Views : 1,029,436
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Mar 6, 2022 ^^
Rating : 4.937 (795/49,463 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-09T21:51:49.098238Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
This is actually a great direction and motivation to learn. I always enjoy learning new things in general but since there’s so much in formation i couldn’t necessarily put the information into one big aspect. The four quadrants should be taught in schools that way students can choose which direction of knowledge they can dive into, and it makes learning everything feel more fulfilling.
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I've long been aware that science has its limitations; the mind is more than just a composition of flesh, fat, and bones, and emotions extend beyond mere muscle and tissue. I understood that various philosophies address these aspects individually, but it now becomes clear that a comprehensive understanding requires a range of diverse philosophies, rather than a single unified theory. This perspective helps me appreciate the complexity of the human experience.
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Really great video. What facinates me is the dynamics between the individual and the collective, how our individual experiences are seemingly internal and exteral at the same time and all seem to cohere into some shared collective world or world view. Some people would even deny that an internal collective even exists.
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This past summer, I went through an existential crisis. A friend I hadn’t seen in YEARS reached out and actually gifted me Wilber’s Book - No Boundary. It’s been one of the best books I’ve read. I studied philosophy in Uni, and received my bachelors in 2020. Wilber’s book was some of the best philosophical material I had the pleasure of consuming. Highly recommend.
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Wow. Just wow. I have always found my different pursuits of knowledge (biology and neuroscience to philosophy and mythology; more recently geopolitics and social justice) to be quite disparate from eachother. This, this one video made me understand which quadrants of knowledge I operate from, towards understanding the the whole.
You have yourself an enthusiastic new subscriber!!
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I think another good example of a philosopher focused on Q3 that wasn't mentioned is Slavoj Zizek. His philosophy is primarily centered around what he calls ideology, the invisible force behind everything in our physical, exterior, and collective experiences, and how that invisible ideological force impacts, molds, and influences the individual. If I understood it correctly, Q3 seems to be observing exactly what Zizek comments on, hidden or concealed individual experiences that come as a product of the external world.
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@TheLivingPhilosophy
2 years ago
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⌛ Timestamps:
0:00 Introduction: A Map of Reality
01:44 What are the four quadrants?
2:34 Q1 – Internal Individual
3:09 Q2 – External Individual
4:22 Q3 – Internal Collective
7:07 Q4 – External Collective
9:00 As a map of knowledge
11:27 As defuser of intellectual conflicts
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