New)
- Cambridge Lecture - When was Medieval Philosophy?
- Cambridge Lecture - Homeric Poems
- Oxford - Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
- Thomas Aquinas in 90 Minutes
- Aristotle in 90 Minutes
- Plato in 90 Minutes
- University of Georgia Course - Aristotle
- Lecture Course - Aristotle's Criticism of Plato's Forms
- PEL - Plato on Ethics & Religion
- Philosopher's Zone - Averroes
- PEL - Plato's Republic: What Is Justice?
- Oxford's John Locke Lectures - Ancient Greek Philosophy as a Way of Life
- Classical Philosophy: Ideas and Essences
- Introduction to Greek Philosophy Course
- Plato's Republic Course
- Yale Lecture - Plato's Republic, I-II
- Yale Lecture - Plato's Republic, III-IV
- Yale Lecture - Plato's Republic, V
- BBC Documentary - The Truth About Democracy (Athenian Golden Age)
- The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius
- Discussion of Homer's Iliad
- Monash University - The Medieval Imagination
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Natural Right
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: The Origins of Political Science
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: A Study Aristotle's Politics
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Aristotle, Ethics
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Aristotle, Rhetoric
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Xenophon, Oeconomicus
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Thucydides
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Plato, Protagoras
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Plato, Meno
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Plato, Laws
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Plato, Gorgias
- University of Chicago Course - Leo Strauss: Plato, Apology/Crito
- Plato - Politics, Justice, and Philosophy
- The Heroic Ideal in Late Stoicism
- Heroism and the Tragic View of Life
- Plato's Republic - The Hero's Reward
- Film - Stealing Heaven (Abelard and Eloise)
- Martha Nussbaum on Aristotle
- Miles Burnyeat on Plato
- Anthony Kenny on Medieval Philosophy
- The Paula Gordon Show - Creating Our Modern World
- Monash University Conference - From Sappho to X
- Plato's Forms: Part 1
- Plato's Forms:Part 2
- Socrates
- Great Ideas of Philosophy
- New School For Social Research - Full course taught by Judith Butler and Simon Critchley: The Tragic and its Limits
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Art - Film - Literature
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- Tate Gallery Symposium - Mapping the Lost Highway: New Perspectives on David Lynch
- Oxford Lecture Series - Approaching Shakespeare
- Marcel Proust: A Life
- Harvard - Professor Thomas Kelly on Beethoven's Ninth Symphony Then and Now
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- God in the Great Gatsby
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- Alexander Gelley - Weak Messianism: Recovery and Prefiguration in Walter Benjamin's Arcade Project
- Boston College - Dante
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- Berkeley Course - Literature in English
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- University of Warwick Course - Modes of Reading: Theory
- University of Warwick Course - English and Comparitive Literary Studys
- University of Warwick - Literature in the Modern World
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- University of Houston Course - The Contemporary Novel: Magical Realism
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- University of Houston Course - Nobel Prize Winners in Literature
- University of Houston Course - Latin American History through the Novel
- University of Houston Course - Masterpieces of British Literature since the Eighteenth Century
- University of Victoria Course - 20th Century British Fiction After WWII
- University of Victoria Course - Modern Anglo-Irish Literature
- NYU Course - American Literature 1: From the Beginnings to the Civil War
- UCSD Course - Intro/Afro-American Literature
- UCSD Course - Science Fiction
- University of Minnesota Course - Historical Survey of British Literature I
- Washington College - Tolkien Course
- Keith Murphy class lectures
- Johns Hopkins University - Proust and Philosophy
- University of Wisconsin Course - The Tales of Hans Christian Anderson
- Frank Delaney - Re:Joyce (lecture series on Joyce's Ulysses)
- Allen Ginsburg - Course lectures
- Fiona MacIntosh - Aeschylus and the Enlightenment
- Bruce Meyer (Georgian College) Lecture - The Four Phases of Yeats
- Nick Mount's (University of Toronto) Lectures - Beckett, Eliot, Woolf, Plath
- Power - Beckett on the Humanities
- James Wood (Harvard) Lecture - Dostoevsky, Camus, and the Problem of Suffering
- Mary Gordon (Barnard College) Lecture - The Appetite for the Absolute: A Reading of Dostoevsky Post-9/11
- Williams - Dostoevsky Lecture
- Bennett - Walt Whitman's Solar Judgment
- Corngold - 1905: A Literary Response to Modernity
- Weinstein - Unknowing: The Work of Modernist Fiction
- Weinstein - Dark Twins: Faulkner and Race
- Harry Ransom Center (UT at Austin) - An Evening of David Foster Wallace
- Anichini - Lecture on Dante's Paridiso IV
- Harvard Course - The Heroic and the Anti-Heroic in Classical Greek Civilization
- Classics in Discussion (Warwick) - Epic Poetry: From Homer To Virgil
- Alexander - The War That Killed Achilles
- Conference - Madness and Literature
Sites and Blogs of Interest (largely commenting on Dreyfus)
- Hendriks photo of Dreyfus
- Dreyfus Filmography
- Slate AI Debate vs Dennett
- Freeman Brain Dynamics Talk
- Bill Blattner at Georgetown
- PhilWeb Bibliography
- ereignis
- Heidegger reading group
- Being and Time
- PragDave
- Spiked
- Everything
- Mark Vernon
- being's poem
- Riggs 2.0
- bend of bay
- Half an Hour
- kqaquizzes
- spontaneity & receptivity
- Minds and Brains
- The Reflection Cafe
- Feel Philosophy
- Kronemyer
- Philosophy of Technology
- Knowledge and Experience
- Blog 99
- Philosophy's Other
- Brain Hammer
- Coevolving Innovations
- Guide To Reality
- Bluegrass Film Society
- Mind Dance
- virtual philosopher
- JOHO
- Continental Philosophy
- ENOWNING
Other Philosophy Webcasts
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22 comments:
Good work Brad! I see also that there is a movie out as well. Kind of remember listening to a Dreyfus podcast where the classroom was crawling with film makers, this must be part of that episode..
Dreyfus was on Philosophy Talk discussing the book a few months back:
http://www.philosophytalk.org/pastShows/Nihilism.html
H
Hi Brad,
Nice blog, also like your links. I am looking for some sort of transcription or summary of the lectures on Being and Time(1), I have started my own, but they are lacking cohesion. Would you know where to look for something like that?
Igmar Rautenbach
The theme makes the assumption that homer’s world, in some way, possessed a quality that our own day and age lacks. If that were true, what exactly made the world of Homer so great? Was it not occupied with the recurring themes that human beings encounter, albeit, in their brief existence in this world: mortality, death, suffering, and the search for meaning in our life. Who am I? Did not this question provoke philosophers like Plato and Aristotle to seek an answer? So if our day an age expresses a nihilist attitude, could this not be a plausible reaction of any group of people in any given time? Homer’s world possessed no more nobler qualities than those displayed throughout the civilizations of history. What exactly do you mean by finding the shining things once more? That people could be given to greater apathy towards the plight of others, and perhaps their own spirituality, does not mean that they lack passion or zeal for the existential qualities that make life worthwhile.
I'm not so sure that Homer's world is all that far away, anonymous.. and for many of the reasons you go on to list. Indeed, the words of Homer have not left the lips of men for three thousand years. They continue to be rediscovered by successive generations, illuminating the imagination of those who care to listen. Perhaps Homer "shines" through the cacophony of the growing wasteland for some of us in the West, just as the Veddas may likewise inspire some in the East.
Maybe Justice Potter Stewart had the right understanding when he remarked "I know it when I see it". Perhaps the same is true when it comes to finding the shining things once more?
I beg to differ with both Anonymous and Foundry-man. I believe the psychological world in which the people of 1000-800 BC lived, must have been substantially different from ours, even if the physical processes of movement, eyesight, eating, evacuating were nearly identical. Given this, the moods captured by Homer (e.g. of Aphrodite/erotic or Ares/aggressive) will be especially difficult for us moderns to return to, as Kelly-Dreyfus propose.
I have several lines of argument as to why Homeric man differs profoundly from Modern man, but rather than list them, I will wait and see if anyone is interested.
Best regards all.
Bring the arguments on! I am sure the ensuing discussion will be interesting...
First off, I'm not exactly sure what a psychological world means. Is that some kind of mood? I suppose I wonder how the concerns of us "moderns" are so radically different from our ancestors - food, sex, sleep can't be all that different today, except that maybe we have an electronic device blaring somewhere in the background (or foreground) drowning out the sound of the blowing wind.
I suppose I see more that unites us with the past, but I would like to see your ideas on that which separates.
OK, Dean. I already admitted that things like eating food and having sex are probably the same now as then, especially in terms of immediate sensation, as opposed to background feelings of valuation.
What valuation? You mentioned sex. I believe most western moderns have multiple valuational overloads concerning sex - which ancient people probably did not. So it feels the same, but does not "feel" the same. We could take this in a couple directions:
(1) Our inescapable judeo-christian prudishness makes us have the idea of sin always in the background. So even if we are having sex with our "lawful" spouse we have in the back of our minds (if we do happen think before, during, or after that activity) some vague worries (or extra excitement) that maybe we are not thinking pure thoughts. My guess is, this purity hang-up did not exist much in ancient times.
(2) In any sexual situation we moderns must take into account the feminist revolution in which women in whole or in part asserted an equal right of engagement and decision-making about sexual matters, aspects that were (not always, but as a general rule) left to men in our male-dominated history since Homer. Now I realize this is dicey ground - who knows how much women controlled their bodies pre-1900 (but if they did so, why did we need such a revolution?). I believe it is safe to say, they do to a much greater extent today than before.
I propose that moderns tend to have, more or less, with different intensities, sexual "purity guilt" on one hand, and sexual "equality negotiation" on the other, which, along with many other nuances, might inform what I referred to as a personal modern "psychology" that makes the goddess/Aphrodite/erotic moods less accessible than in ancient times.
Sure, the sexual sensations are the same, but the background psychology is quite a bit different. This is the historical problem of "going back." To access those moods, we would have to lose some pretty deep modern conditioning such as those outlined above, and reclaim the sexual landscape of 800 B.C. Whether many people would jump on that bandwagon is a significant question for Kelly and Dreyfus to ponder.
Or, someone could tell me how wrong my lines of thought on this turn out to be - I'm OK with addressing that possibility too.
Well, I offered the opening play, but no response so far. No doubt there is not a soul here that is as interested in the game as I am myself, so in the way of Narcissus staring at his reflection, I will extend my meaningless cascade of words, and try to argue my way out of it.
My previous post about sex being different back in Homer's day raises several questions:
1. How important are these minor hangups that have been tentatively identified as "psychological background" to the immediate lived experience of eating, sleeping, or having sex? Does it really matter if moderns have a few mildly obstructive cultural elements to navigate, when the main event almost certainly tastes the same now as then?
My response is that definitely yes, it matters. After all, this is not a biological discussion, where the differentials in physiological response between, say, bonobos and humans in coitus aren't material to the conclusions drawn. We are alluding to the necessary conditions for such an erotic activity in receptive persons, namely the specific mood that can (but does not always) whoosh up in any given amorous situation like that of Helen bedazzled by Paris. It seems hard to argue that this necessary condition is not a matter of very small psychological quanta. A latent fear here, or a lurking guilt there, must be accountable for the go - no go condition.
The "psychological" nuance I am getting at is critical, because it shapes the mood, while the mood merely enables the physical sensations. That is, when getting at moods, sensory perception is at the end of the pipeline.
The role of historical cultural development, guided largely by the common sensabilities, "das Mann" as it were, cannot be minimized. I would guess, and could begin to enumerate, a near infinitude of such tiny cultural bits that have been added, altered, or taken away over 2500 years. And we are not likely to reassemble the puzzle correctly nor are we likely to permit it.
2. If a case has been made that the idea of reviving Homer's moods in relation to Aphrodite and sex is implausible, that does not necessarily extend to other areas where a revival of pagan gods and their attendant moods might be more plausible.
My response is that it appears to me that the basic psychological objection framed against Homeric sex is pertinent across the board, and if not I await a challenge on a specific set of moods that can be proven commensurable.
The case of the greek god of war, Ares, and his aggressive moody outbursts, seems to me much more devastating to the project than was the gentler case of Aphrodite. If there is one giant difference between historical man and modern man (however one chooses to define them) it is that moderns simply do not act as aggressively in personal, face to face situations as did our forebears. This is due not solely to laws, nor to morals, both of which are themselves ancient, and fail to prevent the aggression that does erupt in our society, and did in past ones. Somehow, incrementally, the most "civilized" modern cultures have, on average, undoubtedly by means of an accumulation of small psychological signal redirects, massively lowered the amount of actual (as opposed to media-broadcast) hand-to-hand violence in their midst.
This is true even under conditions of modern "total war". Whereas the 20th century saw incredibe lethality, very little of the killing happened face-to-face. Whether by incendiary bomb, long-range firearm, or poison gas, the modern victim almost never has the chance to look his killer in the eye. The Greeks never would have understood or approved of this industrial butchery, and could not have incorporated its disinterested, long-distance "kill strike" into their martial mood. Where we have seen exceptions, as in Rwanda, the question is one of defining modern warfare - it is not done by machete.
Warfare proceeds mechanically because it must. Modern westerns, unlike Rwandans, have no stomach for real-life (as opposed to virtual) gut-slicing sword play any more, and it is exactly that mood which cannot be accessed without dramatic changes in what I term our "psychological background". Despite the horror of modern weapons of annihilation, whether we can or should dial back to Ares is highly debatable.
3. I have described aspects of modern cultures that did not exist in ancient ones. It would be equally plausible - though harder to substantiate - to describe ancient cultural patterns that no longer exist (but the two problems are symmetrical - you simply can't prove ancient mind-states easily). To me, these considerations make the project of chasing ancient moods to revive the technologically straight-jacketed modern mind a mere chimera.
But perhaps the precise argument rendered against Dreyfus and Kelly's program of renewing polytheistic moods is entirely misdirected. Let's check. Here is a snippet from Kelly's opening blog entry:
How did we go from the intense and meaningful lives of Homer’s world to the sadness and indecision, perhaps even the nihilism, of the current age? And how can we find the shining things once more?
http://allthingsshiningbook.wordpress.com/2010/06/02/when-things-began-to-shin/
Sounds to me like going back is more or less the explicit agenda from this starting point. But maybe I am wrong; maybe their intent is not to somehow recapitulate Homeric moods, but only to serve as our guide, to suggest shining things (found among us in masterful performance givers, for example) with which to sway modern technological man.
However that may be, I think this question really hinges not directly in understanding what Dreyfus and Kelly want to do, which they appear to claim is to plumb Homeric sources for cultural re-coherence, but rather what Martin Heidegger wanted to do, which is perhaps less apparent.
I stole the entire bit following from an insightful comment by Ron Jelaco to Kelly's blog re Twitter at:
http://allthingsshiningbook.wordpress.com/2010/08/24/tweet-tweet/
Near the end of QCT, Heidegger does something out of character. He speculates about the possible ways that technology might loose sway. One way he suggests is, “that the frenziedness of technology may entrench itself everywhere to such an extent that someday, throughout everything technological, the essence of technology may come to presence in the coming-to-pass of truth.” And, he continues, “Because the essence of technology is nothing technological, essential reflection upon technology and decisive confrontation with it must happen in a realm that is, on the one hand, akin to the essence of technology and, on the other, fundamentally different from it.”
However much he extolled some aspects of Greek existence, Heidegger did not seem to advocate resurrecting ancient moods - as if he knew we had to construct our own new moods, even if that means using the technology we have at hand. Could Dreyfus and Kelly be paddling the wrong direction?
4. Which brings us back to technology and my argument that we cannot re-assemble moods from history. Recall that I specifically exempted the virtual equivalent of an Ares-aggression mood: the ubiquitous first-person shooter so many of us have played at one point or other. Whatever shreds of Homeric war-fighting mood is left in the (predominantly male) game playing audience, hung like persistent genes (memes?) in our basal psychology, a yearning for the risk of combat (ancient heroism) without its all too frequent consequences we moderns deftly avoid (death and dismemberment), would seem to get exorcised by precisely that "leveling" technology Dreyfus and Kelly attack for the crime of hiding the shining things from us.
Their argument is boxed in. They must serve up either the raw Homeric mood full-blooded, in person, under a guise which I argue cannot and should not be visited on modern man without the real fear of Rwanda meltdowns on Main Street, or they rest their action plan on hollow echoes which they contend are the modern equivalents to Achilles and Odysseus, such as excellence in sports or other performing art (even master craftsmen are artists in an industrial context). But what they have not left themselves room for is to look directly into the eye of computer technology and see the moods of ancient times (or any times) lurking therein, embedded in the visceral tugs of, for instance, virtual reality games.
But this tendency results directly from a clear assessment of how Dreyfus and Kelly arrived at their Homeric fascination in the first place. They are literary men; they love to read and ponder the Classics, and extoll the wonders of the human imagination captured by the rhythms and cadence of an ancient master wordsmith, and the long-lost world he describes. Perhaps they are among the last of the mainstream humanists who will ever absorb the majority of their thrill from the printed word. The rest of us, trapped not in books but in RAM and bandwidth, will have moved on to the coming dominant technological mode of imagination, wherein history and the arts are experienced virtually, rather than read old-style, word after word. This outcome may indeed be a catastrophe. But it is, at this point, just short of a certainty.
Rebuttal 1. As I was tracing through the lines of argument at Sean Kelly's blog here, I realized that my vociferous denunciation of resurrecting ancient moods has one obvious, Achilles Heel, blind spot and it touches an area of thought near to me: faith.
I have frequently said I think we are emboldened to take faith and faith communities more, not less, seriously when viewed from the existential, phenomenological, postmodern perspective. This boldness comes directly from Dreyfus and his many pointers back to Heidegger, et al. The essential point about faith is that such notions were prematurely put to rest by reason, decisively so, during the enlightenment. Now they must be put back in play among serious thinkers by a growing sense that rationality will inevitably prove insufficient to meet the demands of everyday experience. This argument is too broad to do more than allude to, so I will leave it at that.
So I have pulled my own particular faith rabbit out of Dostoevsky's tattered hat, a sort of christianity that defies disbelief, that refuses to make claims in words bereft of deeds, a faith rendered down to its underwear.
In this christianity of mine, I find an ancient mood I want to defend: Agape love, that weird, self-sacrificing, helpful, caring kind of mood sometimes exemplified by the early christian writings. Now, as I was mulling, it occurred to me that all my "psychological" arguments about how ancient people necessarily differed from modern ones, and thus ancient moods must necessarily be inaccessible to moderns, I seem to be hoist petard-wise. I naturally claim my Agape mood to be translatable to the here and now; it is indispensable to a Dostoevskian position.
Thus I have framed an argument against myself, twice really, and this disclosure is meant more as an admission, if not an apology, for being over hasty in my attack on Ares and Aphrodite, after experiencing a moment of sheer horror contemplating the fact that, based on a similar line of argument, my own preferred whooshing method, Christ Almighty, might be as illusory as those of Kelly and Dreyfus. Note to self: assign further speculative wrestling to a future exercise.
I don't think Dostoevsky would count agape as a mood in the Homeric sense. It does not have the transistory character as the moods found in Ares and Aphrodite. Helen can return to domestic life with Menelaus following the Trojan Wars. Achilles can question the value of his life in the underworld. Not so with agape. For Dostoevsky, agape is redemptive. It forever changes a person. It is the point where the eternal and temporal meet. It is where humans come as close as is possible to the "mysterium tremendum."
Phenomonologically speaking it may be the deepest desire of the heart. The further away we move from humble love and compassion for our fellow man the further we are estranged from what is eternal in ourselves. This is what I take Dostoevsky to mean anyways. This is very close, I think, to Kierkegaard's concept of dread. Dante percieved this estrangement and placed a life devoted to Aphrodite in the 2nd circle of hell while dedicating yourself to Ares landed you in the 7th.
Agape may indeed whooshup on us like a mood. Probably many of us have had some experience, however fleeting, of it. Then it is gone. But Dostoevsky not leave it to the Heracleitian flux of whooshing up. He makes transmission very dependent on human agency. From Markel, to Zossima, to Aloysha and then to Dmitri, Grushenka and the boys. Once "born again" through agape love one is expected to do something. Dostoevsky does not have his characters wait for new revelations of being or simply be carried away by the mood. Their hearts have been changed by as much truth (love) as human beings can endure. The revelation and rapture actually kills Markel. This, it seems to me, is of a far different order than what occurs while under the influence of Ares and Aphrodite. Those who have been changed by agape are tasked in a way that Achilles and Helen are not. They are responsible for living it out in the world for the remainder of their temporal lives. Homer, seemingly, makes no one responsible. Gripped by Ares human beings can (and have) done remarkably heroic and noble deeds. But Ares can also lead to Auschwitz, My Lai, Rwanda, and the seemingly inexhaustible list of atrocities throughout history committed in the God's name. The acts that would have Ivan returning the ticket. People who commit those acts can also deeply regret and sincerely repent of them. For Dostoevsky and Christianity it is at least possible for them to do so.
Dostoevsky and I think Kierkegaard as well would have us align ourselves with the eternal and then make it our life's task to carry out what we can of its truth in the temporal. Zossima says, "Brothers, love is a teacher; but one must know how to acquire it, for it is hard to acquire, it is dearly bought, it is won slowly by long labour. For we must love not only occassionally, for a moment, but for ever. Everyone can love occasionally, even the wicked can" (VI, 3). We are to "Love a man even in his sin," Father Zossima exhorts, "for that is the semblence of Divine Love and is the highest love on earth. Love all of God's creation, the whole and every grain of sand in it. Love every leaf, every ray of God's light. Love the animals, love the plants, love everything. If you love everything, you will perceive the divine mystery in things" (VI, 3). For Zossima and the author who created him this is the one way and not merely one of many ways.
Note to self 2: Or, leave the speculative wrestling to friends who are seeing these obstinate things more incisively just now.
To all the contributor,
Excellent searchers for podcast!
Recently, I found H.S. Harris's pdf lectures notes, including Hegel's Philosophy of religion and Hegel' Logic
http://pi.library.yorku.ca/dspace/handle/10315/883
cch
Excellent blog....Multimedia college.
Intresting Article...Multimedia College
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