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Bro, This Is Not The 'Beowulf' You Think You Know
NPR ^ | August 27, 2020 | Jason Sheehan

Posted on 08/30/2020 9:46:16 PM PDT by nickcarraway

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To: nickcarraway
Oh YUCK!

Now how did I miss seeing that?

If I wasn't a fan of DOCTOR WHO, Tennant's HAMLET would be a 5 star one for me. It's quite good, but I just couldn't disassociate the actor from the roles I've seen him in. OTOH, he was marvelous in DECOY BRIDE and he does comedy quite well.

81 posted on 08/31/2020 2:10:58 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons

I never saw Dr. Who, so it didn’t bother me.


82 posted on 08/31/2020 2:13:15 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
I never did like the resurrected/restart/version 2 of DOCTOR WHO and finally gave up on it during the last male DOCTOR, but I was hooked on the original DOCTOR WHO, from the third DOCTOR onwards. Now THOSE were really good shows! Like the old LOONY TUNES cartoons, they were written on many different levels and there were lots of mostly hidden cues, for adults, in them.

Tennant really is much better in movie comedies ( BRIGHT YONG THINGS, THE DECOY BRIDE; to name but two good ones ) than one might suspect, if you've only seen him do dramas.

83 posted on 08/31/2020 2:39:12 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: BradyLS

I was thinking Bro-e-wulf.


84 posted on 08/31/2020 3:44:55 PM PDT by Redcitizen (Nobody needs a 10 round magazine. You need a 30 round magazine. Yeah)
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To: Fai Mao

I don’t know much about Dewy, but I agree with you that Heidegger was a subjectivitist. I think he start out with Husserl and phenomenology. Phenomenology could be an easy stepping stone to subjectivism and relativism. I know many of the post moderns think highly of him and they are not believers in Truth. But here’s the insane irony: they say it’s true that there is no truth — which is contradictory and hypocritical. However, that doesn’t seem to stop them. I read that some post moderns appeal to Heidegger’s insight that contradiction lies at the deepest levels of Being. And maybe that’s true at the quantum level where phenomena defy common sense, e.g., you can have the same particle occupy two different spaces simultaneously. But I don’t think Heidegger got that insight about contradiction from science or philosophy... maybe through poetry vaulting over everything, but who knows?

I know Heidegger wanted to purify the language of philosophy but I don’t know exactly how. I also know the positivists where suggesting something similar. With the positivists there was a push to make language scientifically accountable. But I think Heidegger was more concerned about Being, its categories and how people got the central idea wrong since Plato. I guess that also goes into the topic of ontics and ontology which you brought up.

I think relativism is thoroughly entrenched in almost every aspect of western life. Again, the irony is that the US went to the moon based on the idea of truth — that we can know the truth about the physical world. But western culture is a different story and for many people it seems harsh to say the West knows the truth — which means that other cultures don’t know the truth. It goes against the left’s idea equality and compassion. The left claim Capitalism is a repressive evil that victimizes minorities and silences their voices with its grand narrative. These minorities also have their cultural truths. But would people who espouse this line prefer to go to a doctor in the West than a witch doctor from Africa? They say that truth is cultural and relative. If truth was so relative why would they go to a western doctor? Why not go to a witch doctor from Africa? So they are hypocrites once again.

Though Heidegger was also a terrible human being (unrepentant Nazi, had affairs with his students while married, had an affair with Hannah Arendt, etc.) I like his idea that “Language is the House of Being.” I don’t know if he came up with it himself or took it from another source — for example, I think took “Being toward Death” from St Augustine. This works well with my idea that God has come to rest in language.

If I can briefly explain my idea that God is now language. We are born and die within language. It surrounds and shapes our existence. In the Pre-modern period God existed as a separate entity. He was Logos or the Word – “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” Aristotle said that God was “Thought thinking thought.” With Christ the Word poured himself into flesh. And then years later that idea of God is eclipsed by secular modernity with Nietzsche’s idea that “God is Dead.” In the Romantic Era, man now becomes God by way of his creativity and his Will to Power. Think of all the creative geniuses that were worshiped in the Romantic Era — the artists were high priests of the spirit. The artists still believed in a spirit, despite the rise of a godless science. And now we have Post Modernism and the emphasis on language — the idea that language determines man’s fate. Language maybe working without our consciously knowing — think of Richard Dawkin’s selfish genes or Hegel’s The Absolute working through man. Laurie Anderson said language is a virus. However, it surrounds and defines our being and our ideas about our world. I think Heidegger might have said that without language there would be no world, there would be nothing...

So I’m curious about this topic because it starts with God as “The Word” and ends up with a godless Heidegger saying that without language there would be nothing. The ancient “Word” ends up as Language in postmodernism – some kind of crazy full circle. If you have any insight, with respect to Heidegger or otherwise, on this topic please let me know.

I have a hard time with Heidegger and have read that he purposely wrote to make reading very difficult. It is almost impenetrable writing and even commentators seem to disagree with each other. It all seems intentional and I just pity the people ensnared in his words. It’s like a fly trap and you are groping around to find meaning – there maybe more sleight-at-hand than present-at- hand with him. But he is a big influence on postmodernism. Still, I think there are trans-historical and trans-cultural truths. As well, not all cultures are equal in having the truth – some have it more of it than others. In other words, there is a big difference between putting a bone in your nose and going to the moon.

A lot of my understanding of post modernism has come from Stephen Hicks’
“Explaining Postmodernism: Skepticism and Socialism from Rousseau to Foucault.” It’s a great and informative read if you are interested.


85 posted on 08/31/2020 4:54:44 PM PDT by BEJ
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To: Grimmy
Thanks!

86 posted on 08/31/2020 5:11:13 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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