Why is Trebbor-Bongo always begging for help?
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TaraDeS — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 03:25 AM)
dbentley666 July 30, 2025 04:59 AM
Member since June 11, 2018
It's not manly at all. I never beg for help. Russell never begs.
Nobody begs, except losers.
You constantly beg for attention with bs.
Self-praise, wrong win-declarations, boring lala-topics, stupid call-outs.
You're just a poor wannabe 666 and a misogynistic attention-whore.
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TaraDeS — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 03:34 AM)
dbentley666 July 30, 2025 05:29 AM
Member since June 11, 2018
Attention, yes. Help, no.
Now go to sleep, Nazi moron.
And your constant cheap reaction is, calling me a Nazi just because I'm German.
I pity you, poor 666 shadow. -
TaraDeS — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 03:43 AM)
dbentley666 July 30, 2025 05:39 AM
Member since June 11, 2018
Bach, Beethoven, Handel, Schubert, Goethe, Schiller, Thomas Mann, Rilke, Hesse, Kafka: all heroes of mine.
Nazis are a big no-no.
Bentley knows some names, Bentley is so sophisticated.
And still doesn't know what a Nazi is. -
LivingDeadBoy
️ — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 03:57 AM)He was one of the major philosophers I didnt read much of. I understood "I think" his core concepts but I did not agree with his issues with Hegel. Neither his nor Adornos "they had different issues with him but still". But then I basically esteem Hegel as a demigod so.
Fidelio♟️ -
dbentley666 — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 04:10 AM)
Good god, I forgot Adorno! Definitely one of my heroes. I've learned more from Adorno than from Heidegger. Hegel is a very great philosopher, and I think his Phenomenology of Spirit is one of the most influential texts ever written, but I think Nietzsche does a great hatchet job on much of Hegel.
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LivingDeadBoy
️ — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 04:26 AM)I like Adorno better than Heidegger as well. But I actually knew what he was talking about because I took the time to read him, unlike Heidegger. I read a little of Heidegger and then read a book explaining his ideas rather than actually trudging through myself. I never felt that trusting of him. Always regarded him with some suspicion even though many people say he's such an incredible thinker, deeper than Hegel, etc.
I agreed with Nietzsches Hegel criticisms BEFORE I read Hegel. I had a vague familiarity with Hegels ideas for many years but didn't like his conclusions and was afraid to read him. Just had an automatic dislike for a while. I liked Nietzsche and Deleuze criticisms of Hegel and I preferred Spinoza to Hegel. I always knew Hegel was "right" or at least unable to be proven "wrong" in my gut though, so I finally read him after reading through books that explained his peculiar terminology. I already knew his historical background and who he was replying to and to an extent building on "Kant, Schelling".
Hegel still blows my mind to this day. Hegel was like this demonic super intelligence. I think the only other person I've read that blew my mind with how far they were willing to stretch the limits of thought was Derrida. But he was more the anti Hegel..
Fidelio♟️ -
dbentley666 — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 04:35 AM)
I'd say Heidegger is still important, very important, because he was one of the first (following Nietzsche, of course) to argue quite seriously that humankind was digging itself into a deep pit, as a result of its forgetfulness of Being. He was, in a sense, the ancestor of all the modern cynics and environmental pessimists (including me) who think we took a wrong turn some centuries ago, either through our embrace of technology or (more worryingly) through our embrace of a a Socratic rationality that displaces the balanced Apollonian-Dionysian philosophy of the pre-Socratics (both Nietzsche and Heidegger argue this). Hegel, on the other hand, seems to be the philosopher of a more optimistic modernity, the philosopher of growth and progress. I ilke his Phenomenology, as I said, largely because I understand it through Kojeve's critique of the Master-Slave sections. Hegel does what Marx fails to do: theorise the importance of status-seeking rather than straightforward materialism.
Adorno is very great as a cultural critic, as one who recommends great art as an antidote to the ills of modernity. In that sense, Charles Taylor is his contemporary disciple, especially in Cosmic Connections. Ihaven't read Spinoza closely, alas; something I must rectify.
I find Derrida tedious, thoigh he's clearly very smart… I've had to teach the bugger, and that was agony! -
LivingDeadBoy
️ — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 04:56 AM)I'd be interested in actually reading what Heidegger has to say about technology, specifically right now with the increases in AI. I have more of a luddite attitude about technology.
Yeah I wouldnt want to teach Derrida to anyone either! Or Hegel. Ive tried explaining Hegel to some friends irl and they just zone out like I'm speaking Chinese.
Fidelio♟️ -
dbentley666 — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 05:03 AM)
I only taught "Structure, Sign and Play" but that was enough! I had less of a problem with Kristeva, Lacan and Butler, maybe because I find psychoanalysis more congenial than deconstruction….
I've used Hegel's Phenomenology with students, and they loved it….
Heidegger has an essay called The Question of Technology. But you can also get a sense of what he thinks from Being and Time… -
LivingDeadBoy
️ — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 05:16 AM)I'll read The Question of Technology. I watched a YouTube video that broke it down, many years ago, but I forgot mostly everything.
Being and Time, too much right now. I own it though. Didn't get far. Haven't touched it since 2016.
Fidelio♟️ -
dbentley666 — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 05:19 AM)
LivingDeadBoy
️ said...
I'll read The Question of Technology. I watched a YouTube video that broke it down, many years ago, but I forgot mostly everything.
Being and Time, too much right now. I own it though. Didn't get far. Haven't touched it since 2016.
Question of Technology is oddly unsatisfying (to me). Heidegger seems to want to pull his punches. Being and Time is much better, and I found it surprisingly easy to read. Much easier than Sartre's Being and Nothingness, for instance. -
sheetsadam1 — 8 months ago(July 30, 2025 03:58 AM)
Bach, Beethoven, Handel, Schubert, Goethe, Schiller, Thomas Mann, Rilke, Hesse, Kafka: all heroes of mine.
Nazis are a big no-no.
Marx, Engels, Neu!, Döblin, Fritz Lang, Sophie, Hildegard of Bingen, von Steuben.
Yes, Germans are ****ing rad!
Draft Barron Trump