An object is a technical term in philosophy often used in contrast to the term subject. Consciousness is a state of cognition that includes the subject, which can never be doubted as only it can be the one who doubts, and some object or objects that may or may not have real existence without reference to the subject. Metaphysical frameworks also differ in whether they consider objects exist independently of their properties and, if so, in what way.
In English the word object is derived from the Latinobjectus (pp. of obicere) with the meaning of "to throw, or put before or against", from ob-(pref.) and jacere, "to throw". As such it is a root for several important words used to derive meaning, such as objectify (to materialize), objective (a future reference), and objectivism (a philosophical doctrine that knowledge is based on objective reality).
Philosophy is the study of general and fundamental problems, such as those connected with reality, existence, knowledge, values, reason, mind, and language. Philosophy is distinguished from other ways of addressing such problems by its critical, generally systematic approach and its reliance on rational argument. The word "philosophy" comes from the Greek φιλοσοφία (philosophia), which literally means "love of wisdom".
The introduction of the terms "philosopher" and "philosophy" has been ascribed to the Greek thinker Pythagoras. The ascription is said to be based on a passage in a lost work of Herakleides Pontikos, a disciple of Aristotle. It is considered to be part of the widespread body of legends of Pythagoras of this time. "Philosopher" was understood as a word which contrasted with "sophist" (from sophoi). Traveling sophists or "wise men" were important in Classical Greece, often earning money as teachers, whereas philosophers are "lovers of wisdom" and not professionals.
The main areas of study in philosophy today include epistemology, logic, metaphysics, ethics, and aesthetics.
Levi Bryant on Object-Oriented Philosophy & Speculative Realism
Levi Bryant on Object-Oriented Philosophy & Speculative Realism
Levi Bryant on Object-Oriented Philosophy & Speculative Realism
Levi Bryant gives a talk titled "Onto-Cartography: On Towards a Borromean Critical Theory".
9:26
4 Ways of Thinking About Abstract Objects - Philosophy Tube
4 Ways of Thinking About Abstract Objects - Philosophy Tube
4 Ways of Thinking About Abstract Objects - Philosophy Tube
Are numbers, sets, colours and Hamlet really objects? Are they abstract? What does that mean? Let Philosophy Tube and David Lewis explain…
Like metaphysics? Check out:
Does Time Pass? http://tinyurl.com/pl5tbvx
Is Time Real? http://tinyurl.com/ojz2zub
Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thephilosophytube
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Suggested Reading:
David Lewis, On The Plurality of Worlds
That awesome comment from Critical Lit: https://
9:38
subject object philosophy
subject object philosophy
subject object philosophy
We can stay together @ http://www.facebook.com/pages/Loksviews/375219492597543 www.loksviews.com Bhagavad Gita talks about how to view subject and object phe...
8:24
Object of philosophy vs science
Object of philosophy vs science
Object of philosophy vs science
I am still trying to define what philosophy is by specifying its object. Now I ask what the difference is between philosophy and science. Science is also als...
11:56
How to Count All the Objects in the Universe - Philosophy Tube
How to Count All the Objects in the Universe - Philosophy Tube
How to Count All the Objects in the Universe - Philosophy Tube
Metaphysics! How would we count all the objects in the universe?
More metaphysics:
Possible Worlds #1 http://tinyurl.com/nowznyd
Possible Worlds #2 http://tinyurl.com/nppdlzp
Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thephilosophytube
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Suggested Reading:
VSauce On How Many Things are There? http://tinyurl.com/m5ucup6
SEP Entry on Objects: http://tinyurl.com/m5rug6s
David Lewis, On the Plurality of Worlds,
Keith
1:30
The Crazy Object-oriented ontology philosophy guy
The Crazy Object-oriented ontology philosophy guy
The Crazy Object-oriented ontology philosophy guy
I am not sure what point this guy was trying to make, but "Object-oriented ontology" is written on the blackboard.
7:54
Software Philosophy: Object Oriented Programming
Software Philosophy: Object Oriented Programming
Software Philosophy: Object Oriented Programming
starting off.
107:40
Things As Objects of Value - The Philosophy of Value - Manly P Hall - 2
Things As Objects of Value - The Philosophy of Value - Manly P Hall - 2
Things As Objects of Value - The Philosophy of Value - Manly P Hall - 2
133:36
OOO
OOO
OOO
Discussion: With Graham Harman, Michelle Kasprzak, Francis Halsall. Response from Kevin Love and Andrew Goffey.
What does it mean to imagine that everything exists equally in the world, and that human beings have no more status than atoms or alpacas? Object-oriented ontology ("OOO") puts things (rather than human beings, science or social relations) at the heart of studying what it means to exist. It is a new philosophical movement that has had a decisive influence on the work of both artists and exhibition-makers. A discussion with philosopher Graham Harman, curator Michelle Kasprzak and lecturers Francis Halsall, Kevin Love and Andrew Goff
43:19
Hegel and Marx - Bryan Magee Series of The Great Philosophers
Hegel and Marx - Bryan Magee Series of The Great Philosophers
Hegel and Marx - Bryan Magee Series of The Great Philosophers
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (August 27, 1770 -- November 14, 1831) a German philosopher and a major figure in German Idealism. His historicist and idealist...
0:55
Richard Feynman on hungry philosophers (or do we see objects or only their light)
Richard Feynman on hungry philosophers (or do we see objects or only their light)
Richard Feynman on hungry philosophers (or do we see objects or only their light)
Richard P Feynman's answer to the question: "When you are looking at something do you see only light or do you see the object?", taken from his first Sir Dou...
37:52
Steve Klabnik - OO Design and the history of philosophy
Steve Klabnik - OO Design and the history of philosophy
Steve Klabnik - OO Design and the history of philosophy
This video was recorded on http://wrocloverb.com. You should follow us at https://twitter.com/wrocloverb. See you next year! Actions are driven by ideas, and...
24:37
The Object of Philosophy (response to MrCropper)
The Object of Philosophy (response to MrCropper)
The Object of Philosophy (response to MrCropper)
Response to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OC7fwlVs0CE Cropper, perhaps, if you wish to actually engage in a philosophical discussion instead of just tellin...
59:18
Graham Harman Interview - Objects, Latour, Foucault, Freud, Egypt, animals and guns
Graham Harman Interview - Objects, Latour, Foucault, Freud, Egypt, animals and guns
Graham Harman Interview - Objects, Latour, Foucault, Freud, Egypt, animals and guns
Graham Harman speaks about object-oriented philosophy, speculative realism, Bruno Latour, Michel Foucault, Sigmund Freud, the Egyptian revolution, animal rig...
Levi Bryant on Object-Oriented Philosophy & Speculative Realism
Levi Bryant on Object-Oriented Philosophy & Speculative Realism
Levi Bryant on Object-Oriented Philosophy & Speculative Realism
Levi Bryant gives a talk titled "Onto-Cartography: On Towards a Borromean Critical Theory".
9:26
4 Ways of Thinking About Abstract Objects - Philosophy Tube
4 Ways of Thinking About Abstract Objects - Philosophy Tube
4 Ways of Thinking About Abstract Objects - Philosophy Tube
Are numbers, sets, colours and Hamlet really objects? Are they abstract? What does that mean? Let Philosophy Tube and David Lewis explain…
Like metaphysics? Check out:
Does Time Pass? http://tinyurl.com/pl5tbvx
Is Time Real? http://tinyurl.com/ojz2zub
Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thephilosophytube
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/PhilosophyTube
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PhilosophyTube
Twitter: @PhilosophyTube
Email: ollysphilosophychannel@gmail.com
Google+: google.com/+thephilosophytube
Suggested Reading:
David Lewis, On The Plurality of Worlds
That awesome comment from Critical Lit: https://
9:38
subject object philosophy
subject object philosophy
subject object philosophy
We can stay together @ http://www.facebook.com/pages/Loksviews/375219492597543 www.loksviews.com Bhagavad Gita talks about how to view subject and object phe...
8:24
Object of philosophy vs science
Object of philosophy vs science
Object of philosophy vs science
I am still trying to define what philosophy is by specifying its object. Now I ask what the difference is between philosophy and science. Science is also als...
11:56
How to Count All the Objects in the Universe - Philosophy Tube
How to Count All the Objects in the Universe - Philosophy Tube
How to Count All the Objects in the Universe - Philosophy Tube
Metaphysics! How would we count all the objects in the universe?
More metaphysics:
Possible Worlds #1 http://tinyurl.com/nowznyd
Possible Worlds #2 http://tinyurl.com/nppdlzp
Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thephilosophytube
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/PhilosophyTube
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PhilosophyTube?ref=hl
Twitter: @PhilosophyTube
Email: ollysphilosophychannel@gmail.com
Google+: google.com/+thephilosophytube
Suggested Reading:
VSauce On How Many Things are There? http://tinyurl.com/m5ucup6
SEP Entry on Objects: http://tinyurl.com/m5rug6s
David Lewis, On the Plurality of Worlds,
Keith
1:30
The Crazy Object-oriented ontology philosophy guy
The Crazy Object-oriented ontology philosophy guy
The Crazy Object-oriented ontology philosophy guy
I am not sure what point this guy was trying to make, but "Object-oriented ontology" is written on the blackboard.
7:54
Software Philosophy: Object Oriented Programming
Software Philosophy: Object Oriented Programming
Software Philosophy: Object Oriented Programming
starting off.
107:40
Things As Objects of Value - The Philosophy of Value - Manly P Hall - 2
Things As Objects of Value - The Philosophy of Value - Manly P Hall - 2
Things As Objects of Value - The Philosophy of Value - Manly P Hall - 2
133:36
OOO
OOO
OOO
Discussion: With Graham Harman, Michelle Kasprzak, Francis Halsall. Response from Kevin Love and Andrew Goffey.
What does it mean to imagine that everything exists equally in the world, and that human beings have no more status than atoms or alpacas? Object-oriented ontology ("OOO") puts things (rather than human beings, science or social relations) at the heart of studying what it means to exist. It is a new philosophical movement that has had a decisive influence on the work of both artists and exhibition-makers. A discussion with philosopher Graham Harman, curator Michelle Kasprzak and lecturers Francis Halsall, Kevin Love and Andrew Goff
43:19
Hegel and Marx - Bryan Magee Series of The Great Philosophers
Hegel and Marx - Bryan Magee Series of The Great Philosophers
Hegel and Marx - Bryan Magee Series of The Great Philosophers
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (August 27, 1770 -- November 14, 1831) a German philosopher and a major figure in German Idealism. His historicist and idealist...
0:55
Richard Feynman on hungry philosophers (or do we see objects or only their light)
Richard Feynman on hungry philosophers (or do we see objects or only their light)
Richard Feynman on hungry philosophers (or do we see objects or only their light)
Richard P Feynman's answer to the question: "When you are looking at something do you see only light or do you see the object?", taken from his first Sir Dou...
37:52
Steve Klabnik - OO Design and the history of philosophy
Steve Klabnik - OO Design and the history of philosophy
Steve Klabnik - OO Design and the history of philosophy
This video was recorded on http://wrocloverb.com. You should follow us at https://twitter.com/wrocloverb. See you next year! Actions are driven by ideas, and...
24:37
The Object of Philosophy (response to MrCropper)
The Object of Philosophy (response to MrCropper)
The Object of Philosophy (response to MrCropper)
Response to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OC7fwlVs0CE Cropper, perhaps, if you wish to actually engage in a philosophical discussion instead of just tellin...
59:18
Graham Harman Interview - Objects, Latour, Foucault, Freud, Egypt, animals and guns
Graham Harman Interview - Objects, Latour, Foucault, Freud, Egypt, animals and guns
Graham Harman Interview - Objects, Latour, Foucault, Freud, Egypt, animals and guns
Graham Harman speaks about object-oriented philosophy, speculative realism, Bruno Latour, Michel Foucault, Sigmund Freud, the Egyptian revolution, animal rig...
214:49
The Transcendental Object At The End Of Time (Terence McKenna Movie) FULL HD
The Transcendental Object At The End Of Time (Terence McKenna Movie) FULL HD
The Transcendental Object At The End Of Time (Terence McKenna Movie) FULL HD
Terence Kemp McKenna was an author, lecturer, philosopher and shamanic explorer of the realm of psychedelic states. He spoke and wrote about a variety of subjects, including metaphysics, alchemy, language, culture, technology, and the theoretical origins of human consciousness. He has been described by some as being "so far out, nobody knows what he's talking about", and by others as "the most innovative thinker of our times".
To shake us out of our perceptual torpor, McKenna played the holy fool, the crazy wisdom sage. He pushed our faces in the most exotic, lurid inventions of modern science and technology. What elevated him above most othe
18:11
American Philosophy Collection — Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge — Consciousness and Object {audio
American Philosophy Collection — Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge — Consciousness and Object {audio
American Philosophy Collection — Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge — Consciousness and Object {audio
9:10
Monte Johnson: Aristotle on the Purpose of Life
Monte Johnson: Aristotle on the Purpose of Life
Monte Johnson: Aristotle on the Purpose of Life
In this video, Monte Johnson (University of California, San Diego) explores an approach to the question “What is the purpose of life?” developed by the Greek...
90:59
Graham Harman Delivers Provost's Lecture on Object-Oriented Method
Graham Harman Delivers Provost's Lecture on Object-Oriented Method
Graham Harman Delivers Provost's Lecture on Object-Oriented Method
Distinguished University Professor Graham Harman delivered the Provost's Lecture titled "Object-Oriented Method in the Humanities, Social Sciences, Art and A...
47:53
American Philosophy Collection — Frank Thilly — The Relation of Consciousness and Object in Sense Pe
American Philosophy Collection — Frank Thilly — The Relation of Consciousness and Object in Sense Pe
American Philosophy Collection — Frank Thilly — The Relation of Consciousness and Object in Sense Pe
76:38
Philosophy of God: L02- P1- Possibility and object of Natural Theology
Philosophy of God: L02- P1- Possibility and object of Natural Theology
Philosophy of God: L02- P1- Possibility and object of Natural Theology
The possibility of a natural theology, God as its subject matter, the method used by natural theology and its content.
Man’s natural knowledge of God. Necessity of analogy. Possibility of forming an idea of God, opposing Agnosticim. The origin of the idea of God. (McCormick, p. 1-9)
55:14
Graham Harman - Speculative Realism and the Philosophy of Tristan Garcia (Purdue Jan 14 2013)
Graham Harman - Speculative Realism and the Philosophy of Tristan Garcia (Purdue Jan 14 2013)
Graham Harman - Speculative Realism and the Philosophy of Tristan Garcia (Purdue Jan 14 2013)
Graham Harman on Speculative Realism and the Philosophy of Tristan Garcia @ Purdue, Mon. Jan. 14th The Illuminations Lecture Series, sponsored by the Philoso...
87:56
Slavoj Žižek. Object a and The Function of Ideology. 2012
Slavoj Žižek. Object a and The Function of Ideology. 2012
Slavoj Žižek. Object a and The Function of Ideology. 2012
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, philosopher and author, talking about the structure of belief and the mediation of desire. In this lecture Slavoj Žižek di...
64:24
Slavoj Zizek. Object Petit a and Digital Civilization. 2014
Slavoj Zizek. Object Petit a and Digital Civilization. 2014
Slavoj Zizek. Object Petit a and Digital Civilization. 2014
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, Slovenian philosopher and cultural theorist talking about object small a, digital civilization, desire, psychoanalysis, prosthetic extension, virtual reality, projection, science, language, universality, sexuality, in relation to the authors Freud, Lacan, Kierkegaard and Hegel. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2012. Slavoj Žižek.
Slavoj Žižek, Ph.D., (born March 21, 1949), is a senior researcher at the Institute of Sociology, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, and a returning f
Levi Bryant on Object-Oriented Philosophy & Speculative Realism
Are numbers, sets, colours and Hamlet really objects? Are they abstract? What does that mean? Let Philosophy Tube and David Lewis explain…
Like metaphysics? Check out:
Does Time Pass? http://tinyurl.com/pl5tbvx
Is Time Real? http://tinyurl.com/ojz2zub
Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thephilosophytube
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/PhilosophyTube
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PhilosophyTube
Twitter: @PhilosophyTube
Email: ollysphilosophychannel@gmail.com
Google+: google.com/+thephilosophytube
Suggested Reading:
David Lewis, On The Plurality of Worlds
That awesome comment from Critical Lit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lzUrVeIdIBM&google;_comment_id=z12awpzzbw3oitxby04cgtyifrnytpj5wfk
If you or your organisation would like to financially support Philosophy Tube in distributing philosophical knowledge to those who might not otherwise have access to it in exchange for credits on the show, please get in touch!
Music: 'Show your Moves' and 'Pamgea' by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Any copyrighted material should fall under fair use for educational purposes or commentary, but if you are a copyright holder and believe your material has been used unfairly please get in touch with us and we will be happy to discuss it.
Are numbers, sets, colours and Hamlet really objects? Are they abstract? What does that mean? Let Philosophy Tube and David Lewis explain…
Like metaphysics? Check out:
Does Time Pass? http://tinyurl.com/pl5tbvx
Is Time Real? http://tinyurl.com/ojz2zub
Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thephilosophytube
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/PhilosophyTube
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PhilosophyTube
Twitter: @PhilosophyTube
Email: ollysphilosophychannel@gmail.com
Google+: google.com/+thephilosophytube
Suggested Reading:
David Lewis, On The Plurality of Worlds
That awesome comment from Critical Lit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lzUrVeIdIBM&google;_comment_id=z12awpzzbw3oitxby04cgtyifrnytpj5wfk
If you or your organisation would like to financially support Philosophy Tube in distributing philosophical knowledge to those who might not otherwise have access to it in exchange for credits on the show, please get in touch!
Music: 'Show your Moves' and 'Pamgea' by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Any copyrighted material should fall under fair use for educational purposes or commentary, but if you are a copyright holder and believe your material has been used unfairly please get in touch with us and we will be happy to discuss it.
We can stay together @ http://www.facebook.com/pages/Loksviews/375219492597543 www.loksviews.com Bhagavad Gita talks about how to view subject and object phe...
We can stay together @ http://www.facebook.com/pages/Loksviews/375219492597543 www.loksviews.com Bhagavad Gita talks about how to view subject and object phe...
I am still trying to define what philosophy is by specifying its object. Now I ask what the difference is between philosophy and science. Science is also als...
I am still trying to define what philosophy is by specifying its object. Now I ask what the difference is between philosophy and science. Science is also als...
Metaphysics! How would we count all the objects in the universe?
More metaphysics:
Possible Worlds #1 http://tinyurl.com/nowznyd
Possible Worlds #2 http://tinyurl.com/nppdlzp
Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thephilosophytube
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/PhilosophyTube
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PhilosophyTube?ref=hl
Twitter: @PhilosophyTube
Email: ollysphilosophychannel@gmail.com
Google+: google.com/+thephilosophytube
Suggested Reading:
VSauce On How Many Things are There? http://tinyurl.com/m5ucup6
SEP Entry on Objects: http://tinyurl.com/m5rug6s
David Lewis, On the Plurality of Worlds,
Keith Hossack, “Plurals and Complexes,” in British Journal for Philosophy of Science
Cian Dorr, “What We Disagree About when We Disagree about Ontology,” in Fictionalism in Metaphysics
Peter van Inwagen, Chapter 2 of Material Beings
James Van Cleve, “The Moon and Sixpence: A Defence of Mereological Universalism,” in Contemporary Debates in Metaphysics
If you or your organisation would like to financially support Philosophy Tube in distributing philosophical knowledge to those who might not otherwise have access to it in exchange for credits on the show, please get in touch!
Music: 'Show your Moves,' 'Latin Industries,' ‘Dark Fog,’ ‘Deliberate Thought,’ ‘Space Fighter Loop’ and ‘Pamgea’ by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Any copyrighted material should fall under fair use for educational purposes or commentary, but if you are a copyright holder and believe your material has been used unfairly please get in touch with us and we will be happy to discuss it.
Metaphysics! How would we count all the objects in the universe?
More metaphysics:
Possible Worlds #1 http://tinyurl.com/nowznyd
Possible Worlds #2 http://tinyurl.com/nppdlzp
Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thephilosophytube
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/PhilosophyTube
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PhilosophyTube?ref=hl
Twitter: @PhilosophyTube
Email: ollysphilosophychannel@gmail.com
Google+: google.com/+thephilosophytube
Suggested Reading:
VSauce On How Many Things are There? http://tinyurl.com/m5ucup6
SEP Entry on Objects: http://tinyurl.com/m5rug6s
David Lewis, On the Plurality of Worlds,
Keith Hossack, “Plurals and Complexes,” in British Journal for Philosophy of Science
Cian Dorr, “What We Disagree About when We Disagree about Ontology,” in Fictionalism in Metaphysics
Peter van Inwagen, Chapter 2 of Material Beings
James Van Cleve, “The Moon and Sixpence: A Defence of Mereological Universalism,” in Contemporary Debates in Metaphysics
If you or your organisation would like to financially support Philosophy Tube in distributing philosophical knowledge to those who might not otherwise have access to it in exchange for credits on the show, please get in touch!
Music: 'Show your Moves,' 'Latin Industries,' ‘Dark Fog,’ ‘Deliberate Thought,’ ‘Space Fighter Loop’ and ‘Pamgea’ by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Any copyrighted material should fall under fair use for educational purposes or commentary, but if you are a copyright holder and believe your material has been used unfairly please get in touch with us and we will be happy to discuss it.
Discussion: With Graham Harman, Michelle Kasprzak, Francis Halsall. Response from Kevin Love and Andrew Goffey.
What does it mean to imagine that everything exists equally in the world, and that human beings have no more status than atoms or alpacas? Object-oriented ontology ("OOO") puts things (rather than human beings, science or social relations) at the heart of studying what it means to exist. It is a new philosophical movement that has had a decisive influence on the work of both artists and exhibition-makers. A discussion with philosopher Graham Harman, curator Michelle Kasprzak and lecturers Francis Halsall, Kevin Love and Andrew Goffey will address implications for the artwork as object.
Discussion: With Graham Harman, Michelle Kasprzak, Francis Halsall. Response from Kevin Love and Andrew Goffey.
What does it mean to imagine that everything exists equally in the world, and that human beings have no more status than atoms or alpacas? Object-oriented ontology ("OOO") puts things (rather than human beings, science or social relations) at the heart of studying what it means to exist. It is a new philosophical movement that has had a decisive influence on the work of both artists and exhibition-makers. A discussion with philosopher Graham Harman, curator Michelle Kasprzak and lecturers Francis Halsall, Kevin Love and Andrew Goffey will address implications for the artwork as object.
published:19 Jun 2013
views:0
Hegel and Marx - Bryan Magee Series of The Great Philosophers
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (August 27, 1770 -- November 14, 1831) a German philosopher and a major figure in German Idealism. His historicist and idealist...
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (August 27, 1770 -- November 14, 1831) a German philosopher and a major figure in German Idealism. His historicist and idealist...
Richard P Feynman's answer to the question: "When you are looking at something do you see only light or do you see the object?", taken from his first Sir Dou...
Richard P Feynman's answer to the question: "When you are looking at something do you see only light or do you see the object?", taken from his first Sir Dou...
This video was recorded on http://wrocloverb.com. You should follow us at https://twitter.com/wrocloverb. See you next year! Actions are driven by ideas, and...
This video was recorded on http://wrocloverb.com. You should follow us at https://twitter.com/wrocloverb. See you next year! Actions are driven by ideas, and...
Response to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OC7fwlVs0CE Cropper, perhaps, if you wish to actually engage in a philosophical discussion instead of just tellin...
Response to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OC7fwlVs0CE Cropper, perhaps, if you wish to actually engage in a philosophical discussion instead of just tellin...
Graham Harman speaks about object-oriented philosophy, speculative realism, Bruno Latour, Michel Foucault, Sigmund Freud, the Egyptian revolution, animal rig...
Graham Harman speaks about object-oriented philosophy, speculative realism, Bruno Latour, Michel Foucault, Sigmund Freud, the Egyptian revolution, animal rig...
Terence Kemp McKenna was an author, lecturer, philosopher and shamanic explorer of the realm of psychedelic states. He spoke and wrote about a variety of subjects, including metaphysics, alchemy, language, culture, technology, and the theoretical origins of human consciousness. He has been described by some as being "so far out, nobody knows what he's talking about", and by others as "the most innovative thinker of our times".
To shake us out of our perceptual torpor, McKenna played the holy fool, the crazy wisdom sage. He pushed our faces in the most exotic, lurid inventions of modern science and technology. What elevated him above most other prophets was that he delivered his prophesies with a wink, an implicit acknowledgement that ultimately reality is stranger than we CAN suppose.
McKenna’s métier was the spoken word — stand-up philosophy that meme-splices Alfred North Whitehead, Marshall McLuhan, James Joyce, William Blake and many others, delivered in a reedy, insinuating voice. Available throughout the Internet with titles like “Having Archaic and Eating it Too” and “Shedding the Monkey,” his lectures are tours de force of verbal virtuosity and pack-rat polymathy, leaping trippingly (in both senses of the word) from quantum mechanics to medieval alchemy, from the chaos theory of Ilya Prigogine to the neo-Platonism of Philo Judaeus.
This movie was created to present and collect (some of) his most profound thoughts, and to possibly show glimpses of the alchemical angel that Terence pursued throughout his life. It does not serve as a biography, (at least) three very important themes were left out for the simple reason that they take hours to unfold themselves: the experiment at La Chorrera, the relationship between the McKenna brothers, and the Trialogues with Rupert Sheldrake and Ralph Abraham. And so, three books are essential to anyone who'd like to dive deeper into the life and mind of Terence McKenna:
True Hallucinations by Terence McKenna
The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss by Dennis McKenna
Chaos, Creativity, and Cosmic Consciousness by Rupert Sheldrake, Terence McKenna, and Ralph Abraham
Created by Peter Bergmann, this is a movie/documentary/project/mashup/juxtaposition/amalgamation made from everything Terence McKenna left us with, mixed with the music of We Plants Are Happy Plants.
From Terence McKenna's Eulogy to Leo Zeff:
Sometimes when Leo would sit with people, they would come out of their reveries and want to talk with him about what they were learning and seeing. And Leo would listen for a few minutes. But he then would always say: "That's fine, that's good, now return to the music." And I think that.. I like to think that Leo has now returned to the music. And some day so shall we. And to whatever degree we follow his example life here, the passage to whatever lies beyond will be made much easier.
Leo showed the way, because Leo knew the way. And I salute him for that, I say for all of us who were his tribe: Goodbye to the secret chief, goodbye to the man who saw most deeply. It's now for us to do as he would have had us do.
The Transcendental Object At The End Of Time
Part 1: Introduction 2:32
Part 2: Human Evolution 10:10
Part 3: Alchemy 15:02
Part 4: Plants 28:26
Part 5: Psychedelics 30:33
Part 6: Culture 34:25
Part 7: Psilocybin 39:48
Part 8: Leaving History 45:16
Part 9: How do you communicate with the mushroom? 51:23
Part 10: What is the voice? 54:18
Part 11: Conversation with Ram Dass 57:51
Part 12: DMT 1:09:46
Part 13: The DMT Experience 1:12:42
Part 14: Rupert Sheldrake and Ralph Abraham 1:26:46
Part 15: Rap, Rant, Rave 1:38:38
Part 16: The Big Bang 1:52:35
Part 17: Humanity 1:57:07
Part 18: "Why is it important for you to do this?" 2:02:38
Part 19: The Good, The True, and The Beautiful 2:12:30
Part 20: Kathleen Harrison 2:15:10
Part 21: Bad Trip 2:17:34
Part 22: High Water Weirdness Event 2:20:57
Part 23: The Promise Of Art 2:26:00
Part 24: Cannabis 2:35:45
Part 25: From Monkeydom To Starshiphood 2:41:41
Part 26: The Transcendental Object At The End Of Time 2:47:10
Part 27: Last Thoughts 2:51:12
Epilogue 3:10:20
Ever-expanding list of contributors, whose work is featured:
(please mention it in the comments if you run into your art/footage)
Videos and audio recordings
SOUND PHOTOSYNTHESIS
Mike Kawitzky
Lorenzo Hagerty/Matrix Masters
VISUALS:
TAS
DMTRMX
Ben Ridgway
The Art Of Salvia Droid
Simon Haiduk
Ken Adams, Bruce Damer, Sacred Mysteries, Rupert Sheldrake, Ralph Abraham
Support this movie:
Buy or stream my music
http://songsabouttheunspeakable.com
http://facebook.com/wpahp
Stream the soundtrack on Spotify:
http://open.spotify.com/user/wpahp/playlist/1fL1lEsza9ISRlj5PV6cXM
Or just like, comment, share!
Thanks for watching
- Peter Bergmann/We Plants Are Happy Plants
Terence McKenna on Facebook
http://facebook.com/LanguageEvolution
Terence Kemp McKenna was an author, lecturer, philosopher and shamanic explorer of the realm of psychedelic states. He spoke and wrote about a variety of subjects, including metaphysics, alchemy, language, culture, technology, and the theoretical origins of human consciousness. He has been described by some as being "so far out, nobody knows what he's talking about", and by others as "the most innovative thinker of our times".
To shake us out of our perceptual torpor, McKenna played the holy fool, the crazy wisdom sage. He pushed our faces in the most exotic, lurid inventions of modern science and technology. What elevated him above most other prophets was that he delivered his prophesies with a wink, an implicit acknowledgement that ultimately reality is stranger than we CAN suppose.
McKenna’s métier was the spoken word — stand-up philosophy that meme-splices Alfred North Whitehead, Marshall McLuhan, James Joyce, William Blake and many others, delivered in a reedy, insinuating voice. Available throughout the Internet with titles like “Having Archaic and Eating it Too” and “Shedding the Monkey,” his lectures are tours de force of verbal virtuosity and pack-rat polymathy, leaping trippingly (in both senses of the word) from quantum mechanics to medieval alchemy, from the chaos theory of Ilya Prigogine to the neo-Platonism of Philo Judaeus.
This movie was created to present and collect (some of) his most profound thoughts, and to possibly show glimpses of the alchemical angel that Terence pursued throughout his life. It does not serve as a biography, (at least) three very important themes were left out for the simple reason that they take hours to unfold themselves: the experiment at La Chorrera, the relationship between the McKenna brothers, and the Trialogues with Rupert Sheldrake and Ralph Abraham. And so, three books are essential to anyone who'd like to dive deeper into the life and mind of Terence McKenna:
True Hallucinations by Terence McKenna
The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss by Dennis McKenna
Chaos, Creativity, and Cosmic Consciousness by Rupert Sheldrake, Terence McKenna, and Ralph Abraham
Created by Peter Bergmann, this is a movie/documentary/project/mashup/juxtaposition/amalgamation made from everything Terence McKenna left us with, mixed with the music of We Plants Are Happy Plants.
From Terence McKenna's Eulogy to Leo Zeff:
Sometimes when Leo would sit with people, they would come out of their reveries and want to talk with him about what they were learning and seeing. And Leo would listen for a few minutes. But he then would always say: "That's fine, that's good, now return to the music." And I think that.. I like to think that Leo has now returned to the music. And some day so shall we. And to whatever degree we follow his example life here, the passage to whatever lies beyond will be made much easier.
Leo showed the way, because Leo knew the way. And I salute him for that, I say for all of us who were his tribe: Goodbye to the secret chief, goodbye to the man who saw most deeply. It's now for us to do as he would have had us do.
The Transcendental Object At The End Of Time
Part 1: Introduction 2:32
Part 2: Human Evolution 10:10
Part 3: Alchemy 15:02
Part 4: Plants 28:26
Part 5: Psychedelics 30:33
Part 6: Culture 34:25
Part 7: Psilocybin 39:48
Part 8: Leaving History 45:16
Part 9: How do you communicate with the mushroom? 51:23
Part 10: What is the voice? 54:18
Part 11: Conversation with Ram Dass 57:51
Part 12: DMT 1:09:46
Part 13: The DMT Experience 1:12:42
Part 14: Rupert Sheldrake and Ralph Abraham 1:26:46
Part 15: Rap, Rant, Rave 1:38:38
Part 16: The Big Bang 1:52:35
Part 17: Humanity 1:57:07
Part 18: "Why is it important for you to do this?" 2:02:38
Part 19: The Good, The True, and The Beautiful 2:12:30
Part 20: Kathleen Harrison 2:15:10
Part 21: Bad Trip 2:17:34
Part 22: High Water Weirdness Event 2:20:57
Part 23: The Promise Of Art 2:26:00
Part 24: Cannabis 2:35:45
Part 25: From Monkeydom To Starshiphood 2:41:41
Part 26: The Transcendental Object At The End Of Time 2:47:10
Part 27: Last Thoughts 2:51:12
Epilogue 3:10:20
Ever-expanding list of contributors, whose work is featured:
(please mention it in the comments if you run into your art/footage)
Videos and audio recordings
SOUND PHOTOSYNTHESIS
Mike Kawitzky
Lorenzo Hagerty/Matrix Masters
VISUALS:
TAS
DMTRMX
Ben Ridgway
The Art Of Salvia Droid
Simon Haiduk
Ken Adams, Bruce Damer, Sacred Mysteries, Rupert Sheldrake, Ralph Abraham
Support this movie:
Buy or stream my music
http://songsabouttheunspeakable.com
http://facebook.com/wpahp
Stream the soundtrack on Spotify:
http://open.spotify.com/user/wpahp/playlist/1fL1lEsza9ISRlj5PV6cXM
Or just like, comment, share!
Thanks for watching
- Peter Bergmann/We Plants Are Happy Plants
Terence McKenna on Facebook
http://facebook.com/LanguageEvolution
published:16 Nov 2014
views:5367
American Philosophy Collection — Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge — Consciousness and Object {audio
In this video, Monte Johnson (University of California, San Diego) explores an approach to the question “What is the purpose of life?” developed by the Greek...
In this video, Monte Johnson (University of California, San Diego) explores an approach to the question “What is the purpose of life?” developed by the Greek...
Distinguished University Professor Graham Harman delivered the Provost's Lecture titled "Object-Oriented Method in the Humanities, Social Sciences, Art and A...
Distinguished University Professor Graham Harman delivered the Provost's Lecture titled "Object-Oriented Method in the Humanities, Social Sciences, Art and A...
The possibility of a natural theology, God as its subject matter, the method used by natural theology and its content.
Man’s natural knowledge of God. Necessity of analogy. Possibility of forming an idea of God, opposing Agnosticim. The origin of the idea of God. (McCormick, p. 1-9)
The possibility of a natural theology, God as its subject matter, the method used by natural theology and its content.
Man’s natural knowledge of God. Necessity of analogy. Possibility of forming an idea of God, opposing Agnosticim. The origin of the idea of God. (McCormick, p. 1-9)
published:14 Jan 2015
views:7
Graham Harman - Speculative Realism and the Philosophy of Tristan Garcia (Purdue Jan 14 2013)
Graham Harman on Speculative Realism and the Philosophy of Tristan Garcia @ Purdue, Mon. Jan. 14th The Illuminations Lecture Series, sponsored by the Philoso...
Graham Harman on Speculative Realism and the Philosophy of Tristan Garcia @ Purdue, Mon. Jan. 14th The Illuminations Lecture Series, sponsored by the Philoso...
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, philosopher and author, talking about the structure of belief and the mediation of desire. In this lecture Slavoj Žižek di...
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, philosopher and author, talking about the structure of belief and the mediation of desire. In this lecture Slavoj Žižek di...
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, Slovenian philosopher and cultural theorist talking about object small a, digital civilization, desire, psychoanalysis, prosthetic extension, virtual reality, projection, science, language, universality, sexuality, in relation to the authors Freud, Lacan, Kierkegaard and Hegel. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2012. Slavoj Žižek.
Slavoj Žižek, Ph.D., (born March 21, 1949), is a senior researcher at the Institute of Sociology, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, and a returning faculty member of the European Graduate School. He has also been a visiting professor at a number of American Universities (Columbia, Princeton, New School for Social Research, New York University, University of Michigan). Slavoj Žižek recieved his Ph.D. in Philosophy in Ljubljana studying Psychoanalysis. He also studied at the University of Paris. Slavoj Žižek is a cultural critic, philosopher and film theorist who is internationally known for his innovative interpretations of Hegel, Marx and Jacques Lacan. Slavoj Žižek has been called the 'Elvis Presley' of philosophy as well as an 'academic rock star.'
Slavoj Žižek is the author of The Sublime Object of Ideology (1989), For They Know Not What They Do (1991), Looking Awry: an Introduction to Jacques Lacan Through Popular Culture (1991), Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Lacan (But Were Afraid To Ask Hitchcock) (1992), Enjoy Your Symptom! Jacques Lacan In Hollywood And Out (1992), Tarrying With The Negative (1993), Mapping Ideology (1994), The Indivisible Remainder (1996), The Plague of Fantasies (1997), The Abyss Of Freedom (1997), The Ticklish Subject: The Absent Centre of Political Ontology (1999), Contingency, Hegemony, Universality: Contemporary Dialogues on the Left (with Judith Butler and Ernesto Laclau) (2000), The Art of the Ridiculous Sublime, On David Lynch's Lost Highway (2000), The Fragile Absolute or Why the Christian Legacy is Worth Fighting For (2000), On Belief (2001), The Fright of Real Tears (2001), Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism? (2001), The Puppet and the Dwarf (2003), Organs Without Bodies: On Deleuze and Consequences (2003), Iraq The Borrowed Kettle (2004) Violence (2008), First As Tragedy, Then As Farce (2009), Living in the End Times (2010), Less Than Nothing: Hegel and the Shadow of Dialectical Materialism (2012), and most recently, The Year of Dreaming Dangerously (2012).
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, Slovenian philosopher and cultural theorist talking about object small a, digital civilization, desire, psychoanalysis, prosthetic extension, virtual reality, projection, science, language, universality, sexuality, in relation to the authors Freud, Lacan, Kierkegaard and Hegel. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2012. Slavoj Žižek.
Slavoj Žižek, Ph.D., (born March 21, 1949), is a senior researcher at the Institute of Sociology, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, and a returning faculty member of the European Graduate School. He has also been a visiting professor at a number of American Universities (Columbia, Princeton, New School for Social Research, New York University, University of Michigan). Slavoj Žižek recieved his Ph.D. in Philosophy in Ljubljana studying Psychoanalysis. He also studied at the University of Paris. Slavoj Žižek is a cultural critic, philosopher and film theorist who is internationally known for his innovative interpretations of Hegel, Marx and Jacques Lacan. Slavoj Žižek has been called the 'Elvis Presley' of philosophy as well as an 'academic rock star.'
Slavoj Žižek is the author of The Sublime Object of Ideology (1989), For They Know Not What They Do (1991), Looking Awry: an Introduction to Jacques Lacan Through Popular Culture (1991), Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Lacan (But Were Afraid To Ask Hitchcock) (1992), Enjoy Your Symptom! Jacques Lacan In Hollywood And Out (1992), Tarrying With The Negative (1993), Mapping Ideology (1994), The Indivisible Remainder (1996), The Plague of Fantasies (1997), The Abyss Of Freedom (1997), The Ticklish Subject: The Absent Centre of Political Ontology (1999), Contingency, Hegemony, Universality: Contemporary Dialogues on the Left (with Judith Butler and Ernesto Laclau) (2000), The Art of the Ridiculous Sublime, On David Lynch's Lost Highway (2000), The Fragile Absolute or Why the Christian Legacy is Worth Fighting For (2000), On Belief (2001), The Fright of Real Tears (2001), Did Somebody Say Totalitarianism? (2001), The Puppet and the Dwarf (2003), Organs Without Bodies: On Deleuze and Consequences (2003), Iraq The Borrowed Kettle (2004) Violence (2008), First As Tragedy, Then As Farce (2009), Living in the End Times (2010), Less Than Nothing: Hegel and the Shadow of Dialectical Materialism (2012), and most recently, The Year of Dreaming Dangerously (2012).
Contemporary American philosopher Graham Harman, the leading figure associated with the metaphysical movement object-oriented ontology, delivers his lecture ...
51:36
Veda Pramana of Shree Madhwacharya's Tatvavada.mp4 (video mp4 Object)
Veda Pramana of Shree Madhwacharya's Tatvavada.mp4 (video mp4 Object)
Veda Pramana of Shree Madhwacharya's Tatvavada.mp4 (video mp4 Object)
Dr. Purna Prasad presents an introduction to the science behind the philosophy of the great thirteenth century philosopher Shree Madhwacharya.
63:25
Graham Harman. Black Holes. 2014
Graham Harman. Black Holes. 2014
Graham Harman. Black Holes. 2014
http://www.egs.edu Graham Harman, Philosopher, talking about the thing-in-itself, black holes, withdrawn objects, Speculative Realism, Heidegger, correlationism, essence, Object Oriented Philosophy, the History of Philosophy, materialism. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2014. Graham Harman.
Graham Harman is Distinguished University Professor at the American University in Cairo, where he has worked since 2000. He is a founding member of the well-known Speculative Realism movement, and the chief exponent (since
103:15
[Philosophy] An Introduction to Metaphysics (& the Absolute Reality), Audiobook by Henri Bergson
[Philosophy] An Introduction to Metaphysics (& the Absolute Reality), Audiobook by Henri Bergson
[Philosophy] An Introduction to Metaphysics (& the Absolute Reality), Audiobook by Henri Bergson
An Introduction to Metaphysics (Introduction a la Metaphysique) is a philosophical essay by Henri Bergson that explores the concept of reality. For Bergson, ...
92:28
Objects and Objections
Objects and Objections
Objects and Objections
*Apologies for poor sound quality at beginning - it improves after around 20:00 !*
Friday November 7 2014: a book launch and discussion with Peter Wolfendale on his new book OBJECT-ORIENTED PHILOSOPHY, followed by Q&A;, at Baltic Kitchen, BALTIC CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART, Gateshead, UK.
0:00
The Noumenon Unclothed: Metaphysics with Peter Wolfendale
The Noumenon Unclothed: Metaphysics with Peter Wolfendale
The Noumenon Unclothed: Metaphysics with Peter Wolfendale
With his recent book from Urbanomic, Object Oriented Philosophy: The Noumenon’s New Clothes, philosopher Peter Wolfendale examines trends in continental philosophy which seek to overturn a correlationist consensus, and directly access a metaphysical realism once more. Wolfendale engages a broad-ranging knowledge of the history Western philosophical thought, from Deleuze to Quine, to examine and critique this turn, arguing for the priority of a methodological epistemology if we are to have any hope of recovering a metaphysical stance worth advocating. Following Kant, Wolfendale’s Transcendental Realism proceeds from a fundamental deontology to
30:31
Ruby Midwest 2013 OOP and Philosophy by Steve Klabnik
Ruby Midwest 2013 OOP and Philosophy by Steve Klabnik
Ruby Midwest 2013 OOP and Philosophy by Steve Klabnik
Actions are driven by ideas, and ideas are driven by philosophy. For a deep understanding of our actions, we have to go the whole way back to the philosophy ...
23:03
Let's read: Bertrand Russell- "The Value of Philosophy"
Let's read: Bertrand Russell- "The Value of Philosophy"
Let's read: Bertrand Russell- "The Value of Philosophy"
This is a reading of the last chapter of Bertrand Russell's 1912 book, "The Problems of Philosophy."
Clear, rational, and undeniably consistent, Russell argues that the mind without philosophical training will be constrained, and ultimately relegated to using only common sense to explain the world.
This is a point that I truly believe in: Intuition provides an incomplete worldview. We grow satisfied with the things to which we are accustomed, and this enticing comfort causes us to trust in our assumptions about the world. The actual state of the world does not always correspond to our expectations, which are usually derived from our "common
28:11
Alan Watts ~ Why Money Rules Your Life
Alan Watts ~ Why Money Rules Your Life
Alan Watts ~ Why Money Rules Your Life
http://alanwatts.com/ Alan Watts was born in London in January of 1915 at the start of the first World War. At a young age he became fascinated with the arts...
Contemporary American philosopher Graham Harman, the leading figure associated with the metaphysical movement object-oriented ontology, delivers his lecture ...
Contemporary American philosopher Graham Harman, the leading figure associated with the metaphysical movement object-oriented ontology, delivers his lecture ...
http://www.egs.edu Graham Harman, Philosopher, talking about the thing-in-itself, black holes, withdrawn objects, Speculative Realism, Heidegger, correlationism, essence, Object Oriented Philosophy, the History of Philosophy, materialism. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2014. Graham Harman.
Graham Harman is Distinguished University Professor at the American University in Cairo, where he has worked since 2000. He is a founding member of the well-known Speculative Realism movement, and the chief exponent (since the late 1990’s) of object-oriented philosophy. In 2013 he was ranked by ArtReview, along with his Speculative Realist colleagues, as one of the 100 most powerful influences in the contemporary art world.
His career as an author being with Tool-Being: Heidegger and the Metaphysics of Objects (2002). This path-breaking interpretation offered a re-reading of Heidegger’s famous tool-analysis, showing that this analysis encapsulates the whole of Heidegger’s philosophical advance. The prominent distinction between Zuhandenheit (readiness-to-hand) and Vorhandenheit (presence-at-hand) gives us an opposition not between praxis and theory, but between objects and relations more generally. Entities do not simply withdraw from human access, as in Immanuel Kant’s notion of the thing-in-itself, but withdraw from each other as well.
http://www.egs.edu Graham Harman, Philosopher, talking about the thing-in-itself, black holes, withdrawn objects, Speculative Realism, Heidegger, correlationism, essence, Object Oriented Philosophy, the History of Philosophy, materialism. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2014. Graham Harman.
Graham Harman is Distinguished University Professor at the American University in Cairo, where he has worked since 2000. He is a founding member of the well-known Speculative Realism movement, and the chief exponent (since the late 1990’s) of object-oriented philosophy. In 2013 he was ranked by ArtReview, along with his Speculative Realist colleagues, as one of the 100 most powerful influences in the contemporary art world.
His career as an author being with Tool-Being: Heidegger and the Metaphysics of Objects (2002). This path-breaking interpretation offered a re-reading of Heidegger’s famous tool-analysis, showing that this analysis encapsulates the whole of Heidegger’s philosophical advance. The prominent distinction between Zuhandenheit (readiness-to-hand) and Vorhandenheit (presence-at-hand) gives us an opposition not between praxis and theory, but between objects and relations more generally. Entities do not simply withdraw from human access, as in Immanuel Kant’s notion of the thing-in-itself, but withdraw from each other as well.
published:16 Mar 2015
views:336
[Philosophy] An Introduction to Metaphysics (& the Absolute Reality), Audiobook by Henri Bergson
An Introduction to Metaphysics (Introduction a la Metaphysique) is a philosophical essay by Henri Bergson that explores the concept of reality. For Bergson, ...
An Introduction to Metaphysics (Introduction a la Metaphysique) is a philosophical essay by Henri Bergson that explores the concept of reality. For Bergson, ...
*Apologies for poor sound quality at beginning - it improves after around 20:00 !*
Friday November 7 2014: a book launch and discussion with Peter Wolfendale on his new book OBJECT-ORIENTED PHILOSOPHY, followed by Q&A;, at Baltic Kitchen, BALTIC CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART, Gateshead, UK.
*Apologies for poor sound quality at beginning - it improves after around 20:00 !*
Friday November 7 2014: a book launch and discussion with Peter Wolfendale on his new book OBJECT-ORIENTED PHILOSOPHY, followed by Q&A;, at Baltic Kitchen, BALTIC CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART, Gateshead, UK.
published:10 Nov 2014
views:286
The Noumenon Unclothed: Metaphysics with Peter Wolfendale
With his recent book from Urbanomic, Object Oriented Philosophy: The Noumenon’s New Clothes, philosopher Peter Wolfendale examines trends in continental philosophy which seek to overturn a correlationist consensus, and directly access a metaphysical realism once more. Wolfendale engages a broad-ranging knowledge of the history Western philosophical thought, from Deleuze to Quine, to examine and critique this turn, arguing for the priority of a methodological epistemology if we are to have any hope of recovering a metaphysical stance worth advocating. Following Kant, Wolfendale’s Transcendental Realism proceeds from a fundamental deontology to revive the constructive trajectory of truth in the formal structure of the real, rationally and systematically engaging both the demands of thought and the world upon philosophy.
In this seminar Peter Wolfendale will present his approach to conducting metaphysics in the the 21st century, providing an overview of what we can recover from the development of philosophy and where we can go in the future. Responding to Wolfendale’s presentation will be artist/theorist Amanda Beech, philosopher Daniel Sacilotto, and philosopher Ben Woodard. Moderated by artist and writer Joshua Johnson.
With his recent book from Urbanomic, Object Oriented Philosophy: The Noumenon’s New Clothes, philosopher Peter Wolfendale examines trends in continental philosophy which seek to overturn a correlationist consensus, and directly access a metaphysical realism once more. Wolfendale engages a broad-ranging knowledge of the history Western philosophical thought, from Deleuze to Quine, to examine and critique this turn, arguing for the priority of a methodological epistemology if we are to have any hope of recovering a metaphysical stance worth advocating. Following Kant, Wolfendale’s Transcendental Realism proceeds from a fundamental deontology to revive the constructive trajectory of truth in the formal structure of the real, rationally and systematically engaging both the demands of thought and the world upon philosophy.
In this seminar Peter Wolfendale will present his approach to conducting metaphysics in the the 21st century, providing an overview of what we can recover from the development of philosophy and where we can go in the future. Responding to Wolfendale’s presentation will be artist/theorist Amanda Beech, philosopher Daniel Sacilotto, and philosopher Ben Woodard. Moderated by artist and writer Joshua Johnson.
published:17 Apr 2015
views:0
Ruby Midwest 2013 OOP and Philosophy by Steve Klabnik
Actions are driven by ideas, and ideas are driven by philosophy. For a deep understanding of our actions, we have to go the whole way back to the philosophy ...
Actions are driven by ideas, and ideas are driven by philosophy. For a deep understanding of our actions, we have to go the whole way back to the philosophy ...
This is a reading of the last chapter of Bertrand Russell's 1912 book, "The Problems of Philosophy."
Clear, rational, and undeniably consistent, Russell argues that the mind without philosophical training will be constrained, and ultimately relegated to using only common sense to explain the world.
This is a point that I truly believe in: Intuition provides an incomplete worldview. We grow satisfied with the things to which we are accustomed, and this enticing comfort causes us to trust in our assumptions about the world. The actual state of the world does not always correspond to our expectations, which are usually derived from our "common sense."
The world is not what it seems to the mind's suspicion, and I can demonstrate this to you: Imagine an empty bus with a helium-filled balloon in the middle. The bus driver hits the gas, and the bus quickly accelerates to 50 mph. Where does your intuition tell you that the balloon will go? To the back? To the front? Stay in the middle? Acceleration should cause an object on the bus to move to the back, as the object's mass resists the forward change, preferring to stay at rest. And this is exactly what happens, except that it is not the balloon that goes to the back, but the heavier air: The air inside the bus sloshes back as though the bus were a filled bucket of water, and all of that displaced air sends the (much lighter) balloon shooting forward, as if riding atop a wave of air.
"The value of philosophy" is in its ability to remind us that we should be ever-vigilant in questioning our own assumptions. If you believe only what you see, you will be easy to fool. I hope you enjoy this reading.
This is a reading of the last chapter of Bertrand Russell's 1912 book, "The Problems of Philosophy."
Clear, rational, and undeniably consistent, Russell argues that the mind without philosophical training will be constrained, and ultimately relegated to using only common sense to explain the world.
This is a point that I truly believe in: Intuition provides an incomplete worldview. We grow satisfied with the things to which we are accustomed, and this enticing comfort causes us to trust in our assumptions about the world. The actual state of the world does not always correspond to our expectations, which are usually derived from our "common sense."
The world is not what it seems to the mind's suspicion, and I can demonstrate this to you: Imagine an empty bus with a helium-filled balloon in the middle. The bus driver hits the gas, and the bus quickly accelerates to 50 mph. Where does your intuition tell you that the balloon will go? To the back? To the front? Stay in the middle? Acceleration should cause an object on the bus to move to the back, as the object's mass resists the forward change, preferring to stay at rest. And this is exactly what happens, except that it is not the balloon that goes to the back, but the heavier air: The air inside the bus sloshes back as though the bus were a filled bucket of water, and all of that displaced air sends the (much lighter) balloon shooting forward, as if riding atop a wave of air.
"The value of philosophy" is in its ability to remind us that we should be ever-vigilant in questioning our own assumptions. If you believe only what you see, you will be easy to fool. I hope you enjoy this reading.
http://alanwatts.com/ Alan Watts was born in London in January of 1915 at the start of the first World War. At a young age he became fascinated with the arts...
http://alanwatts.com/ Alan Watts was born in London in January of 1915 at the start of the first World War. At a young age he became fascinated with the arts...
Learn Philosophy Fast & Basic Philosophical Issues
Learn Philosophy Fast & Basic Philosophical Issues
Learn Philosophy Fast & Basic Philosophical Issues
This is a deep-structure philosophy video covering how to fast-track your study of philosophy and a summary of the philosophical issues to be covered in later lectures.
1:32
All About - Property (philosophy)
All About - Property (philosophy)
All About - Property (philosophy)
What is Property (philosophy)?
A documentary report all about Property (philosophy) for the blind and visually impaired or for homework/assignment.
In modern philosophy and mathematics, a property is a characteristic of an object; a red object is said to have the property of redness. The property may be considered a form of object in its own right, able to possess other properties. A property however differs from individual objects in that it may be instantiated, and often in more than one thing. It differs from the logical/mathematical concept of class by not having any concept of extensionality, and from the philosophical concept of cla
4:55
What is the difference between object and concept - and how does it apply to our philosophy?
What is the difference between object and concept - and how does it apply to our philosophy?
What is the difference between object and concept - and how does it apply to our philosophy?
What is the difference between object and concept - and how does it apply to our philosophy?
6:11
Property (philosophy)
Property (philosophy)
Property (philosophy)
In modern philosophy and mathematics, a property is a characteristic of an object; a red object is said to have the property of redness. The property may be considered a form of object in its own right, able to possess other properties. A property however differs from individual objects in that it may be instantiated, and often in more than one thing. It differs from the logical/mathematical concept of class by not having any concept of extensionality, and from the philosophical concept of class in that a property is considered to be distinct from the objects which possess it. Understanding how different individual entities (or particulars) c
2:04
Thalys by Pop Philosophy
Thalys by Pop Philosophy
Thalys by Pop Philosophy
Have you ever thought about the train as a philosophical object?
Travel with Jacques Sojcher, a philosopher, between Brussels and Paris, and see a Thalys journey differently through the prism of Pop Philosophy.
10:05
Alan Watts - Relevance of Oriental Philosophy 1 of 2
Alan Watts - Relevance of Oriental Philosophy 1 of 2
Alan Watts - Relevance of Oriental Philosophy 1 of 2
Reveal the hidden secret behind the numbers that surround your everyday: http://bit.ly/1vjT9kH ---!!! Alan Watts - The Tao of Philosophy Series Alan W...
3:13
Philosophy | Positive Versus Negative Properties
Philosophy | Positive Versus Negative Properties
Philosophy | Positive Versus Negative Properties
The philosophical construct of negative properties is one of it's trade-mark ideas.In modern philosophy, mathematics, and logic, a property is an attribute o...
155:32
CFAR-BCU MA Media Arts Philosophy Practice (Daniel Rubinstein) 5. Diving into the Dialectic Part II
CFAR-BCU MA Media Arts Philosophy Practice (Daniel Rubinstein) 5. Diving into the Dialectic Part II
CFAR-BCU MA Media Arts Philosophy Practice (Daniel Rubinstein) 5. Diving into the Dialectic Part II
CFAR International Centre for Fine Art Research (BIAD/BCU) Prof Johnny Golding / MA Contemporary Philosophy & Aesthetics We've got the 'this', now where is t...
Learn Philosophy Fast & Basic Philosophical Issues
This is a deep-structure philosophy video covering how to fast-track your study of philosophy and a summary of the philosophical issues to be covered in later lectures.
This is a deep-structure philosophy video covering how to fast-track your study of philosophy and a summary of the philosophical issues to be covered in later lectures.
What is Property (philosophy)?
A documentary report all about Property (philosophy) for the blind and visually impaired or for homework/assignment.
In modern philosophy and mathematics, a property is a characteristic of an object; a red object is said to have the property of redness. The property may be considered a form of object in its own right, able to possess other properties. A property however differs from individual objects in that it may be instantiated, and often in more than one thing. It differs from the logical/mathematical concept of class by not having any concept of extensionality, and from the philosophical concept of class in that a property is considered to be distinct from the objects which possess it. Understanding how different individual entities (or particulars) can in some sense have some of the same properties is the basis of the problem of universals. The terms attribute and quality have similar meanings.
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_(philosophy)
Text to Speech powered by tts-api.com
Images are Public Domain or CC-BY-3.0:
220px-Property_dualism.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_(philosophy)
John_Locke_by_Herman_Verelst.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_and_legal_rights
John_Locke.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberalism
What is Property (philosophy)?
A documentary report all about Property (philosophy) for the blind and visually impaired or for homework/assignment.
In modern philosophy and mathematics, a property is a characteristic of an object; a red object is said to have the property of redness. The property may be considered a form of object in its own right, able to possess other properties. A property however differs from individual objects in that it may be instantiated, and often in more than one thing. It differs from the logical/mathematical concept of class by not having any concept of extensionality, and from the philosophical concept of class in that a property is considered to be distinct from the objects which possess it. Understanding how different individual entities (or particulars) can in some sense have some of the same properties is the basis of the problem of universals. The terms attribute and quality have similar meanings.
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_(philosophy)
Text to Speech powered by tts-api.com
Images are Public Domain or CC-BY-3.0:
220px-Property_dualism.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_(philosophy)
John_Locke_by_Herman_Verelst.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_and_legal_rights
John_Locke.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberalism
published:07 Apr 2015
views:0
What is the difference between object and concept - and how does it apply to our philosophy?
In modern philosophy and mathematics, a property is a characteristic of an object; a red object is said to have the property of redness. The property may be considered a form of object in its own right, able to possess other properties. A property however differs from individual objects in that it may be instantiated, and often in more than one thing. It differs from the logical/mathematical concept of class by not having any concept of extensionality, and from the philosophical concept of class in that a property is considered to be distinct from the objects which possess it. Understanding how different individual entities (or particulars) can in some sense have some of the same properties is the basis of the problem of universals. The terms attribute and quality have similar meanings.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
In modern philosophy and mathematics, a property is a characteristic of an object; a red object is said to have the property of redness. The property may be considered a form of object in its own right, able to possess other properties. A property however differs from individual objects in that it may be instantiated, and often in more than one thing. It differs from the logical/mathematical concept of class by not having any concept of extensionality, and from the philosophical concept of class in that a property is considered to be distinct from the objects which possess it. Understanding how different individual entities (or particulars) can in some sense have some of the same properties is the basis of the problem of universals. The terms attribute and quality have similar meanings.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
Have you ever thought about the train as a philosophical object?
Travel with Jacques Sojcher, a philosopher, between Brussels and Paris, and see a Thalys journey differently through the prism of Pop Philosophy.
Have you ever thought about the train as a philosophical object?
Travel with Jacques Sojcher, a philosopher, between Brussels and Paris, and see a Thalys journey differently through the prism of Pop Philosophy.
published:08 Sep 2014
views:87
Alan Watts - Relevance of Oriental Philosophy 1 of 2
Reveal the hidden secret behind the numbers that surround your everyday: http://bit.ly/1vjT9kH ---!!! Alan Watts - The Tao of Philosophy Series Alan W...
Reveal the hidden secret behind the numbers that surround your everyday: http://bit.ly/1vjT9kH ---!!! Alan Watts - The Tao of Philosophy Series Alan W...
The philosophical construct of negative properties is one of it's trade-mark ideas.In modern philosophy, mathematics, and logic, a property is an attribute o...
The philosophical construct of negative properties is one of it's trade-mark ideas.In modern philosophy, mathematics, and logic, a property is an attribute o...
CFAR International Centre for Fine Art Research (BIAD/BCU) Prof Johnny Golding / MA Contemporary Philosophy & Aesthetics We've got the 'this', now where is t...
CFAR International Centre for Fine Art Research (BIAD/BCU) Prof Johnny Golding / MA Contemporary Philosophy & Aesthetics We've got the 'this', now where is t...
4 Ways of Thinking About Abstract Objects - Philosophy Tube
Are numbers, sets, colours and Hamlet really objects? Are they abstract? What does that me...
published:03 Oct 2014
4 Ways of Thinking About Abstract Objects - Philosophy Tube
4 Ways of Thinking About Abstract Objects - Philosophy Tube
Are numbers, sets, colours and Hamlet really objects? Are they abstract? What does that mean? Let Philosophy Tube and David Lewis explain…
Like metaphysics? Check out:
Does Time Pass? http://tinyurl.com/pl5tbvx
Is Time Real? http://tinyurl.com/ojz2zub
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Email: ollysphilosophychannel@gmail.com
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Suggested Reading:
David Lewis, On The Plurality of Worlds
That awesome comment from Critical Lit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lzUrVeIdIBM&google;_comment_id=z12awpzzbw3oitxby04cgtyifrnytpj5wfk
If you or your organisation would like to financially support Philosophy Tube in distributing philosophical knowledge to those who might not otherwise have access to it in exchange for credits on the show, please get in touch!
Music: 'Show your Moves' and 'Pamgea' by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Any copyrighted material should fall under fair use for educational purposes or commentary, but if you are a copyright holder and believe your material has been used unfairly please get in touch with us and we will be happy to discuss it.
published:03 Oct 2014
views:1125
9:38
subject object philosophy
We can stay together @ http://www.facebook.com/pages/Loksviews/375219492597543 www.loksvie...
We can stay together @ http://www.facebook.com/pages/Loksviews/375219492597543 www.loksviews.com Bhagavad Gita talks about how to view subject and object phe...
I am still trying to define what philosophy is by specifying its object. Now I ask what the difference is between philosophy and science. Science is also als...
How to Count All the Objects in the Universe - Philosophy Tube
Metaphysics! How would we count all the objects in the universe?
More metaphysics:
Possib...
published:20 Feb 2015
How to Count All the Objects in the Universe - Philosophy Tube
How to Count All the Objects in the Universe - Philosophy Tube
Metaphysics! How would we count all the objects in the universe?
More metaphysics:
Possible Worlds #1 http://tinyurl.com/nowznyd
Possible Worlds #2 http://tinyurl.com/nppdlzp
Subscribe! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thephilosophytube
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/PhilosophyTube
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PhilosophyTube?ref=hl
Twitter: @PhilosophyTube
Email: ollysphilosophychannel@gmail.com
Google+: google.com/+thephilosophytube
Suggested Reading:
VSauce On How Many Things are There? http://tinyurl.com/m5ucup6
SEP Entry on Objects: http://tinyurl.com/m5rug6s
David Lewis, On the Plurality of Worlds,
Keith Hossack, “Plurals and Complexes,” in British Journal for Philosophy of Science
Cian Dorr, “What We Disagree About when We Disagree about Ontology,” in Fictionalism in Metaphysics
Peter van Inwagen, Chapter 2 of Material Beings
James Van Cleve, “The Moon and Sixpence: A Defence of Mereological Universalism,” in Contemporary Debates in Metaphysics
If you or your organisation would like to financially support Philosophy Tube in distributing philosophical knowledge to those who might not otherwise have access to it in exchange for credits on the show, please get in touch!
Music: 'Show your Moves,' 'Latin Industries,' ‘Dark Fog,’ ‘Deliberate Thought,’ ‘Space Fighter Loop’ and ‘Pamgea’ by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Any copyrighted material should fall under fair use for educational purposes or commentary, but if you are a copyright holder and believe your material has been used unfairly please get in touch with us and we will be happy to discuss it.
published:20 Feb 2015
views:2273
1:30
The Crazy Object-oriented ontology philosophy guy
I am not sure what point this guy was trying to make, but "Object-oriented ontology" is wr...
Discussion: With Graham Harman, Michelle Kasprzak, Francis Halsall. Response from Kevin Lo...
published:19 Jun 2013
OOO
OOO
Discussion: With Graham Harman, Michelle Kasprzak, Francis Halsall. Response from Kevin Love and Andrew Goffey.
What does it mean to imagine that everything exists equally in the world, and that human beings have no more status than atoms or alpacas? Object-oriented ontology ("OOO") puts things (rather than human beings, science or social relations) at the heart of studying what it means to exist. It is a new philosophical movement that has had a decisive influence on the work of both artists and exhibition-makers. A discussion with philosopher Graham Harman, curator Michelle Kasprzak and lecturers Francis Halsall, Kevin Love and Andrew Goffey will address implications for the artwork as object.
published:19 Jun 2013
views:0
43:19
Hegel and Marx - Bryan Magee Series of The Great Philosophers
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (August 27, 1770 -- November 14, 1831) a German philosopher ...
Hegel and Marx - Bryan Magee Series of The Great Philosophers
Hegel and Marx - Bryan Magee Series of The Great Philosophers
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (August 27, 1770 -- November 14, 1831) a German philosopher and a major figure in German Idealism. His historicist and idealist...
Richard Feynman on hungry philosophers (or do we see objects or only their light)
Richard Feynman on hungry philosophers (or do we see objects or only their light)
Richard P Feynman's answer to the question: "When you are looking at something do you see only light or do you see the object?", taken from his first Sir Dou...
Steve Klabnik - OO Design and the history of philosophy
Steve Klabnik - OO Design and the history of philosophy
This video was recorded on http://wrocloverb.com. You should follow us at https://twitter.com/wrocloverb. See you next year! Actions are driven by ideas, and...
Response to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OC7fwlVs0CE Cropper, perhaps, if you wish to actually engage in a philosophical discussion instead of just tellin...
Graham Harman Interview - Objects, Latour, Foucault, Freud, Egypt, animals and guns
Graham Harman Interview - Objects, Latour, Foucault, Freud, Egypt, animals and guns
Graham Harman speaks about object-oriented philosophy, speculative realism, Bruno Latour, Michel Foucault, Sigmund Freud, the Egyptian revolution, animal rig...
Contemporary American philosopher Graham Harman, the leading figure associated with the metaphysical movement object-oriented ontology, delivers his lecture ...
http://www.egs.edu Graham Harman, Philosopher, talking about the thing-in-itself, black ho...
published:16 Mar 2015
Graham Harman. Black Holes. 2014
Graham Harman. Black Holes. 2014
http://www.egs.edu Graham Harman, Philosopher, talking about the thing-in-itself, black holes, withdrawn objects, Speculative Realism, Heidegger, correlationism, essence, Object Oriented Philosophy, the History of Philosophy, materialism. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2014. Graham Harman.
Graham Harman is Distinguished University Professor at the American University in Cairo, where he has worked since 2000. He is a founding member of the well-known Speculative Realism movement, and the chief exponent (since the late 1990’s) of object-oriented philosophy. In 2013 he was ranked by ArtReview, along with his Speculative Realist colleagues, as one of the 100 most powerful influences in the contemporary art world.
His career as an author being with Tool-Being: Heidegger and the Metaphysics of Objects (2002). This path-breaking interpretation offered a re-reading of Heidegger’s famous tool-analysis, showing that this analysis encapsulates the whole of Heidegger’s philosophical advance. The prominent distinction between Zuhandenheit (readiness-to-hand) and Vorhandenheit (presence-at-hand) gives us an opposition not between praxis and theory, but between objects and relations more generally. Entities do not simply withdraw from human access, as in Immanuel Kant’s notion of the thing-in-itself, but withdraw from each other as well.
published:16 Mar 2015
views:336
103:15
[Philosophy] An Introduction to Metaphysics (& the Absolute Reality), Audiobook by Henri Bergson
An Introduction to Metaphysics (Introduction a la Metaphysique) is a philosophical essay b...
[Philosophy] An Introduction to Metaphysics (& the Absolute Reality), Audiobook by Henri Bergson
[Philosophy] An Introduction to Metaphysics (& the Absolute Reality), Audiobook by Henri Bergson
An Introduction to Metaphysics (Introduction a la Metaphysique) is a philosophical essay by Henri Bergson that explores the concept of reality. For Bergson, ...
*Apologies for poor sound quality at beginning - it improves after around 20:00 !*
Friday ...
published:10 Nov 2014
Objects and Objections
Objects and Objections
*Apologies for poor sound quality at beginning - it improves after around 20:00 !*
Friday November 7 2014: a book launch and discussion with Peter Wolfendale on his new book OBJECT-ORIENTED PHILOSOPHY, followed by Q&A;, at Baltic Kitchen, BALTIC CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART, Gateshead, UK.
published:10 Nov 2014
views:286
0:00
The Noumenon Unclothed: Metaphysics with Peter Wolfendale
With his recent book from Urbanomic, Object Oriented Philosophy: The Noumenon’s New Clothe...
published:17 Apr 2015
The Noumenon Unclothed: Metaphysics with Peter Wolfendale
The Noumenon Unclothed: Metaphysics with Peter Wolfendale
With his recent book from Urbanomic, Object Oriented Philosophy: The Noumenon’s New Clothes, philosopher Peter Wolfendale examines trends in continental philosophy which seek to overturn a correlationist consensus, and directly access a metaphysical realism once more. Wolfendale engages a broad-ranging knowledge of the history Western philosophical thought, from Deleuze to Quine, to examine and critique this turn, arguing for the priority of a methodological epistemology if we are to have any hope of recovering a metaphysical stance worth advocating. Following Kant, Wolfendale’s Transcendental Realism proceeds from a fundamental deontology to revive the constructive trajectory of truth in the formal structure of the real, rationally and systematically engaging both the demands of thought and the world upon philosophy.
In this seminar Peter Wolfendale will present his approach to conducting metaphysics in the the 21st century, providing an overview of what we can recover from the development of philosophy and where we can go in the future. Responding to Wolfendale’s presentation will be artist/theorist Amanda Beech, philosopher Daniel Sacilotto, and philosopher Ben Woodard. Moderated by artist and writer Joshua Johnson.
published:17 Apr 2015
views:0
30:31
Ruby Midwest 2013 OOP and Philosophy by Steve Klabnik
Actions are driven by ideas, and ideas are driven by philosophy. For a deep understanding ...
Ruby Midwest 2013 OOP and Philosophy by Steve Klabnik
Ruby Midwest 2013 OOP and Philosophy by Steve Klabnik
Actions are driven by ideas, and ideas are driven by philosophy. For a deep understanding of our actions, we have to go the whole way back to the philosophy ...
Let's read: Bertrand Russell- "The Value of Philosophy"
This is a reading of the last chapter of Bertrand Russell's 1912 book, "The Problems of Ph...
published:15 May 2015
Let's read: Bertrand Russell- "The Value of Philosophy"
Let's read: Bertrand Russell- "The Value of Philosophy"
This is a reading of the last chapter of Bertrand Russell's 1912 book, "The Problems of Philosophy."
Clear, rational, and undeniably consistent, Russell argues that the mind without philosophical training will be constrained, and ultimately relegated to using only common sense to explain the world.
This is a point that I truly believe in: Intuition provides an incomplete worldview. We grow satisfied with the things to which we are accustomed, and this enticing comfort causes us to trust in our assumptions about the world. The actual state of the world does not always correspond to our expectations, which are usually derived from our "common sense."
The world is not what it seems to the mind's suspicion, and I can demonstrate this to you: Imagine an empty bus with a helium-filled balloon in the middle. The bus driver hits the gas, and the bus quickly accelerates to 50 mph. Where does your intuition tell you that the balloon will go? To the back? To the front? Stay in the middle? Acceleration should cause an object on the bus to move to the back, as the object's mass resists the forward change, preferring to stay at rest. And this is exactly what happens, except that it is not the balloon that goes to the back, but the heavier air: The air inside the bus sloshes back as though the bus were a filled bucket of water, and all of that displaced air sends the (much lighter) balloon shooting forward, as if riding atop a wave of air.
"The value of philosophy" is in its ability to remind us that we should be ever-vigilant in questioning our own assumptions. If you believe only what you see, you will be easy to fool. I hope you enjoy this reading.
published:15 May 2015
views:16
28:11
Alan Watts ~ Why Money Rules Your Life
http://alanwatts.com/ Alan Watts was born in London in January of 1915 at the start of the...
http://alanwatts.com/ Alan Watts was born in London in January of 1915 at the start of the first World War. At a young age he became fascinated with the arts...
Learn Philosophy Fast & Basic Philosophical Issues
This is a deep-structure philosophy video covering how to fast-track your study of philoso...
published:15 Apr 2015
Learn Philosophy Fast & Basic Philosophical Issues
Learn Philosophy Fast & Basic Philosophical Issues
This is a deep-structure philosophy video covering how to fast-track your study of philosophy and a summary of the philosophical issues to be covered in later lectures.
published:15 Apr 2015
views:41
1:32
All About - Property (philosophy)
What is Property (philosophy)?
A documentary report all about Property (philosophy) for t...
published:07 Apr 2015
All About - Property (philosophy)
All About - Property (philosophy)
What is Property (philosophy)?
A documentary report all about Property (philosophy) for the blind and visually impaired or for homework/assignment.
In modern philosophy and mathematics, a property is a characteristic of an object; a red object is said to have the property of redness. The property may be considered a form of object in its own right, able to possess other properties. A property however differs from individual objects in that it may be instantiated, and often in more than one thing. It differs from the logical/mathematical concept of class by not having any concept of extensionality, and from the philosophical concept of class in that a property is considered to be distinct from the objects which possess it. Understanding how different individual entities (or particulars) can in some sense have some of the same properties is the basis of the problem of universals. The terms attribute and quality have similar meanings.
Intro/Outro music:
Discovery Hit/Chucky the Construction Worker - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC-BY-3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_(philosophy)
Text to Speech powered by tts-api.com
Images are Public Domain or CC-BY-3.0:
220px-Property_dualism.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_(philosophy)
John_Locke_by_Herman_Verelst.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_and_legal_rights
John_Locke.jpg from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberalism
published:07 Apr 2015
views:0
4:55
What is the difference between object and concept - and how does it apply to our philosophy?
What is the difference between object and concept - and how does it apply to our philosoph...
published:06 Oct 2014
What is the difference between object and concept - and how does it apply to our philosophy?
What is the difference between object and concept - and how does it apply to our philosophy?
What is the difference between object and concept - and how does it apply to our philosophy?
published:06 Oct 2014
views:8
6:11
Property (philosophy)
In modern philosophy and mathematics, a property is a characteristic of an object; a red o...
published:28 Sep 2014
Property (philosophy)
Property (philosophy)
In modern philosophy and mathematics, a property is a characteristic of an object; a red object is said to have the property of redness. The property may be considered a form of object in its own right, able to possess other properties. A property however differs from individual objects in that it may be instantiated, and often in more than one thing. It differs from the logical/mathematical concept of class by not having any concept of extensionality, and from the philosophical concept of class in that a property is considered to be distinct from the objects which possess it. Understanding how different individual entities (or particulars) can in some sense have some of the same properties is the basis of the problem of universals. The terms attribute and quality have similar meanings.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
published:28 Sep 2014
views:2
2:04
Thalys by Pop Philosophy
Have you ever thought about the train as a philosophical object?
Travel with Jacques Sojch...
published:08 Sep 2014
Thalys by Pop Philosophy
Thalys by Pop Philosophy
Have you ever thought about the train as a philosophical object?
Travel with Jacques Sojcher, a philosopher, between Brussels and Paris, and see a Thalys journey differently through the prism of Pop Philosophy.
published:08 Sep 2014
views:87
10:05
Alan Watts - Relevance of Oriental Philosophy 1 of 2
Reveal the hidden secret behind the numbers that surround your everyday: http://bit.ly/1vj...
Alan Watts - Relevance of Oriental Philosophy 1 of 2
Alan Watts - Relevance of Oriental Philosophy 1 of 2
Reveal the hidden secret behind the numbers that surround your everyday: http://bit.ly/1vjT9kH ---!!! Alan Watts - The Tao of Philosophy Series Alan W...
The philosophical construct of negative properties is one of it's trade-mark ideas.In modern philosophy, mathematics, and logic, a property is an attribute o...
CFAR-BCU MA Media Arts Philosophy Practice (Daniel Rubinstein) 5. Diving into the Dialectic Part II
CFAR-BCU MA Media Arts Philosophy Practice (Daniel Rubinstein) 5. Diving into the Dialectic Part II
CFAR International Centre for Fine Art Research (BIAD/BCU) Prof Johnny Golding / MA Contemporary Philosophy & Aesthetics We've got the 'this', now where is t...
(CNN)The question everyone is asking, now that the two Dannemora, New York, fugitives are no longer on the run, is. What took the cops so long?. It's the wrong question. The real question we should be asking is. How is it possible that nobody, other than the fugitives, got hurt? No one from law enforcement. No one from the public. Not a single injury, not a single fatality ...Philip Lerman. There's certainly an element of luck involved ... ....
TAIPEI, Taiwan — A fire on a music stage spread into a crowd of spectators at a Saturday night party at a Taiwan water park, injuring more than 500 people, including eight in critical condition, authorities said Sunday. The fire was sparked by an accidental explosion of a colored theatrical powder thrown from the stage in front of about 1,000 people, the fire agency and local media said ... ....
The gunman killed by police after the Tunisian attack which killed at least 38 people was not previously known to the authorities, according to the country’s prime minister. Habib Essid said Seifeddine Rezgui came from the town of Gaafour in the Siliana region and had been a student at the University of Kairouan... ....
Behind the Candelabra star tells Event magazine he ‘regretted the embarrasment’ to Catherine Zeta-Jones of his comments about oral sex and cancer given in a 2013 Guardian interview. ‘It was one of those things’ … Michael Douglas. Photograph. Clarius Entertainment/cour/R/Clarius Entertainment/cour/R. Ben Child. @BenChildGeek. Monday 29 June 2015 09.48 BST...Related. Michael Douglas. oral sex caused my cancer ... “And her family.” ... Related ... Related ... ....
Politically and Ethically Significant Speech", concern a collection of issues at the under-explored intersection of philosophy of language with moral and political philosophy... Lecture 6 returns to philosophy of language with a close look at the pragmatics of efforts to rectify this under-representation ... Political Manipulation and Philosophy of Language ... In feminist philosophy, Saul is known for her book Feminism....
"Architecture then becomes an archive of the social form," said MarcusVilaRichter, "and individualization of the building facade is almost becoming an object of social research." ... You need to know something about philosophy and other fields to keep track."....
"Architecture then becomes an archive of the social form," said MarcusVilaRichter, "and individualization of the building facade is almost becoming an object of social research." ... You need to know something about philosophy and other fields to keep track."....
Drawing widely from such fields as behavioral decision research, politics, philosophy of choice, and conflict management in terrorism, Sri Bhashyam and Montibeller propose modifications in the assumptions used by counter-terrorism risk analysts to make models conform more closely to what actually is known about terrorists' motivations and judgments....
... are a leading indicator of financial stability, providing an objective baseline of the future solvency of an insurer. Demotech's philosophy is to review and evaluate insurers based on their area of focus and execution of their business model rather than solely on financial size. Visit www.demotech.com for more information....
Dublin manager Jim Gavin was pleased with his team's discipline in their comprehensive LeinsterSFC semi-final win over Kildare on Sunday ... "In those exchanges, our guys held their ground, which you would expect them to do ... "Discipline is one of our core philosophies and everything is based around that ... "To that end that objective has been achieved and we’re just delighted to get through to a Leinster final....
New Community Participation and Additional Resources Without affecting the poor, are the Objectives of the Additional 5 %Tax The Additional 5 % tax is provisional, for 3 years Shall be payable as of January 2015 together with tax returns of the current year ... The aforementioned three pillars are reflected in the philosophy of the draft law, as the ......
The unique collaboration between FireflyMillward Brown and Second City is designed to apply the philosophy of improvisation to generating and developing consumer-generated ideas ...The idea behind Consumer Theater is grounded the improvisational philosophy of 'Yes, And …,' which explores and continually builds on an idea using improvisational exercises, scene structures, and games....
The House and Senate are so far apart – in numbers and philosophy – that they couldn’t even agree on a temporary budget last week to keep government running while they argue ...Pass a straightforward budget and argue philosophy of government later. ....
Last week JusticeAnthony Kennedy wrote the for the landmark Obergefell v ... 2 Li Chi ... Chai & W ... 1967) ... But for some on the court, like Justice Antonin Scalia, even using philosophy from other cultures is . ... It's no longer appropriate to use the single prism of Westernphilosophy to represent the history of civilization ... And who knows, maybe it's a small sign that the Supreme Court might be more open to international laws and philosophy....
A revolution originated from the holocaust of injustice and oppression.5th June 1963 is the origin of all inclusive uprising, characterised by two outstanding features I.e the sole leadership of Imam Khomeini and the all Islamic motives and objectives of the movement ... Imam Khomeini ( r a) passed on the trust & custodianship of the objects of the revolution to Imam Khameini present Leader....
It allows clubs to conform with the FFPphilosophy while leaving room for them to invest and grow at the same time as preventing gambling on success - a development that pleases UEFA president Michel Platini. "The new regulations are an expansion and a strengthening of financial fair play," he said. "The overall objectives of financial fair play remain the same ...That's a fair argument ... "Maybe ... If I invest I am in breach ... ....
(Source. University of Windsor). A passion for teaching mixed with an empathetic and non-judgemental approach earned Social Work professor Dr ... A former student says that Dr ... Dr. Grant says her teaching is guided by an overall philosophy and belief in creating a respectful classroom environment ... This philosophy has been noted by Dr ... distributed by ... (noodl....