The Sickness of Consciousness in the Western Philosophical Tradition

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The Sickness of Consciousness in the Western Philosophical Tradition

description

This presentation accompanies a lecture on the sickness of consciousness in the Western philosophical tradition.

Transcript of The Sickness of Consciousness in the Western Philosophical Tradition

Page 1: The Sickness of Consciousness in the Western Philosophical Tradition

The Sickness of Consciousnessin the Western Philosophical Tradition

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The Decadenceof Western Civilization

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The Romans of the DecadenceThomas Couture, 1847

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The Collapse of Civilization

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The Last Days of BabylonGeorges Rochegrosse, 1891

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The Sickness of Civilization

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The PlagueArnold Böcklin, 1898

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“I am a child of my time, that is, a decadent:

the difference is that I understand this, that I revolt

against it.” --Friedrich Nietzsche (1888)

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“The tragedy of all culture [is that]

the higher and more noble it is,

the less right it has to exist,

for it is a superfluous and harmful hotbed

in which life rots and weakens.” --František V. Krejčí (1896)

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Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Notes from the Underground

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The Reader of DostoevskyEmil Filla, 1907

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The Sickness of Consciousness

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“Too much consciousness is a sickness…

any consciousness at all is a sickness.”

--Fyodor Dostoevsky, Notes from the Underground (1864)

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“[E]very line in Notes from the

Underground is important…

no thinking person can afford not to

consider carefully all of the ideas expressed

in it.” --Vasily Rozanov (1891)

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“Civilization has done for mankind what life

has done for the Underground Man:

provided it with an excess of

consciousness,

a sick consciousness which has come to

find pleasure in its moral fall.” --Robert Louis Jackson (1958)

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“Pure reflection [...]

is a sickness [and] an evil.” --Friedrich Joseph Schelling (1792)

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“Consciousness of life…

is mere pain and sorrow

over this existence.”--G. W. F. Hegel (1807)

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“[Suffering] is heightened

in proportion to

the clearness of [one’s] consciousness.”--Arthur Schopenhauer (1818)

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“It is the rising level of consciousness,

or the degree to which it rises,

that is the continual intensification of

despair:

the more consciousness,

the more intense the despair.”--Søren Kierkegaard (1849)

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“[O]ur souls have become corrupted in

proportion as our sciences and arts have

advanced toward perfection.”--Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1750)

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“All progress has been in appearance

steps toward

the perfection of the individual,

but in fact toward

the decay of the species.”--Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1754)

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“[I]n following the history of civil society,

we shall be telling also that of

human sickness.”--Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1754)

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“Our feeling for nature

is like the sick person’s

feeling for health.”--Friedrich Schiller (1796)

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“[A]s soon as we experience

the misery of culture

we long to be back where we began.”--Friedrich Schiller (1796)

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“I have never been able to understand the idea

that only one-tenth of the people

should be given higher education,

while the remaining nine-tenths should serve merely

as material and means to that end...

I do not wish to think...

otherwise than with the faith

that all the ninety millions of us Russians...

will some day be educated, humanized, and happy.”--Fyodor Dostoevsky (1876)