

Johnathan Bi
Insights from the Great Books
Lectures & Interviews on the Great Books www.johnathanbi.com
Episodes
Mentioned books

24 snips
Jul 26, 2024 • 1h 12min
Why “Innovation” Was a Crime in the 16th Century
Benoît Godin, an author specializing in the intellectual history of innovation, dives into the surprising history of innovation, revealing its past condemnation as a crime. He discusses how perspectives have shifted from viewing innovation negatively to embracing it as essential for progress. Godin contrasts originality with established wisdom and critiques the superficiality of modern innovation driven by narcissism. He emphasizes the importance of grounding new ideas in tradition and the delicate balance between innovation and imitation for authentic creativity.

9 snips
Jul 12, 2024 • 1h 20min
Overcoming Nihilism with Nietzsche | Robert Pippin
Robert Pippin discusses Nietzsche's views on nihilism and technology. They explore the decline of traditional values, critique of economistic models, challenges of modern culture, and overcoming nihilism through self-overcoming and immersion in art. The conversation delves into Nietzsche's perspectives on human nature, cheerfulness, and the role of philosophy in realization.

14 snips
Jul 6, 2024 • 1h 24min
Self-Esteem Requires External-Validation | Fred Neuhouser on Rousseau
Fred Neuhouser, an expert on Rousseau's concept of amour-propre, discusses the importance of external validation in self-esteem, exploring Rousseau's philosophy on self-love versus recognition from others. Topics include the desire for acknowledgment, navigating hierarchies and self-esteem amid failure, exploring wealth as a measure of self-worth, and the competitive nature of romantic love in seeking validation.

46 snips
Jun 21, 2024 • 1h 13min
Selfish Heroes Make Great Leaders | Christopher Kelly on Rousseau
Christopher Kelly, an expert on Jean-Jacques Rousseau's philosophy, discusses the importance of heroes in society, the evolution of language, and the role of compassion in community-building. The conversation explores Rousseau's views on heroism, the impact of heroes on public discourse, and the challenges of creating heroic narratives in modern societies.

66 snips
Jun 15, 2024 • 1h 42min
Rousseau's First Discourse: Science & Art Are Poisoning You
Exploring Rousseau's critique on the negative impacts of science and art, the corruption and division in Christianity, his views on enlightenment, governance, wealth, power, and the relevance of science and heroes in the modern world.

25 snips
Jun 8, 2024 • 55min
Reject Free Will, Become Who You Are | Brian Leiter on Nietzsche
Professor Brian Leiter, an expert on Nietzsche's critique of free will, delves into Nietzsche's rejection of free will and moral responsibility. He discusses how Nietzsche's philosophy challenges the idea of free will, emphasizing personal liberation. The conversation also covers Nietzsche's view on consciousness and social coordination, human behavior influenced by unconscious drives, determinants of human behavior, and Nietzsche's perspective on self-improvement.

106 snips
Jun 7, 2024 • 1h 36min
Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morality: Masters vs. Slaves
Explore Nietzsche's ideas on achieving greatness by overcoming herd morality. Learn about the challenges of aspiring to be a higher man and the impact of societal values on individual potential. Delve into Nietzsche's critique of egalitarian morality and slave morality, as well as his perspectives on Christian love and the aesthetic ideal.

55 snips
Dec 31, 2022 • 1h 37min
Lecture VII: The One Who Withholds | René Girard's Mimetic Theory
Christianity exposed the injustice of scapegoating and, in doing so, robbed us of the cathartic tools which early human societies used to contain and resolve violence. Today, the Katechon which prevents violence from overflowing is three institutions that limit and channel violence: Law, Capitalism, and War. By tracing a genealogy for all three institutions, Girard comes to the terrifying conclusion that these final bulwarks against apocalypse are on the verge of collapse. More precisely, their collapse is already underway.Some links to further guide your study:* Join my email list to be notified of future episodes: greatbooks.io* Full transcript: https://open.substack.com/pub/johnathanbi/p/transcript-of-girard-lecture-vii Get full access to Johnathan Bi at www.johnathanbi.com/subscribe

87 snips
Dec 29, 2022 • 1h 26min
Lecture VI: The Triumph of Modernity | René Girard's Mimetic Theory
Rescued by Christianity, modernity is distinctly different than the violent, deceitful, and stagnant societies of yore. We are the most loving, truthful, and innovative culture ever to exist. Resting uneasily alongside this fundamental affirmation of modernity, however, is Girard’s puzzling insistence that things have barely changed at all: we now simply persecute victims under the banner of love, rigidly adhere to scientific dogmas under the guise of free inquiry, and package trivialities as radical innovations. Despite our high-minded ideals, stubborn human nature refuses to budge and, so, the perversions of modernity take on the shape of hypocrisy. Even humanity’s greatest triumph is terribly ambivalent and limited.Some links to further guide your study:* Join my email list to be notified of future episodes: greatbooks.io* Full transcript: https://open.substack.com/pub/johnathanbi/p/transcript-of-girard-lecture-vi Get full access to Johnathan Bi at www.johnathanbi.com/subscribe

60 snips
Dec 24, 2022 • 1h 7min
Lecture V: The Christian Revelation | René Girard's Mimetic Theory
For Girard, Christianity is radically different from all other religions in one crucial aspect: it takes the side of the innocent victim and, in doing so, exposes the violence and deceit of worldly order. We will explore how this intuition of innocence begins to take root in the Hebrew bible and blossoms into a resounding declaration in the Crucifixion. Girard presents us with an anthropology of the Cross: a translation of Christian phenomena into this-worldly, humanistic language. Girard’s success in placing this world in the foreground, however, forces the other world and even God himself to retreat into the background. In Girard’s unorthodox Christianity, God’s absence is just as loud and jarring as humanity’s presence.Some links to further guide your study:* Join my email list to be notified of future episodes: greatbooks.io* Full transcript: https://open.substack.com/pub/johnathanbi/p/transcript-of-girard-lecture-v Get full access to Johnathan Bi at www.johnathanbi.com/subscribe


