I love listening to people like this so inspirtional after the purile stuff most networks flood us with. Good to see humans can be wonderous
@TheTenorChannelАй бұрын
thank you for passing this very precious message
@ckpchaudhari4 ай бұрын
This should be an international anthem for humanity. I strongly recommend...
@donaldwhittaker79875 ай бұрын
Outstanding
@firstal37995 ай бұрын
Philosophical comedy
@Johnconno6 ай бұрын
The profile of an English Patrician, born to rule and never worried about food, bills or a roof over his head.
@kaboomboom59676 ай бұрын
Knowing our trueself is the essence of all philosophy
@thealmightyaku-41536 ай бұрын
An insightful speech in all its aspects, even today - and so funny!
@sld17767 ай бұрын
Russell starts the lecture by assuming the North Korean communists have more food. lol
@marcusaurelius91234 ай бұрын
Or perhaps he meant the promise of more food
@HkFinn83Күн бұрын
No he was correct. North Korea was much more prosperous than South Korea until relatively recently. The boom of the 70’s saw South Korea go from a medieval agrarian society to a modern Industrial power in one generation.
@miaash38707 ай бұрын
A brilliant mind! May this intelligent man forever rest in peace!
@CHALETARCADE9 ай бұрын
Love Bertrand, but why on Earth would he say that only protestant country protect animal rights? The Italian, the irish or the French always loved and protected their animals, no more and no less than Americans or Brits. What a weird piece of biggotery coming from such a great mind!
@dewok27069 ай бұрын
he was always a bigoted aristocratic pompous spoiled little man
@HkFinn83Күн бұрын
What a bizarre thing to offended by
@strangebird59749 ай бұрын
While a lot of his ideas might seem a bit naive in hindsight, there's no denying his inquisitive intelligence and the relevance of his questioning. It's extremely relevant today to pose this question: What are the psychological impulses that are relevant on a societal and political scale? And how do we curtail our destructive tendencies? I guess two of his main answers: Make people feel secure and make them well educated are pretty solid proposals. (Also, I get that there were a lot of tongue in cheek jokes in the speech. However, I find it interesting that while some of those jokes seemed to land fine, others seemed to presuppose an outlook of the times that I don't share and where I therefore didn't really get the joke.)
@HkFinn83Күн бұрын
There’s 0.0% chance that anything Bertrand Russell ever thought about anything, can be described by you, random KZfaq commenter, ‘naive’.
@christopherwood9032 Жыл бұрын
such a creative, humorous, and intelligent man
@olivervision9 ай бұрын
It's like Plato meets George Carlen..
@dickyboyryw Жыл бұрын
Such a great, man. We're so fortunate to have audio and video recordings of his work. He's up there with Alan Watts, Aldus Huxley Krishnamurti and Mckenna. His life is fascinating. He met and spoke with many legendary, figures. Einstein, Gladstone and Lenin.
@MichaelLaFrance1 Жыл бұрын
You've just listed my favorite lecturers, I've listened to their tapes for decades, scouring the pre-Internet for recordings, and then mp3s after the internet provided them. Watts and McKenna were the first podcasters in my book. Can you imagine the wonderful podcasts Terence would do today, had he lived? McKenna's partner in the trialogues, Rupert Sheldrake is still active. If you haven't listened to him lately, he's here on KZfaq. That said, I haven't listened to Krishnamurti, but I will do so now, based on your recommendation.
@deluminati Жыл бұрын
i dont like nor dislike nor wish to argue with but feel the need to just confusedly ask, how do you regard those others "up there with" russell?
@sitarai1225 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Sir Bertrend Russell for your enlighten address 🙏
@cosimo77707 ай бұрын
Actually, Lord Russell - but he announced that he wished to be addressed as Bertrand Russell.
@abinam2255 Жыл бұрын
"Let us forget the Koreans and consider the human race"! (followed by laughter among the audience). Are not the Koreans human!? The racist DNA of the 19th and 20th century Englishman in full display. A prized thinker and philosopher, but a racists nonetheless who believed in the exclusivity and entitlement of the Englishman and his english speaking cousins in the colonies. Disappointing to see what Russell stood for.
@TheRealGnolti Жыл бұрын
"If one man offers you democracy, and another offers you a bag of grain, at what stage of starvation will you prefer the grain to the vote?" A marvelous, always relevant question. Sadly, history shows that more than half a century later, a great many people do not even need to be starving to choose the grain over the vote.
@amellirizarry95038 ай бұрын
I feel like a lot of people quote Russell under the impression that he was some kind of Classical Liberal type, but he was literally a Socialist/Communist with a lot of Anarchist sympathies, more people should read 'Proposed Roads To Freedom' and 'In Praise of Idleness'
@TheRealGnolti8 ай бұрын
@@amellirizarry9503 If you are referring to me as "some people," sure Russell was a Socialist, and that's a great thing; this world needs more Socialism. But a Communist? Did you ever hear his criticism of Lenin or read his unambiguously titled essay, "Why I Am Not a Communist"? At the very least, BR was fundamentally opposed to human cruelty (or as he once put it, "unkindness") in any form, so your post smells more than vaguely off.
@reinfeddedewolff5565 Жыл бұрын
AMAZING "NOBEL PRIZE 1950 OF LITERATURE SPEECH" DIGITALLY EASILY FOR THE WORLD "WITHIN REACH" WITH IRONY, WISDOM AND WITTINESS "COMBINED" VERY "REFINED" FROM A STANDPOINT OF "ENLIGHTENMENT, INTELLIGENCE AND EDUCATION", AMONG OTHERS, THE ISSUE OF "WAR AND PEACE" SUCH A "SPECIAL SENSATION".
@MiserableAmerica Жыл бұрын
What the world needs is intelligence, and intelligence can be appropriately fostered through education. Educate, educate, educate. This was an excellent speech.
@Philognosis12 ай бұрын
Education is the last thing we need. Learning and knowledge is what we need.
@8nansky5282 жыл бұрын
I ADORE READING
@someguy7046 Жыл бұрын
try reading some of his book "The Impact of Science on Society" & you may not view him the same way afterwards
@marcusaurelius91234 ай бұрын
@someguy7046 great book & I respect the man even more having read it
@remasteredretropcgames33122 жыл бұрын
@ 40:00 Genetic engineering has entered the barren wasteland of a chat.
@remasteredretropcgames33122 жыл бұрын
Slavery sounds like it got in the way of industrialization in many dimensions.
@amarjeetpaul54182 жыл бұрын
WaheGuruJi ki Khalsa, WaheGuruJi ki Fateh!
@RamanDeep-xv7ym2 жыл бұрын
Ah jede dalle unlike krde oh pta ni kedi duniya ch rehnde