There is something empowering to the reader when you don't give them everything and let the reader do some work, says Yai. You don't want to just attribute something deep when just because he's writing in a more obscure style. Sometimes at the same time, there is something, we know this, like reading borhes, for example. It's that balance that is tricky. And the best of the worst ones, it's, it's not worth the effort. But for the best people, it's worth the Effort.
Socrates was ugly and tired of life, so he made a tyrant of reason. Philosophers are mummies who hate the body and the senses. Reason is a tricky old woman. Morality is a misunderstanding. Kant is a sneaky Christian. And don't even get Nietzsche started on "free will" or the "self" - just excuse for priests to punish people, a hangman's metaphysics. David and Tamler dive into Friedrich Nietzsche's Twilight of the Idols, a fascinating set of aphorisms brimming with passion, provocation, questions without answers.
Plus, a professor is sanctioned for sex talk with his students - fair or coddling foul?
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