My badly translated YouTube says: has Nietzsche wake up yet?
2 months ago | 44
I think the word is stoked, at least where I'm from. I don't know the origin of the word, but stoked also has to do with fire and combustion, I think.
1 month ago | 0
What is the best way to access this essay? I was having a hell of a time finding it anywhere that wasn’t behind a steep paywall.
2 months ago | 2
*Small typo in the message > should be stoked Haven't watched PT in ages, last I remember they were riding a horse as the last heir of what I believe was the English throne. Small world.
2 months ago | 0
Alice the PT nietzsche essay was terrible, let's be honest 😅
2 months ago (edited) | 5
So what? So many video essays makers just complain on the internet and never actually do anything but make media and art. Without actual work being done, the art is meaningless.
2 months ago | 1
you're never in a good place if your conclusions are a barometer of philosophy tube. Nor, indeed, Nietzsche. I'd point you toward Ash Sarker's new tome, for a fair critique of Wokeism if you don't like my arguments much. Regarding Nietzsche. No, he certainly was NOT woke. One feature of woke is the rather spurious supposition that the individual is transparent to him or herself. Whatever you may think of Nietzsche's philosophy (like Freud, like Marx) he does not believe the individual to be self-transparent, but is occluded in the space of culture; that power is the "underlying" mechanism of life, but may be expressed in other forms of behaviour, for example. The Woke person begins from the unphilosophical (risible) platitude of assuming the miracle of being outside culture and "saying what one means." I expect better of you.
2 months ago (edited) | 2
Alice Cappelle
Yayyy! So stocked to see @PhilosophyTube came to the same conclusion as in my video 'in defense of 'wokism'' , quoting Wendy Brown's essay Moralism as Antipolitics (great essay!!)
2 months ago | [YT] | 318