clseller wrote:Jesus would get a 190 on the LSAT

clseller wrote:Jesus would get a 190 on the LSAT
Lolwut?Lyov Myshkin wrote:nietzsche's probably the only person on the list who is dumb enough to copy off of rand.
where's hume? i'd say the guy who invented 'correlation is not causation' flaw deserves to be on this list.
I feel Being and Time, although one work, counts as two, per the title.PARTY wrote:clearly you haven't read being and time.Odd Future Wolf Gang wrote:Are you trolling or serious?Campagnolo wrote:Right damn near the top, unquestionably.Odd Future Wolf Gang wrote:Where does MARTIN HEIDEGGER go on this list?
Give me five cogent reasons why he's near the top.
Heidegger also has a bunch of excellent essays (on art, technology, etc.). I think his work on Technology is actually brilliant and particularly relevant today.Campagnolo wrote:
I feel Being and Time, although one work, counts as two, per the title.
As for reasons, 3, 4, and 5:
3: He has the deepest understanding of exactly what it is to be a human in the world in the way I don't think no one else has, not even Kant. When you read about readiness to hand and dasein, you can't help but see that this is the proper way to think about our own experiences.
4: His reading of Aristotle is unmatched. In particular, his understanding of Metaphysics Book Z is just crazy. I struggled literally for an entire year with book Z, and it took about a week of Heidegger to make it all click into place.
5: He is, I think, the first person to really get beyond metatphysics. Nietzsche tried, he saw the problem quite clearly, but Heidegger took him up and went all the way.
Whatever his personal failings, he was a great figure in our tradition.
To the things themselves!
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If anyone in this thread actually understands being and time i'd be the MOST impressed.stillwater wrote:Heidegger also has a bunch of excellent essays (on art, technology, etc.). I think his work on Technology is actually brilliant and particularly relevant today.Campagnolo wrote:
I feel Being and Time, although one work, counts as two, per the title.
As for reasons, 3, 4, and 5:
3: He has the deepest understanding of exactly what it is to be a human in the world in the way I don't think no one else has, not even Kant. When you read about readiness to hand and dasein, you can't help but see that this is the proper way to think about our own experiences.
4: His reading of Aristotle is unmatched. In particular, his understanding of Metaphysics Book Z is just crazy. I struggled literally for an entire year with book Z, and it took about a week of Heidegger to make it all click into place.
5: He is, I think, the first person to really get beyond metatphysics. Nietzsche tried, he saw the problem quite clearly, but Heidegger took him up and went all the way.
Whatever his personal failings, he was a great figure in our tradition.
To the things themselves!
what's not to understand?polkij333 wrote:If anyone in this thread actually understands being and time i'd be the MOST impressed.stillwater wrote:Heidegger also has a bunch of excellent essays (on art, technology, etc.). I think his work on Technology is actually brilliant and particularly relevant today.Campagnolo wrote:
I feel Being and Time, although one work, counts as two, per the title.
As for reasons, 3, 4, and 5:
3: He has the deepest understanding of exactly what it is to be a human in the world in the way I don't think no one else has, not even Kant. When you read about readiness to hand and dasein, you can't help but see that this is the proper way to think about our own experiences.
4: His reading of Aristotle is unmatched. In particular, his understanding of Metaphysics Book Z is just crazy. I struggled literally for an entire year with book Z, and it took about a week of Heidegger to make it all click into place.
5: He is, I think, the first person to really get beyond metatphysics. Nietzsche tried, he saw the problem quite clearly, but Heidegger took him up and went all the way.
Whatever his personal failings, he was a great figure in our tradition.
To the things themselves!
is that a phenomenological question? if so, you win a cookie.PARTY wrote:what's not to understand?
polkij333 wrote:is that a phenomenological question? if so, you win a cookie.PARTY wrote:what's not to understand?
Speaking of which, Hegel's The Phenomenology of the Spirit is another one that goes down smooth.polkij333 wrote:is that a phenomenological question? if so, you win a cookie.PARTY wrote:what's not to understand?
That's a metaphysical question, and clearly off limits.polkij333 wrote:is that a phenomenological question? if so, you win a cookie.PARTY wrote:what's not to understand?
Then answer me one question:PARTY wrote: what's not to understand?
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she was not a native English speaker, though (aside from being a hack - see earlier posts)Borhas wrote:I think Rand's the only one who could read English so probably her
Lol don't get this started again.99.9luft wrote:she was not a native English speaker, though (aside from being a hack - see earlier posts)Borhas wrote:I think Rand's the only one who could read English so probably her
Wittgenstein taught at Cambridge. I think he could handle the LSAT (while mindfucking the shit out of it). And Richard Rorty knows that English as well.Borhas wrote:I think Rand's the only one who could read English so probably her
you're right, I should stop. okay, last one...RedBirds2011 wrote:Lol don't get this started again.99.9luft wrote:she was not a native English speaker, though (aside from being a hack - see earlier posts)Borhas wrote:I think Rand's the only one who could read English so probably her
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It's foolish to try and sum up Being and Time here, but I'll try anyways. Being and Time tries to unite our varied senses, perceptions, and faculties into a unified being that reflects the way we actually experience the world. To do this, he picks up Husserl's concept of intentionality and the pre-theoretical conditions necessary for intentionality.Odd Future Wolf Gang wrote:I'm convinced Heidegger was the greatest troll in western philosophy.
The true putz here is Rand.Campagnolo wrote:It's foolish to try and sum up Being and Time here, but I'll try anyways. Being and Time tries to unite our varied senses, perceptions, and faculties into a unified being that reflects the way we actually experience the world. To do this, he picks up Husserl's concept of intentionality and the pre-theoretical conditions necessary for intentionality.Odd Future Wolf Gang wrote:I'm convinced Heidegger was the greatest troll in western philosophy.
I think I've done a pretty fair amount of defending Heidegger here. Why do you find him to be such a putz?
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--ImageRemoved--Odd Future Wolf Gang wrote:I'm convinced Heidegger was the greatest troll in western philosophy.
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