MartyrMade
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Re: MartyrMade
Nothing wrong with those 2 origin stories. It goes without saying that sufferers can simultaneously exhibit manifestations from both making a definitive diagnoses impossible, and neither have good treatment success.
Shamedia, Shamdemic, Shamucation, Shamlection, Shamconomy & Shamate Change
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Re: MartyrMade
So I'm finally finished this marathon...
Here are my take home points, if any of you want to skip 5 hours of audio...
**SPOILER ALERT**
Nietzsche and Dostoevsky were both giants in their fields at the dawn of our modern age as we have come to know it...
This was the end of the age of monarchs and empires and the beginning of the age of nations.
Germany was the youngest nation, and here Nietzsche came of age - a fierce modernist who saw a strange opportunity in the modern era for a new kind of man, who would rise up strong and proud on the ashes of outdated religion and become his own god.
He preached manliness and strength, rather than more "slave religion" which he felt kept men weak and malleable.
He saw himself as a modern man and did not like nationalism.... seeing himself as a post national European.
But Nietzsche, despite his aggressive writing, was weak, awkward in the military which he hated, a disappointment to his father, who died early in his life and bullied by his mother and sister. He always fell for women who rejected him, including the wife of Wagner who was practically everything he wasn't. He allowed himself to be humiliated by anther love interest who drew him into a bizarre platonic love triangle where she dominated both men.
Dostoevsky seems to have been Nietzsche's doppleganger, having a very similar childhood with a conservative strict military minded father who he disappointed by becoming an artist. He achieved stardom while still immature and he made a fool of himself by allowing his fame to go to his head and he was roundly mocked when it did. He also martyred himself to various women, and then became a compulsive gambler and wretch when he married the love interest that finally accepted his proposal.
When Nietzsche discovered Dostoevsky's writings (the reverse never happened) it was like holding up a mirror to himself. He was stunned and bewildered. He was fascinated, but it may have been too much for him to process... and he was finally undone.... he went mad and died in this condition.
In the end Dostoevsky "returned to the fold" of his father, taking responsibility for himself and his family, overcoming addiction and became a hero of his fatherland Russia. Nietzsche on the other hand went mad, believing himself a God and that he was being crucified like Jesus or torn apart like Dionysos.
Nietzsche foreshadowed the advent of our modern calamities... the end of religion and communal values spawned the most diabolical totalitarian states and saw the most brutal destruction that man has ever brought upon man... we have yet to solve some of the ecological problems of this age.
But apparently becoming God wasn't all it was cracked up to be for a weak man like Nietzsche. In the meantime Dostoevsky demonstrates that accepting responsibility by reconciling with the cultural "father", like in the parable of the prodigal son, is becoming a real man, not a God. Perhaps this is what it really means to find God in our modern world, returning to traditional transcendant values of responsibility and self respect.
Not bad.....
could have been a lot shorter without the screed... and the outing of random internet acquaintances as "narcissists"....
But I learned a few things.
Here are my take home points, if any of you want to skip 5 hours of audio...
**SPOILER ALERT**
Nietzsche and Dostoevsky were both giants in their fields at the dawn of our modern age as we have come to know it...
This was the end of the age of monarchs and empires and the beginning of the age of nations.
Germany was the youngest nation, and here Nietzsche came of age - a fierce modernist who saw a strange opportunity in the modern era for a new kind of man, who would rise up strong and proud on the ashes of outdated religion and become his own god.
He preached manliness and strength, rather than more "slave religion" which he felt kept men weak and malleable.
He saw himself as a modern man and did not like nationalism.... seeing himself as a post national European.
But Nietzsche, despite his aggressive writing, was weak, awkward in the military which he hated, a disappointment to his father, who died early in his life and bullied by his mother and sister. He always fell for women who rejected him, including the wife of Wagner who was practically everything he wasn't. He allowed himself to be humiliated by anther love interest who drew him into a bizarre platonic love triangle where she dominated both men.
Dostoevsky seems to have been Nietzsche's doppleganger, having a very similar childhood with a conservative strict military minded father who he disappointed by becoming an artist. He achieved stardom while still immature and he made a fool of himself by allowing his fame to go to his head and he was roundly mocked when it did. He also martyred himself to various women, and then became a compulsive gambler and wretch when he married the love interest that finally accepted his proposal.
When Nietzsche discovered Dostoevsky's writings (the reverse never happened) it was like holding up a mirror to himself. He was stunned and bewildered. He was fascinated, but it may have been too much for him to process... and he was finally undone.... he went mad and died in this condition.
In the end Dostoevsky "returned to the fold" of his father, taking responsibility for himself and his family, overcoming addiction and became a hero of his fatherland Russia. Nietzsche on the other hand went mad, believing himself a God and that he was being crucified like Jesus or torn apart like Dionysos.
Nietzsche foreshadowed the advent of our modern calamities... the end of religion and communal values spawned the most diabolical totalitarian states and saw the most brutal destruction that man has ever brought upon man... we have yet to solve some of the ecological problems of this age.
But apparently becoming God wasn't all it was cracked up to be for a weak man like Nietzsche. In the meantime Dostoevsky demonstrates that accepting responsibility by reconciling with the cultural "father", like in the parable of the prodigal son, is becoming a real man, not a God. Perhaps this is what it really means to find God in our modern world, returning to traditional transcendant values of responsibility and self respect.
Not bad.....
could have been a lot shorter without the screed... and the outing of random internet acquaintances as "narcissists"....
But I learned a few things.
Deep down tho, I still thirst to kill you and eat you. Ultra Chimp can't help it.. - Smitty
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Re: MartyrMade
I learned that podcast sounds like ass.
So like CM reviewing Common Sense - thank you for your sacrifice of time.
You have saved others untold hours with your service.
So like CM reviewing Common Sense - thank you for your sacrifice of time.
You have saved others untold hours with your service.
"Hey varmints, don't mess with a guy that's riding a buffalo"
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Re: MartyrMade
I appreciate it too DY, I find Martyrmade a litte harder to listen to, and Bonelli and can't even listen to. I'm a sensitive bitch when it comes to voice and delivery.
PLATA O PLOMO
Don't fear authority, Fear Obedience
Don't fear authority, Fear Obedience
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Re: MartyrMade
At your service.
>salutes<
Deep down tho, I still thirst to kill you and eat you. Ultra Chimp can't help it.. - Smitty
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Re: MartyrMade
An nescis, mi fili, quantilla prudentia mundus regatur? - Axel Oxenstierna
Nie lügen die Menschen so viel wie nach einer Jagd, während eines Krieges oder vor Wahlen. - Otto von Bismarck
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Re: MartyrMade
Cooper gets most of it right, like he always does.doc_loliday wrote: ↑Mon Sep 06, 2021 9:31 pmSo what's your take on his insights or beliefs on narcissism, compulsions, addictions, divided mind et cetera?
He just got stuck in a rut on a narcissist hunt... (focussing on a specific kind of male beta cuck narcissist)...
Other than that he was bang on the money.
Paranoia and narcissism are related in exactly the way he says.
Addictions and compulsions can be illustrated by the metaphor of a divided mind that pushes the self increasingly to the observer role, demanding increasing rationalization until the abyss engulfs the agent self completely.
Cooper knows his stuff.
What did you think, doc?
Deep down tho, I still thirst to kill you and eat you. Ultra Chimp can't help it.. - Smitty
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Re: MartyrMade
I'm going to have to listen to this episode.
Shamedia, Shamdemic, Shamucation, Shamlection, Shamconomy & Shamate Change
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Re: MartyrMade
It was great that Cooper made Nietzsche into an illustration of a sort of inside his head nut job contradiction that he apparently was. I only wish he would have delved more thoroughly into Dostoevsky biography, and been more clear about how he got out of it. AKA a redemption arch. Don't worry I will on my own show. Whenever I decide to lol. If I ever go back to podcasting it'll be to go over the Chekhov and Dostoevsky I've read.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/ ... myhimm_2_1
Cheers nibbas
https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/ ... myhimm_2_1
Cheers nibbas
The good, the true, & the beautiful