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Good YouTube/etc Channels worth watching

Thanks for the further explanation. I had my concerns about querying your initial post in that you might inadvertently undermine my faith and positive regard for stoicism with any further replies. But I'm glad that has not been the case.

I understand where you are coming from now, although I can't say that I've witnessed any of the types who make stoicism their entire personality.

It does sound a bit much, to say the least. I see it as something worth learning more about, as it's one of the most practical approaches to kind of 'going with the flow' and being at peace with it, that I have encountered so far. In some ways it doesn't exactly seem like a philosophy, although it has many central concepts , but much more of a practical and grounded approach and mindset to adopt (at least when it suits) to life.

I fully admit to having nothing but the vaguest knowledge of other philosophies. From my limited knowledge of other philosophies, many of them seem so much more abstract, (which tends to turn me off straight away) and would require a hell of a lot of studying and digestion, in order to be able to apply the teachings. But perhaps Budhism is similar to Stoicism in some ways, in what I gather is another kind of kind of 'acceptance of what is' based philosophy and religion. Also similar to the Muslim belief systems in that regard, that seem to surrender fate and destiny to the will of Alah, and the conviction that everything that happens is the will of Alah, and is therefor good and right and proper, and not to be worried about. Not sure I agree with that, but that's going off on a bit of a tangent.

I can't say I've ever seen any example of people making their entire personality based on Stoicism. Maybe I should just search for 'extreme stoic living' etc to find such examples. Otherwise, I guess the original Stoic thinkers could have been regarded in the same light. Marcus Aurelius's 'Meditations' were never intended for publication, they were his private journals, of his own thoughts and practices. But they seem to have ended up being one of the central tenets of the whole philosophy.

The type of people I mean tend to be Bros. Usually tech bros, almost exclusively alpha male bros, wake up and grind bros…

In all cases they miss the entire point of stoicism which is far closer to (as you point out) “go with the flow,” “it is what it is,” “acceptance over desire” school of thought than the “more tough = more good” bastardisation of stoicism the aforementioned folk always seem to go by.

I’d strongly recommend branching out into other philosophy though. I’ve posted several accessible philosophy channels in this thread previously and they’re all worth trying to see what fits imo. I would suggest Nietzsche is perhaps closest to stoicism in more modern philosophy, but he’s obviously massively controversial due to certain groups taking totally the wrong lessons :o

Aurelius was actually very lenient and forgiving by stoic standards. They got pretty hardcore in previous centuries. As did the cynics which inspired them. All of which is briefly explained in this here video - along with stoic stew =D

 


Pursuit of Wonder is another of those channels that covers a wide range of topics - almost all of them intriguing.

The above vid is truly fascinating. The more you think about it the deeper and more genuinely mind-boggling (and honestly seriously philosophically challenging) it becomes.

If you’re prone to being existential crises maybe avoid this one ;)
 
Rick Beato. The guy knows a hell of a lot about music, from many different perspectives.

He's been a musician in a band, a sound engineer, producer, a music lecturer, and has many many other credentials and experinces in the industry.

In recent videos he's been discussing the impact of AI on popular music, which could have major consequences.

 
The type of people I mean tend to be Bros. Usually tech bros, almost exclusively alpha male bros, wake up and grind bros…
Andrew Tate is never Stoic, those type of people have never read Epictetus.

Aurelius was actually very lenient and forgiving by stoic standards. They got pretty hardcore in previous centuries. As did the cynics which inspired them.
The Cynics were amazing, I think everyone on here knows I am totally obsessed with Diogenes the Cynic.
 
Been obsessed with this channel for a while, just amazing dance skills on display.

This was the first video I ever saw of her dance skills, even someone who has no idea what "Devi" means or is will be able to tell the moment the lady goes from Durga to Kali & her wrath is released.


India has had this stuff for thousands of years, The UK has Morris Dancing or some bullshit you see on The World at War series on U&Yesterday during the Blitz of London. People all dancing in a line while doing a weird Bee Gee's-esque point in the air & then all turn 180* around, The UK is so shit & flat compared to India & what they have as "Culture"

The UK dances around The Maypole, India has dance which is more like Monkey or Crane style Kung Fu, I know where my heart sits.
 
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This guy, Mark Manson, is by a huge distance the pick of the bunch, when it comes to the modern day self help-genre imho.

His excellent book "The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F***" remained at top spot on the New York Times best seller list for a very long and thoroughly deserved time. It spawned dozens of similarly titled books, none of which were anywhere near as good.

From Wikipedia:

The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck: A Counterintuitive Approach to Living a Good Life is a 2016 nonfiction self-help book by American blogger and author Mark Manson. The book covers Manson's belief that life's struggles give it meaning and argues that typical self-help books offer meaningless positivity which is neither practical nor helpful. It was a New York Times and Globe and Mail bestseller. As of July 2024, over 20 million copies of the book had been sold.

Contents​

The book is a reaction to the self-help industry and what Manson saw as a culture of mindless positivity that is not practical or helpful for most people. Manson uses many of his own personal experiences to illustrate how life's struggles often give it more meaning, which, he argues, is a better approach than constantly trying to be happy. Manson's approach and writing style have been described as different from other self-help books, using blunt honesty and profanity to illustrate his ideas.

The book has nine chapters. The first chapter, Don't Try, is named after the philosophy of Charles Bukowski, who served as a major inspiration for the whole book.

The chapters have the following titles:
  1. Don't Try.
  2. Happiness is a problem.
  3. You are not special.
  4. The value of suffering.
  5. You are always choosing.
  6. You are wrong about everything (But so am I).
  7. Failure is the way forward.
  8. The importance of saying no.
  9. And then you die.

The book is not about how to be an asshole and not care, quite the contrary. It's mainly about concerning yourself with the the things in life that really matter. And how to not lose yourself on things that don't matter.

(This book along with Atomic Habits by James Clear have to be the 2 best self help books I've ever read. And I've read a LOT of them. Most of them have just been repetitive, obvious, predictable, and tedious, but these 2 buck the trend.)

Manson has an engaging, amusing, and refreshing way of relaying things. He absolutely goes in for tough love, but only when necessary and all in a way that's appropriate and makes sense. I guess that's his angle, and although many of the things he talks about are familiar, he has an original and modern style, that is so ideal for this day and age. He packs a powerful emotional punch at times.

I watched this last night, and it reminded me just how perceptive and insightful that he is.



I could not recommend him strongly enough tbh.
 
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@Bleaney

self help for samurai's, i'm 1/5 way in and think this is the best self help i've been exposed to
250px-Hagakure.jpg
 
Culture Unplugged is one of those sites where you learn about such cool stuff from around the planet.


@Foreigner @Perkins : Reborn
Doc on xiansheng priests in rural china & the underground "occult / magick" funeral rituals they perform, its goes without saying what they do & their faith doesn't go down too easy with the Communist party.
 
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@Bleaney

self help for samurai's, i'm 1/5 way in and think this is the best self help i've been exposed to
250px-Hagakure.jpg
LOVE The Hagakure, my copy is falling apart.
You ever read Dokkoko by Miyamoto Musashi?

The Hagakure - "
Meditation on inevitable death should be performed daily. Every day when one’s body and mind are at peace, one should meditate upon being ripped apart by arrows, rifles, spears and swords, being carried away by surging waves, being thrown into the midst of a great fire, being struck by lightning, being shaken to death by a great earthquake, falling from thousand-foot cliffs, dying of disease or committing seppuku at the death of one’s master. And every day without fail one should consider himself as dead.

Also.........
 
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Everybody is talking about AI. Many people are excited about AI and what our future may look like because of it. Most people are either ignorant of the potential dangers of AI or they are unaware of how AI is being implemented in their lives and the negative consequences of that process. Some may say that our concerns about AI are an overreaction and others believe these concerns are justified. Nevertheless, AI is increasingly infiltrating our lives, and it is not going unnoticed by those with their eyes and ears open. This brings me to AI 2027, a detailed scenario showing how we might get from today's AI systems to superintelligence in coming years. AI 2027 proposes two potential scenarios, and yes, one of those scenarios ends with the extinction of the human species. The researchers of AI 2027 are convinced that either scenario is likely if we don't pivot and curtail our advancements in AI, creating safer systems aligned with human values. But, even though this all sounds terrible, none of this is a surprise from the teachings of the Hindu world-age doctrine of the Yugas. Actually, it is proposed that this would happen, which presents us with a choice: you can either remain asleep at the wheel of your own life and remain a puppet to AI and the companies who run such systems, or you can take responsibility for your life and listen to the knowledge I am about to share, so that you can make an informed choice to either further humanity or sleepwalk into the arms of AI and the destruction of our species.

 
There are a lot of minimalist/frugality/anti-consumerism channels and videos on you tube.

Yesterday, this guy came out with one of the most coherent and well presented arguments that I have come across so far.

I fully agree with, and live by, about 90% of what he says, and with the examples that he used.

Some people go too far with their frugality imo, but this guy has the balance about right imo. He is well presented, , has decent clothes and trainers, buys quality proper 'real' (unprocessed) food, has some cheap holidays, runs a 3 year old car, and lives in a nice apartment.

He probably earned a lot of money is his previous day job, as he seems very well set up, if he's now gone full time on youtube. (I'm not sure if he has or not tbh.)

 
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