Nietzsche's point is that the thinker tries to think against what is generally accepted that they must always push the limits of their ideas. Perhaps, it isn't how he or Sarte felt but spoke so as a way of fulling their "office" as a thinker. It is a taxing way of life to live, when you are within your own head and working against your own thoughts and instincts.
@TheSpiritualShow There are a few places you can look. I think the quotation they have in this video is from Bernard-Henri Lévy's (terrible) biography of Sartre, because it sounds familiar. And I think there are other times when he talks about it, in his essays, but I can't think of any of the specifics right now.
"A thinker can for years on end force himself to think against the grain: that is to say, to pursue not the thoughts which offer themselves from within him but those to which an office, a prescribed schedule, an arbitrary kind of industriousness seem to oblige him. In the end, however, he will fall sick: for this apparently moral overcoming of himself will ruin his nervous energy just as thoroughly as any regularly indulged in excess could do." -- Nietzsche
sartre didnt do the extreme opposite he did exactly as the thinker nietzsche is describing woould do
1) to pursue not the thoughts which offer themselves from within him but those to which an office, a prescribed schedule, an arbitrary kind of industriousness seem to oblige him-being and nothingness, whole of your life scheduled from nothingness to actuall being
2)he will fall sick-sartre joinig marxism that is, stop thinking
@gautamkc He embraced Marxism due to internal compulsion, not the external kind that Nietzsche speaks of there, and also abandoned it due to his thoughts changing, hence, more internal compulsion. He perpetually pursued life through manifestations of freedom, and being a staunch individual against all odds, always vigorously and with self-worth. Conversely, the person Nietzsche speaks of in that aphorism lacerates himself in the bondage of what is unworthy of him and merely saps him of fervour.
I also cannot find 7. I am immensely grateful to the person who uploaded these.I have wanted to see these for years.If 7 is available please upload it.
4:10 The guy just changed from french to english.
Renegen1 6 months ago
@Antchrist4Life
Nietzsche's point is that the thinker tries to think against what is generally accepted that they must always push the limits of their ideas. Perhaps, it isn't how he or Sarte felt but spoke so as a way of fulling their "office" as a thinker. It is a taxing way of life to live, when you are within your own head and working against your own thoughts and instincts.
skinsmagic 6 months ago
ABOUT SARTRE ON THE TERRORISME, IS THERE'S ANY LINK IN FRENCH OR ENGLISH? in what book or article was this published? anyone?
TheSpiritualShow 2 years ago
@TheSpiritualShow There are a few places you can look. I think the quotation they have in this video is from Bernard-Henri Lévy's (terrible) biography of Sartre, because it sounds familiar. And I think there are other times when he talks about it, in his essays, but I can't think of any of the specifics right now.
bittercup87 1 year ago
Does anyone know if there are are documentaries available regarding his falling out with Camus over l'homme revolté?
I was hoping someone might elucidate on why Simone de Beauvoir hated Camus so much in the end?
madelinefauchelevant 4 years ago
Sartre and Camus falling out? Now that's just Absurd.
zekal10 3 years ago 15
@zekal10 Awesome
brandonplaysguitar16 1 year ago
@zekal10 Good one, but not as absurd as Heidegger and Nazism. :)
natedaug1 1 year ago
"A thinker can for years on end force himself to think against the grain: that is to say, to pursue not the thoughts which offer themselves from within him but those to which an office, a prescribed schedule, an arbitrary kind of industriousness seem to oblige him. In the end, however, he will fall sick: for this apparently moral overcoming of himself will ruin his nervous energy just as thoroughly as any regularly indulged in excess could do." -- Nietzsche
Sartre did the extreme opposite.
Antichrist4Life 4 years ago 5
YES! very very good, i'm so glad when I see that others are watching, too!
coreyalan23 2 years ago
@Antichrist4Life
well, i think ur wrong
sartre didnt do the extreme opposite he did exactly as the thinker nietzsche is describing woould do
1) to pursue not the thoughts which offer themselves from within him but those to which an office, a prescribed schedule, an arbitrary kind of industriousness seem to oblige him-being and nothingness, whole of your life scheduled from nothingness to actuall being
2)he will fall sick-sartre joinig marxism that is, stop thinking
plz reply
gautamkc 1 year ago
@gautamkc He embraced Marxism due to internal compulsion, not the external kind that Nietzsche speaks of there, and also abandoned it due to his thoughts changing, hence, more internal compulsion. He perpetually pursued life through manifestations of freedom, and being a staunch individual against all odds, always vigorously and with self-worth. Conversely, the person Nietzsche speaks of in that aphorism lacerates himself in the bondage of what is unworthy of him and merely saps him of fervour.
Antichrist4Life 1 year ago
@gautamkc Explain to me why he stopped thinking after "joining" Marxism, its clear that he was still developing his ideas well after 68
almanacofsleep 9 months ago
I also cannot find 7. I am immensely grateful to the person who uploaded these.I have wanted to see these for years.If 7 is available please upload it.
frantzfanon7 4 years ago
Ditto :)
briannewion 4 years ago
I can't find part 7, thanks for uploading these, it's much appreciated :)
Neondub 4 years ago