table of contents

05/05/2009

Adrian Daub on the Metaphysics of Misogyny

ADRIAN DAUB is Assistant Professor of German at Stanford University. He received his B.A. from Swarthmore College in 2003 and his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Pennsylvania in 2008. His current book project is entitled Uncivil Unions: The Metaphysics of Marriage in Early German Idealism and Jena Romanticism, 1794-1801, and he is […]

download transcript [vtt]
00:00:00.000
[ Music ]
00:00:16.000
>> This is KZSU Stanford.
00:00:18.460
Welcome to entitled opinions.
00:00:22.500
My name is Robert Harrison, and we're coming
00:00:27.200
to you from the Stanford campus.
00:00:29.780
[ Music ]
00:00:50.780
>> The surgeon general requires that we issue the following warning
00:00:54.600
at least once a year.
00:00:56.880
Entitled opinions contains unadulterated, unusually concentrated
00:01:01.740
intellectual substance.
00:01:03.340
It should be avoided by anyone who does not have a high tolerance
00:01:07.580
for thinking.
00:01:08.260
If you're allergic to the exchange of ideas,
00:01:12.300
if you're deficient in curiosity,
00:01:14.380
if you suffer from anti-intellectualism,
00:01:17.340
then please tune out now.
00:01:19.460
This show offers the narcotic
00:01:22.920
of intelligent conversation.
00:01:25.260
It enters into the garden and seats us at the banquet of ideas
00:01:28.940
where we feast on the bread of angels.
00:01:31.720
There's plenty of room at the table,
00:01:33.800
and everyone is welcome, but be warned,
00:01:36.280
the bread of angels is not your ordinary snack.
00:01:39.780
It may set your head spinning, and even blow your mind.
00:01:44.880
Silence must be clear.
00:01:48.100
[ Music ]
00:01:55.100
>> Where else friends are you going to hear
00:02:11.180
about the metaphysics of misogyny for a runaway hour?
00:02:14.580
Only here on entitled opinions, but let's double check that.
00:02:20.180
Let me type in metaphysics of misogyny here and do a Google search.
00:02:25.220
You remember Google, right?
00:02:27.580
I had the company's vice president
00:02:29.520
and chief internet evangelist, Vince Cerf,
00:02:32.080
on our show this past fall.
00:02:34.180
You cannot be serious metaphysics of misogyny,
00:02:38.960
19,600 results.
00:02:42.320
Is there really nothing new under the sun,
00:02:45.540
not even entitled opinions?
00:02:49.900
Let's have a look here.
00:02:50.700
Leading the Google list is an article,
00:02:52.700
metaphysics and misogyny, subtitle, souls, bodies,
00:02:58.100
and women in Plato's dialogues.
00:03:00.280
Sounds interesting actually.
00:03:02.660
Then let's see, there's something on Saudi Arabia and Wahhabism,
00:03:07.740
something else under the rubric container technology.
00:03:12.420
I'm reading, quote, "The problem is not just bad metaphysics
00:03:17.540
or misogyny, but the structure of production and reproduction.
00:03:21.860
The container is structurally necessary, but dot, dot, dot.
00:03:27.700
That's as much as you get without accessing the site.
00:03:30.580
Zoe Sophia.
00:03:32.660
Zoe Sophia.
00:03:35.260
You think that's a name?
00:03:37.140
A real name? Maybe it's an alias.
00:03:40.020
Well, I don't have time to find out right now, continuing on.
00:03:43.980
Nope.
00:03:46.140
There's really nothing in the 19,600 results,
00:03:49.260
which bears any resemblance to what we have in store for you today on entitled opinions.
00:03:54.140
It's all either metaphysics and misogyny,
00:03:57.180
or metaphysics, misogyny, and whatever.
00:04:00.300
And there's the difference.
00:04:02.620
Our show is not just about the sociological,
00:04:05.340
ideological or analogical relation between metaphysics and misogyny.
00:04:10.220
It's about the metaphysics of misogyny,
00:04:13.220
which is a separate beast altogether.
00:04:15.580
Now, the first question we should address before we get started is the following,
00:04:20.540
is your host a misogynist.
00:04:23.140
In all honesty, I can't provide you with an answer to that question,
00:04:27.380
at least not until I have a better understanding of the essence of misogyny.
00:04:31.620
In other words, it's a question I won't be able to answer until the end of our hour,
00:04:37.100
when thanks to the insights of my special guest, Adrian Dowb,
00:04:42.540
I will have a more decisive grasp of the philosophical foundations of misogyny.
00:04:47.780
We're not interested here in the vulgar run of the mill forms of misogyny.
00:04:52.060
We're interested in what I would call the misogynistic sublime.
00:04:56.820
Should I Google that term too and see if anyone's used it before?
00:05:01.420
To hell with that, I hereby claim it as my own regardless of precedent.
00:05:06.620
Where were we? I was saying I don't really know if I'm a misogynistic or not.
00:05:11.660
All I know for sure is that I'm old enough to remember how,
00:05:15.580
during my adolescence and early adulthood in the 70s,
00:05:18.860
when feminism was making such huge strides,
00:05:22.540
I welcomed enthusiastically the notion that men and women are fundamentally equal.
00:05:27.580
I always thought that women were the superior gender,
00:05:30.900
and it was edifying to think I might be their equal.
00:05:34.220
I still think women are superior,
00:05:37.860
but misogyny is a devilish thing, and it could be that my admiration and even veneration of women
00:05:44.980
is one of misogyny's many perverse guys' and a rather conventional one at that.
00:05:50.980
Joseph Conrad once called himself, quote, "agentlemen and a Catholic,"
00:05:56.980
but that's my line, or at least it would have been my line had Conrad not gotten there before me.
00:06:03.460
I don't know what Conrad meant by it, but speaking for myself,
00:06:08.020
one of the main reasons I'm a Catholic is because Catholicism founds its spirituality upon the feminine.
00:06:14.660
I don't mean upon the feminine as a principle, but upon women per se.
00:06:19.940
The presence of women in the gospels is as decisive as the presence of women in the early church
00:06:26.660
without women there is no early church, period.
00:06:30.500
If I'm a Catholic, it's also thanks to the vast army of female saints
00:06:35.380
who have laid their heads upon the breast of our pelican during the past two millennia.
00:06:40.340
Because I have this abiding belief that where women are present,
00:06:45.940
where they make their voices heard, where their spirituality is allowed to manifest itself in
00:06:51.940
its own native forms, good things invariably happen.
00:06:55.700
Just as bad things invariably happen, where women are silenced,
00:07:00.420
walled in, or rendered secondary.
00:07:02.820
None of this means, however, that I am immune to the lures of metaphysical misogyny
00:07:09.140
that I do not find something fascinating about the philosophical debasement of women.
00:07:14.340
And I think that when men and women are honest with themselves, they will acknowledge
00:07:20.100
that there is a deep reservoir of creative and/or destructive tension in the relations between the
00:07:26.980
genders, a tension that can sometimes take the form of resentment, scorn, and even hatred.
00:07:33.780
If this were not a perpetual possibility, the relations between the sexes would be flaxid and flat.
00:07:40.820
"O the et amo, I love and I hate all in one," as Catellus said.
00:07:47.380
But let's turn out in my guest Adrienne Daube, who is an assistant professor of German
00:07:52.340
studies here at Stanford. This is Adrienne's first year at Stanford.
00:07:56.340
"Pache and Nancy Ratchet." And this quarter, he is actually teaching a course on misogyny.
00:08:02.020
Adrienne, welcome to the program.
00:08:03.540
"Thank you so much, Robert."
00:08:04.500
This course you're teaching, Adrienne. Why don't you tell us what texts you start out with,
00:08:09.780
and who are the main misogynistic thinkers that you deal with?
00:08:12.980
Well, it's a course that obviously focuses on German texts of the 19th century.
00:08:20.020
So the wonderful rundown that you provided just a minute ago
00:08:24.900
actually forms essentially the first week and the Pruele Gomena.
00:08:28.980
And we move on to fix the Hege Schopenhauer Kierkegaard, Bachofen, Nietzsche,
00:08:37.860
Vininger, and we wrap up with the poet, Efte van Georga.
00:08:41.700
A lot of Germans.
00:08:42.900
A lot of Germans, I know, and it requires a certain amount of justification, I would think,
00:08:47.540
because you can accuse Germans of many things, but they do not have a sole purchase on misogyny.
00:08:54.260
Not at all, I would say.
00:08:55.780
But it's the case that you do anything with antiquity before you get to the German in the 19th century.
00:09:03.700
Well, we covered Plato and Aristotle a little bit of the church fathers, and Rousseau.
00:09:10.740
It's one of those requirements of Stanford's quarter system that you have to
00:09:16.580
move rather quickly through preliminary stages.
00:09:19.940
And it turns out, you know, it's one of those things that when you write it down on a syllabus
00:09:24.980
is, feels horrifically violent, but when we actually got to reading those texts in the class,
00:09:31.940
it became pretty clear that there wasn't really a lot of new thinking about this for about,
00:09:41.060
I would say, 1500 or so years.
00:09:44.980
It's usually these texts provide reconfigurations of topoy that are introduced by the
00:09:51.700
ancients, essentially.
00:09:53.300
Of course, the early church offers some new impulses, and after that, essentially,
00:10:01.300
these topoy get rearranged rather than a real change.
00:10:05.620
Do you agree with me that there's something pro-feminine in the early church?
00:10:11.220
Well, this is of course, I'm poaching
00:10:14.500
on land that is not even close to my discipline, but it seems to me from my reading and
00:10:22.580
the early, especially along the agnostic gospels, that, yes, there were, there appears to have been
00:10:29.700
much more strong foundation on gender equality in the early church, which was essentially done
00:10:39.540
away with, as it consolidated into what we today call the Catholic Church, and that there is,
00:10:46.420
and of course, we know today that there is a whole bunch of texts that essentially were kicked out
00:10:50.500
of what came to be the Bible precisely because they would have had two revolutionary repercussions
00:10:58.900
on gender relations in the ancient church.
00:11:02.260
Because they were so radically, if not egalitarian, even pro-feminine.
00:11:06.740
Yeah, not in ways that we today would recognize, but in ways that were perfectly clear to
00:11:13.460
contemporaries.
00:11:14.420
I mean, the famous instance of this is the question of celibacy, which of course,
00:11:19.940
you know, today's strikes us as not particularly feminist, but the idea that this was,
00:11:25.460
that Chris Chan, he was a way for women not to marry and submit to, you know, to a role in the
00:11:31.060
family, of course, had something quite radical at the time, and there is indication that I've,
00:11:36.020
I must confess, no independent research on this, but there are many scholars who argue that
00:11:40.740
this is what led to the suppression of texts like the acts of Paul and Thecla,
00:11:45.060
that essentially they called for celibacy for both men and women, and therefore essentially
00:11:53.460
would have committed the young Christian church to, you know, shaker.
00:11:57.380
Yeah.
00:11:57.940
So, a fate of the shakers, you know.
00:11:59.540
Yes, you have to multiply.
00:12:02.340
And exactly.
00:12:03.540
That's the earth, but of course, subsequently there was the tradition of the convent where in
00:12:09.140
Christendom, women could opt out of the marriage.
00:12:14.660
Exactly.
00:12:15.300
And it seems that that is how it was understood well into the 19th century, that being the
00:12:22.420
bride of Christ was the best way to avoid being a bride of just any other guy.
00:12:27.220
And an ordinary massage.
00:12:28.260
Exactly.
00:12:30.260
And I'm sure that most of our listeners who are tuning in are going to be particularly interested
00:12:34.180
in the misogynistic aspect of our conversation and not the pro, you know, the pro feminine,
00:12:40.660
I think of the church.
00:12:41.460
So why don't we actually make this huge leap, if there's no way to do it in a non-violent manner,
00:12:48.340
but let's get to these philosophers that interest you particularly.
00:12:53.540
I don't know who would you like to start with?
00:12:58.020
Well, we could start even with someone like Higa or Feichte.
00:13:04.340
I think those two are already very good and sort of introducing what, you know, I said there was
00:13:10.980
a, this 2000 year history where, you know, it was essentially sort of moving around a certain
00:13:15.780
topo, without invigorating this debate in particular in new ways.
00:13:19.140
But of course, these Germans idea with are essentially the first who are post-feminist
00:13:26.180
misogynists.
00:13:26.980
I mean, these are, you know, don't get me wrong.
00:13:28.900
These, this was not of course not a feminism that we recognize, but this is, these are thinkers
00:13:33.700
right and think about gender relations after Wilsoncraft's the vindication of the rights of women.
00:13:38.900
They right after the French Revolution and after the Enlightenment, a time which had precisely
00:13:44.820
suggested that if social relations can't be tested by reason, they may not have any justification
00:13:53.700
at all. And of course, this was precisely what these thinkers were, we're trying to provide.
00:13:59.940
So this, this creates a very strange, puts them in a strange position.
00:14:03.140
I, I like it into kind of a rear guard action and I think that's what makes it maybe a little bit
00:14:07.380
more hopeful and a little bit less depressing than the 2000 years I came before it, that,
00:14:12.020
that in some way these, these men are fighting on, fighting a lost cause in some way, you know,
00:14:16.820
they, they understand, however subliminally that the very precepts from which they start actually
00:14:22.500
commit them to gender equality. So we're talking here about philosophers who theorized in their philosophy,
00:14:29.540
the superiority of the male gender over the female gender and that they're doing it as,
00:14:34.180
you suggest in a defensive posture, but they are trying to find philosophical
00:14:38.580
uh, justifications for the misogyny. So that's the, now we're into the metaphysics.
00:14:43.940
Absolutely. Let's talk a little bit about the metaphysics of thick, they were Hegel.
00:14:47.940
Right. Well, let's start with fidget. That's a, that's a very good example.
00:14:51.540
Um, fidget is, is quite ingenious in embedding misogyny into his project. He,
00:14:57.700
is of course famous for basing his philosophy and what he would call the absolute eye,
00:15:04.260
which decomposes into something called the eye and the knot eye and the, it is the task of
00:15:11.380
the eye to determine the knot eye and he essentially borrows Aristotle's characterization of,
00:15:20.660
of the sexes as form and content, respectively. And thereby advances an argument that, in essence,
00:15:28.980
the, that essentially likens a woman to not, through the knot eye, that is to be determined.
00:15:34.900
Uh, as a passive, uh, passive recipient of, uh, an effective male form form. Right.
00:15:41.620
Right. And he does all this in a metaphysical ethics, which is important because the, the problem
00:15:47.380
he addresses is not that this is somehow wrong. The problem for him is what he calls dignity,
00:15:53.460
uh, which for him as a county and precisely had to do with human spontaneity.
00:15:58.100
Uh, he declares that reason is necessarily active. And the problem is, of course, if, uh,
00:16:04.340
it is true that woman is the knot eye and therefore essentially receptive. How can she be said to
00:16:10.340
be have human dignity at all? But is this a biological argument that he, that he's advancing
00:16:17.460
does it rely on the authority of Aristotle, but he was a great enough philosopher that he would
00:16:21.620
want to provide some foundations for this claim. That is, that is what is surprising in some ways.
00:16:26.980
I mean, that, that's, that's why I decided to focus on this course on the metaphysics of misogyny,
00:16:32.100
that these, these, these people make it their business after all to step away from what just
00:16:37.620
happens to exist and they are quite able to do so in astonishing ways in other fields. And yet,
00:16:43.620
when it comes to gender relations, they're often quite unable to do so. So there is some of that. I
00:16:48.180
mean, he doesn't invoke Aristotle explicitly, but he invokes an argument that from Aristotle,
00:16:54.340
via Aquinas, to Bacon had really been, uh, at the, you know, one of the go-to tricks, sort of
00:17:01.700
philosophical misogyny in the Western tradition. On the other hand, he does have, I think, a relatively
00:17:07.300
serious purpose in doing so. And that is he's also a post-russoist philosopher. I think what he's
00:17:12.660
interested in is ultimately creating a complementary relation of the sexes. And of course, the form
00:17:18.420
content relation, which, you know, are essentially reflexive determinations that cannot be thought
00:17:22.900
apart from one another, uh, provides precisely that. That is to say he is in that sense an
00:17:27.860
anti-liberal thinker because he, he is interested in providing an account of the sexes that
00:17:34.340
would allow, that wouldn't allow them to operate independently of one another. Uh, so I think that,
00:17:41.300
that, that's as far as you can go on a justification of it. Other than that, he seems to assume
00:17:46.180
that women are, uh, and I quote, you know, absolutely passive and men are, and I quote again,
00:17:51.780
absolutely active, where exactly he's getting that from and what exactly he means by that is, of course,
00:17:58.740
rather unclear. I mean, it doesn't help that the 18th century was relatively squeamish about,
00:18:02.980
you know, sexuality. We can, of course, sort of, you know, we have some ideas of what might be meant by it,
00:18:10.340
but he's certainly never explicit to see draw sociopolitical consequences from, uh,
00:18:15.380
from that principle to the effect that women's places in the home or that they're
00:18:20.580
biologically that as mothers and that they don't belong in the public sphere. Exactly.
00:18:24.580
He does. Yes. Yes. Except of course he, the, the text I've been referring to is called the,
00:18:31.060
uh, the deduction, the metaphysical deduction of marriage, uh, and he, he's of course,
00:18:36.260
ultimately concerned with vindicating marriage as a reasonable, uh, arrangement. The, the trick is,
00:18:42.500
of course, women have to have dignity. Uh, he's not going to argue that they're not human.
00:18:46.980
Uh, assist that only through love and marriage can they reconceive of their absolute
00:18:51.140
passivity as activity, uh, the act of loving someone. Again, what that means is absolutely unclear,
00:18:57.060
but the upshot is supposed to be that ultimately in monogamy, women are able to
00:19:04.340
recuperate the dignity that they're elsewhere not afforded, but, but the same token that means,
00:19:08.820
yes, woman's places and is in the family, not as they're in the home, but in the family.
00:19:12.980
Right. Sounds very boring for, yes. If not, as a metaphysical, certainly,
00:19:17.940
for the women, how does Hegel differ from a victim in this regard? Well, I mean, in terms of
00:19:23.380
very close and, in many respects, no, well, yeah, feast was a, was a important, uh, was an important
00:19:29.620
launching point for Hegel, but of course, also one of his perennial punching bags. Uh, I would say
00:19:34.980
that Hegel is in terms of domesticity. Hegel is relatively close to, he's, I mean, he,
00:19:40.980
famously claims in the philosophy of right. A woman has their substantial vocation in the family,
00:19:45.540
and her ethical disposition in family piety. So that means that essentially she obeys only
00:19:52.340
the law of the family and not the law of the city of the city. Uh, and dignity and take any
00:19:59.380
you like, and dignity is for him the case where those two come into, into, into conflict.
00:20:06.020
But with integrity, you bring up a very interesting point, which is Hegel, of course, is a
00:20:10.420
much more historical thinker, uh, famously than feast. And, and in take a news, of course, for him,
00:20:15.540
not just an example, in take a news for him, a point where it becomes clear that the law of the
00:20:20.980
state and its abstractness and its mediation, et cetera destroys to some extent the coherence of
00:20:26.980
the family. Uh, and dignity is precisely at that point of rupture where, where it turns out that
00:20:32.420
the old paternal law of crion, the king, contradicts her impulses as a family member. Uh, and
00:20:39.460
he goes point in essence is, of course, that the kind of alienation that is characteristic of
00:20:46.500
the state and of modernity in particular, uh, happens mostly in, in, in the palace, not in the
00:20:54.100
the oil costs in the, in the, in the family, either in the household. The, and that actually points to a very
00:20:59.620
interesting, uh, relationship between femininity and modernity for Hegel, because on the one hand, of
00:21:06.100
course, Hegel like the others, I'm, I suppose had an awareness that, you know, women's issues
00:21:12.820
are becoming more prominent precisely because of modernities were, uh, results of the French
00:21:18.420
revolution. Yet at the same time, he strangely enough asserts that this fear of modernity, which is
00:21:25.460
the palace, uh, you know, of, of public life that destroys the immediacy or the substantiality as he
00:21:31.220
called it, of, of family life, is in fact, close to women. So women are a symptom of modernity, but not
00:21:37.700
of it. Uh, and I think, in that way, Hegel, uh, I think goes further than fichte in moving from,
00:21:44.740
you know, sort of just legalistic theories to really a metaphysics that, that brings out the
00:21:49.780
contradictions of women's position, uh, in, you know, post revolutionary modernity.
00:21:54.820
I remember in the phenomenology, he speaks about the, um, enormous sacrifice that the man or the
00:22:02.820
head of the household, the patriarch has to undergo in order to leave the comfort and affection of
00:22:09.860
the domestic sphere and actually go out of the house into the public sphere and that if everyone had their
00:22:16.580
choice, the men would probably just assume stay home, right, then not be citizens, but there's
00:22:21.380
somehow a drive in the history of the world spirit that almost makes us the emissaries of, of this
00:22:30.980
larger project and that even though it doesn't lead to personal happiness for men, they must
00:22:37.940
nevertheless go into the public sphere for saking the household to a sense. This is actually a,
00:22:42.900
you're putting a finger on what's a bit of a strange, strange spot for Hegel because on the one hand,
00:22:51.380
he, uh, he makes precisely that argument that, but you have to see that it's not by a large and
00:22:57.140
existential argument. He really seems to think that metaphysically the family ends with their
00:23:03.300
production. What that means seeing as, you know, everybody's, um, mom and dad are essentially still,
00:23:09.940
you know, living at home is not quite clear, but it, it, he really thinks that, uh, the beginning
00:23:15.780
and the wearing of children leads the solution of the family. The same extent means that
00:23:19.700
the individual cannot go back, right, uh, but of course he, as long as it is a he, has the choice
00:23:27.940
of either just being part of the palace or being part of a, of a household, I'm guessing, even
00:23:33.060
though he seems to pretty much assume, Hegel seems to pretty much assume that anyone who has left
00:23:39.940
the, his original family will then found a new one. So this is not something that he really
00:23:44.180
questions. Well, I want to get to some of the real classical misogynists like the
00:23:50.340
show point, how it works because it doesn't get much more classic than that. Yeah,
00:23:53.780
show point hours is he's an overt misogynist. He's a proud misogynist. He's not someone who is
00:23:58.980
trying to find metaphysical, necessarily, um, idealist metaphysical arguments for the gender issue. And so
00:24:05.140
show point hour, he's 19th century, you know, German philosopher notoriously an enemy of Hegel.
00:24:11.780
Absolutely. Uh, famous for offering his lecture course at the same time as he goes. Of course,
00:24:18.020
the joke turned out to be on show point, however, because no one showed up. He would lecture to
00:24:21.620
empty row. Apparently he would insist on lecturing with no one in the room. It's true. It's true.
00:24:27.060
And one has to say, of course, he's a misogynist, but he's really a, uh, an equal opportunity offender.
00:24:32.900
I mean, this, this, this, this, this, exactly is a mis-unthrope. The very, um, the very, uh,
00:24:39.300
episode that you referred to, uh, with lecturing to empty, uh, lecture halls is precisely also instilled
00:24:47.540
in him a undying hatred of academic philosophy. So he really, there was a, he had an enemies list
00:24:53.620
worthy of, uh, you know, Richard Nixon, but it's true. Women were came in for particular scorn.
00:24:58.980
What was his argument about the ontological status of women? Well, that's a very interesting thing.
00:25:04.420
As far as, as his misogyny is concerned, it is closer to something we call, uh, you know,
00:25:10.420
anthropological misogyny. Uh, it, show point hour fancy himself, something of a scientist,
00:25:16.900
uh, absolutely without any justification as far as I can tell. And he essentially refers not to
00:25:23.620
like, fish the, you know, the constitution of our subjectivity or transcendental philosophy. He,
00:25:30.900
when he puts down women, it really is on physical, physiological grounds. I mean, I think the,
00:25:36.100
I think the very famous quote that I, I remember as, uh, that he calls women, you know, big children.
00:25:43.060
Uh, and you have that quote with, sure, sure. Let me see. This is on women. This is, uh,
00:25:47.860
it's appeared in the Paraga and Paralipomena from 1851. They're big children all their life long.
00:25:54.020
They kind of intermediate stage between the child and the full grown man who alone is human
00:25:59.300
in the strict sense of the word. And, uh, of course, and this, our, in this brief piece on women,
00:26:06.020
men come in for particular scorn as well, but not so much, you know, for their essence,
00:26:11.940
but for the fact that they essentially fall for, you know, these children. But why are men the only
00:26:20.260
human beings in the strict sense of the word for showpanew. I think he would, I mean,
00:26:25.620
showpanew is a proto evolutionist. Uh, he, I think he really thinks of this in the terms of the
00:26:31.380
great chain of being, uh, men are for him more advanced than he will, you know,
00:26:36.980
do things like no structure and hip bones and that kind of thing. I mean, this is very different from
00:26:42.020
Higa and fix that. Uh, and, you know, I'll read you another quote, you know, it is only the man
00:26:48.100
who's intellect is clouded by his sexual impulses that could give the name of the fair sex
00:26:53.060
to that undersized narrow, shoulder broad, hip and short, legged race.
00:26:57.700
I guess my intellect is clouded. Exactly. I mean, it's, uh, he's not, you know,
00:27:03.860
men don't come, men don't come, come off very good either. And in a, in one of the famous chapters
00:27:10.020
of his, you know, Magnum Opus, the world is willing representation, showpanew are
00:27:14.660
ridicule men alongside women, essentially human beings insofar as they are sexual or appear to be
00:27:24.580
fools for showpanew. It's very different from fix it, by the way, who, if you think through this
00:27:29.220
idea of activity and passivity actually ends up saying that only women have trouble with their
00:27:35.940
humanity. Men can be rational and sexual at the same time, which of course for us post Freudian
00:27:41.940
seems very strange. And showpanew is much more on our wavelength. He thinks the moment you think
00:27:47.780
erotically you go into act, ironically. Well, um, there's, there's a way in which showpanewers,
00:27:56.180
theories there about the intellect being clouded by the sexual impulses are as related to his
00:28:00.900
metaphysics of the will as well. Absolutely. Because the world is will and representation. I don't
00:28:06.660
know, is that a, are those two gendered concepts in that dialectic? I don't, I don't think so. I don't
00:28:12.980
think so. But they are related. And, and, and here's how he does it, because of course, as I say,
00:28:18.820
he's an evolutionist. And, and this is where showpanew are strangely close to something like Richard
00:28:24.180
Dawkins. He thinks that why are we acting like fools in love? Well, it's because the species, the will
00:28:29.940
of the species, asserts itself through us. But of course, this is not something that men and women
00:28:34.420
fall differently prey to. Say we all are stuges of the will. And it is the mistake of love is not that
00:28:44.020
you don't follow your instincts. You should follow instincts. He thinks. But the problem is that
00:28:48.820
we think that this is my one true love. This is the one for me, my better half, etc, etc.
00:28:54.260
The, the fact is he says it could be anyone. What matters is, you know, object choice, what matters
00:29:03.140
is ultimately passing on away. He doesn't call a genetic material, but you know, creating a good,
00:29:08.340
and really is it object choice. Because I remember, I don't know if it's on women, I think
00:29:12.820
there's another essay called the metaphysics of sex. Sexual love, yeah, sexual love. That's
00:29:16.740
that chapter in chapter 44 of the world as well. That's what I was referring to. And I remember
00:29:22.660
I'm saying there that it's actually not we have only the illusion of choosing. Absolutely.
00:29:27.700
To make that it's actually nature. All of a sudden the attraction between a man and a woman
00:29:34.100
is some third thing that is neither one nor the other is not identical to either of them,
00:29:40.420
but is the this yet unrealized unborn child. The will of the child is a will of the unborn child,
00:29:46.980
which would result from the union that pushes the two towards one another. Because it's this
00:29:52.260
blind will to exist on the part of the unborn. Exactly. You know, I know that that's reductive and it's
00:29:58.180
dockings like, but I think it's so much more elegant than the geneticist or language. Absolutely.
00:30:02.980
Absolutely. And you know, there's there's something about it that has a certain metaphysical elegance.
00:30:08.340
Absolutely. And I mean, just played us there, there are two things cannot come together
00:30:12.820
unless a third thing unites. Absolutely. He kind of literal. And that's that's something that, of course,
00:30:18.660
you know, that stands behind the, you know, fitter and halo as well. There's this idea of
00:30:23.460
unification, always already having to underpin what they think of as the union of the sexes.
00:30:29.620
The reason why I wanted to bring up this illusion of object choice is that they can strike a bridge to
00:30:35.460
his, his metaphysics. Because of course, show upon how our, and I'm going to, you know, Mr.
00:30:40.740
President him horribly here, but in essence, things that there's this,
00:30:43.940
per
00:30:50.940
he thinks that's an illusion. It's a necessary illusion that keeps us from, you know, from, from not being able to function in the world, but it is an illusion nonetheless.
00:31:05.300
And love for him functions apparently analogous to that in the sense that if we just figured out that all we were trying to do was create
00:31:12.980
allow this new life to be born so that the species can live on and we can die quickly. None of us would would go out presumably and go to, to, you know,
00:31:22.500
bars or restaurants at all. And his point is that there is a Percipium Individo etsionis at work there too.
00:31:29.940
It's quite fascinating because it leaves no room for homosexual love. And yet in the tradition, of course,
00:31:37.140
the grand platonic tradition, the, the ultimate ideal for of love was homosexual. How's it not reproductive? Well, it's funny you should bring that up because
00:31:46.660
Schopenhauer is, I think, as far as I'm aware, the, the first to offer a, well, not at a fence, but an explanation of homosexuality. Pretty much since the Greeks. And he in fact opens it by saying, you know, I can't tell you how many people will talk about the Greeks and not address the fact that when they speak of love, they mean homosexual love. That is,
00:32:07.060
essentially, you want to get away from having sex with women as quickly as humanly possible and, and, and turn your, your life towards be getting and with respect to the soul, which is, you know, the,
00:32:17.940
for the tonic, which is sort of educational arrows. Schopenhauer is the first to really suggest a totally different solution. He says, well, homosexuality essentially allows for people who wouldn't have had good offspring to, you know,
00:32:36.100
essentially get busy with one another rather than messing up, well, he doesn't say the, the gene pool, but something like that, messing up the species as a whole. I mean, so far, I guess it's not unlike some evolutionary
00:32:50.180
or maybe a couple of generations ago.
00:32:54.280
But on the other hand, he adds a distinct layer of craziness to it,
00:32:59.160
by insisting that the reason why Greek love apparently always transpired
00:33:04.040
between older men and younger men, much younger boys essentially,
00:33:08.740
was that their semen wasn't quite up to snuff.
00:33:13.580
Because either too early or too late,
00:33:17.640
the quality of the semen is lackluster,
00:33:21.540
and therefore homosexuality is a way of keeping them busy until they hit their window,
00:33:26.740
where essentially they're going to produce the primo semen.
00:33:33.940
And you're talking in the case of the boys now?
00:33:37.340
Both of them.
00:33:38.140
He thinks that after the age of, let's say it's 54, it's very specific.
00:33:42.740
And also one should add younger than he was at the time,
00:33:46.840
that he thinks that essentially homosexual urges once again set in.
00:33:50.340
I don't know where this comes from.
00:33:52.840
Because in the Greeks, of course, homosexuality was not a category of identity.
00:33:57.740
Because many of them were engaged in what we call homosexual practices,
00:34:01.840
and were married with offspring and children of their own.
00:34:05.340
Or is it for showpaneward?
00:34:06.740
Because it's a thing you do for a particular stage of your life.
00:34:11.140
Again, it runs very much counter to modern identitarian conception.
00:34:16.740
But homosexuality or sexuality in general.
00:34:19.740
Well, there's plenty of other characters on our list here.
00:34:23.540
Absolutely.
00:34:24.040
Yeah, we gotta move on to.
00:34:25.740
Should we?
00:34:26.740
If you don't mind taking another leap to go back to the German music.
00:34:32.740
Absolutely, yes, yes.
00:34:33.740
Because, of course, obviously from Hegel's showpaneward and Nietzsche,
00:34:37.140
it's all one kind of genealogical line.
00:34:41.440
Absolutely.
00:34:41.940
The sort of ethical strife between, of course, showpaneward was a huge influence on Nietzsche.
00:34:47.940
Absolutely.
00:34:48.940
And then Nietzsche turns against him and so forth.
00:34:51.940
Do you have a sense that Nietzsche's misogyny,
00:34:56.440
and Nietzsche's misogyny, I'm thinking of the quotes that Nietzsche's sometimes most famous for.
00:35:03.940
Right.
00:35:04.440
When you go to see a woman, don't forget your wit.
00:35:06.940
Right.
00:35:07.940
You think that's showpanewardian in essence, or is there something else going on in his,
00:35:12.940
in his, the delight he takes in debasing the status of women in certain of his aphorism.
00:35:19.940
Exactly.
00:35:20.940
That doesn't talk about the way he exalts him in others.
00:35:22.440
Right.
00:35:23.440
The strange thing, of course, about the famous whip aphorism is that it comes from Zarathustra.
00:35:28.940
So it is Zarathustra's discourse to some extent and not Nietzsche's.
00:35:32.940
And secondly, that it's not actually said by Zarathustra himself, and old woman tells him.
00:35:37.940
She asks him, you speak to us women a lot, but you never speak of women.
00:35:43.940
And actually, I think Zarathustra's reply to it is pretty much in the encapsulation of what is 19th century misogyny.
00:35:49.940
He says, and I quote, "About women one should speak only to men."
00:35:54.940
So a woman in general must speak only to men.
00:35:56.940
That is, that is misogyny, I would say.
00:35:58.940
This course about women with a capital W among the boys, the boys club, the old boys club.
00:36:05.940
But the whip suggestion is one that she offers.
00:36:09.940
That's her little truth, as she says.
00:36:12.940
Well, you know, this is very fascinating to me because it raises this other interesting issue that takes us a little bit outside now at the sphere of the metaphysics.
00:36:21.940
My godmother was a German woman who would often quote that line of Nietzsche's in German, "approvingly, almost."
00:36:31.940
And I know of other, I have a friend whose aunt would teach her son how to, what would be misogynistic and would teach him how to beat Barbie dolls.
00:36:45.940
Because they felt that this was the kind of education that boys had to under-year.
00:36:51.940
So I just wanted to throw this out as misogyny not being strictly the domain of males.
00:36:57.940
The males, yeah.
00:36:58.940
But that there is such a thing as female misogyny.
00:37:00.940
They're on their own gender.
00:37:02.940
And for Nietzsche to put the whip dictum into the mouth of the old woman is quite revealing.
00:37:10.940
Right, right.
00:37:11.940
Although it is him doing it.
00:37:12.940
Right.
00:37:13.940
On the other hand, though, the whip, of course, is also not as straightforward in Nietzsche's hands than in another thinkers, I'd say.
00:37:20.940
Nietzsche exalts relations of dominance.
00:37:23.940
And he, and of course, there's this famous picture of him dragging a cart, carrying Luandre Asalome, who is, in fact, holding a whip.
00:37:33.940
Now, who is Luandre Asalome for our listeners?
00:37:36.940
She was a Russian aristocrat and woman about Europe who pierced of been the smartest and most attractive woman of the later 19th century.
00:37:48.940
And Rilke was in love with her, Freud.
00:37:52.940
I mean, everybody was incredibly impressed.
00:37:53.940
Nietzsche, horribly, hopelessly.
00:37:55.940
Hopelessly.
00:37:56.940
Unlike Rilke, they didn't even come close to ever consummating that.
00:38:02.940
He proposed to her.
00:38:03.940
Oh, absolutely.
00:38:04.940
If he can't that.
00:38:05.940
I knew you were right.
00:38:06.940
That picture, she, it's one who has the whip.
00:38:08.940
That's the whip.
00:38:09.940
And of course, Zarathustra offers this inchomium, with this anti-enchomium of woman.
00:38:15.940
Right after his inchomium to the friend, where he says essentially that a friend also, I mean, I'm quoting from memory now, but
00:38:21.940
a friend has to also be a potential enemy.
00:38:24.940
So it's not quite clear whether we're dealing with straightforward wife beating here.
00:38:29.940
I mean, of course, there is some of that.
00:38:31.940
And I think we shouldn't talk that.
00:38:34.940
The fact that when we hear women in whips, it's not usually highly metaphysical, but rather in a police
00:38:40.940
blotter somewhere, we shouldn't eclipse that.
00:38:42.940
But the fact that with Nietzsche, it's never quite as simple as that.
00:38:45.940
But that for him, friendship, which he exalts also has relations of some kind of violence built in.
00:38:54.940
So whether or not this woman is saying, you go to a woman and you want to beat her,
00:38:59.940
or whether you better suit up.
00:39:01.940
I think that might be sort of the question.
00:39:03.940
I'm not sure if that's what's going on there, but all I'd caution against would be to say that this is a very straightforward
00:39:13.940
statement about subjugating women.
00:39:15.940
It's quite possible it's saying something not necessarily the opposite, but something very different from that.
00:39:21.940
It's not the only place where he has highly misogynistic statements on the women.
00:39:26.940
It keeps props up throughout.
00:39:29.940
And some of the unpublished aphorism, particularly vermin, that regard.
00:39:34.940
I mean, it makes it clear that it's not just a mask that he's wearing in terms of their through-strap,
00:39:41.940
but that this is something that he's, of course, to some extent preoccupied with.
00:39:45.940
Yeah, and I wanted to raise this question given his authorship of the birth of tragedy,
00:39:50.940
his first book, and the relationship between Apollo and Dionysus.
00:39:55.940
And the way in which there's some people have seen in the Dionysian a distinctly feminine power.
00:40:04.940
Absolutely.
00:40:05.940
And Apollo being the god of measure and of illusion, order and restraint.
00:40:13.940
And there have been people, a philologist who have even interpreted the evolution, cultural evolution from patriarchy into patriarchy.
00:40:23.940
He has something as a triumph of what Nietzsche would have called the Apollonian principle over the Dionysian.
00:40:28.940
And yet he was famously sympathetic towards the Dionysian.
00:40:32.940
Absolutely. And therefore towards the feminine, and this conjugates well with some of his statements, certainly later in his active life,
00:40:40.940
where he claims that philosophers, hitherto, have been very clumsy with women.
00:40:48.940
Right.
00:40:49.940
And that they haven't known how to deal with her within a nuanced enough way truth is truth is a woman who has her reasons for hiding her reasons.
00:41:00.940
Right.
00:41:01.940
And that he claimed to be a philosopher who knew his way with women, whereas most of his predecessors didn't know how to deal with it.
00:41:08.940
Yeah, one can only guess that that's only a philosophical point.
00:41:11.940
Of course.
00:41:12.940
It's absolutely correct. I think. And I think what you're saying about Nietzsche and the Dionysian is particularly apropos.
00:41:19.940
And if I may just give you a somewhat longer answer, this brings up a figure that's also on my docket for this course, which is
00:41:31.940
Yuanyak of Bajol from which probably the one that your listeners are least familiar with.
00:41:34.940
He's the Bajolf.
00:41:36.940
A professor at Baja and in fact a friend of the Yang Nietzsche and in fact the originator of this terminology of Dionysian and Apollonian.
00:41:47.940
And he's famous particularly for having written this book, The Mother Right, which argues precisely as you were saying, this idea, which proposed that there had been a matriarchal society that was betrayed by and violently overthrown by this masculineist Olympian regime.
00:42:05.940
Sometimes male sky gods.
00:42:08.940
Exactly. And essentially, and this is the move from the lunar gods to the sun god Apollo.
00:42:14.940
And so I mean, this is for him, the Apollonian.
00:42:17.940
Now Bajolf is interesting. I mean, but what's much more interesting is his reception because Bajolf and himself, of course the sun god eventually leads into the Christian god, etc.
00:42:28.940
So you can see why Nietzsche would read this and think, wow, this is a really wonderful way of, you know, of undercutting Christianity.
00:42:35.940
Bajolf didn't mean it that way at all.
00:42:37.940
It's every indication that Bajolf and a very devout Christian, it was somewhat horrified by this idea of a maternalistic society.
00:42:46.940
Of course none of his readers appeared to have gotten that.
00:42:49.940
And Nietzsche is only the first and a long line of people who take from Bajolf and precisely these rhapsodic descriptions of what it was about.
00:42:57.940
The descriptions of what it must have been like on this pre-marital, pre-classical Greek hippie commune, essentially that he describes.
00:43:07.940
And indeed, even in reading the man himself, it is difficult to see how this isn't enormously appealing.
00:43:13.940
But he appears to have not, at least in his outward statements, it doesn't appear to have appealed to him very much.
00:43:20.940
So the idea that with the triumph of patriarchy over matriarchy, this was an advance in civilization, it was almost like the precondition for specifically of the true civilization.
00:43:31.940
That's how Bajolf wants to see it exactly.
00:43:33.940
Nietzsche reverses that and says it's the betrayal, essentially, of the dynasty and inside.
00:43:38.940
Of course, his ultimate point and the birth of tragedy is that the two need to be in some kind of dialogue.
00:43:43.940
And that absolutely is probably not the way to long-life and good health either.
00:43:50.940
But it would appear that he took something very different away from Bajolf and then was intended.
00:43:59.940
Another person that I could bring in very briefly is the poet, Stefan Guillagre, who in the 20th century took Bajolf the way he had intended, but two very different ends.
00:44:10.940
More in the direction of Plato, as you mentioned earlier, in the sense that he understands this progress of civilization to be necessary and a domination of women.
00:44:21.940
But for him, that means that ultimately you want to do away with heterosexuality altogether and that really the ultimate end point of this process would have to be a completely homo-social community, a kind of monkish monastic order that you wanted to form.
00:44:39.940
Of course, you deal with the Huthorne question and whether there's something misogynistic about homosexuality in your course.
00:44:50.940
I do. I do.
00:44:51.940
That too touchy.
00:44:52.940
Well, we will deal with that. I mean, Guillagre is the classic place to look for that.
00:44:58.940
And I think the answer is for some thinkers, they absolutely was.
00:45:02.940
For others, not so much. It depends on whether you think of homosexuality as Guillagre did as hyper-masculinity, hyper-virality, which is, you know, at least I think for Americans often someone counterintuitive.
00:45:17.940
I mean, I think the prejudice is that prevail in the United States, so you run to the opposite direction.
00:45:22.940
And the ones that say that, for instance, binding are being, who we're going to get to, I guess, towards the end of this hour is, you know, they end up allying homosexuals with women.
00:45:35.940
And so at that point, whatever my misogynistic thing you want to say about women is true of gay people as well.
00:45:41.940
But there are in modern and German modernism currents and Guillagre, I think, is one of the most famous that go the opposite way.
00:45:49.940
And essentially argue that homosexuality is a form of hyper-virality and essentially the ultimate razzio of this project, masculine is project of subduing the mother right.
00:46:00.940
Reminds me of Italian fascism to a certain extent.
00:46:03.940
Yeah, an exaltation of this hyper-virality that also adopts intensely homo or rata-f
00:46:09.880
Absolutely.
00:46:10.880
It's not only sexual undercurrent to it.
00:46:11.880
Right, right.
00:46:12.880
You mentioned Vinegure, he is a very fascinating figure. I'm not sure many of our listeners are deeply familiar with him.
00:46:20.880
Can you speak a little bit about this character, Otto Vinegure, who was the author of a book called Sex and Character?
00:46:27.880
Sex and Character, exactly.
00:46:28.880
He was Austrian.
00:46:31.880
He was Austrian, born in Vienna in 1880 and died there in 1903.
00:46:37.880
And he's famous for a book.
00:46:39.880
So he was 23 years.
00:46:40.880
He was 23 years old.
00:46:41.880
He had written this famous book Sex and Character.
00:46:44.880
I think a year prior, and it was a revised dissertation.
00:46:49.880
And he had published it in March of 1903 and shot himself on October 3rd, shot himself on the heart.
00:46:58.880
The book was sort of a success gone die, especially after his suicide.
00:47:04.880
And if any of the listeners want to check it out, it is available in relatively good English translation.
00:47:13.880
And you'll be struck by the fact that this is an adapted dissertation.
00:47:17.880
Anyone who's ever read an adapted dissertation will be be fuddled by what exactly the standards of academic stringency were applied to this thing,
00:47:28.880
but allow someone to get a PhD for it.
00:47:30.880
It is essentially a...
00:47:32.880
But we're reading it a hundred years later.
00:47:34.880
Absolutely.
00:47:35.880
But I mean there are many of our rigorous dissertations will not be read ten years later.
00:47:39.880
No, it's true.
00:47:40.880
It was certainly it hit like a lightning bolt.
00:47:43.880
It really synthesized a lot of discourses that were in currency.
00:47:48.880
Some of them, you know, the metaphysical misogyny of 2000 years ago,
00:47:52.880
but with supposedly new insights garnered from evolutionary theory, from physiology,
00:47:59.880
from psychology, Freud was immensely impressed with it, though he refused to procure a publisher for it,
00:48:07.880
which I think tells you something.
00:48:09.880
And Wittgenstein, I think he was interested in listening to find a publisher for that.
00:48:12.880
They met once.
00:48:13.880
I don't think it really...
00:48:15.880
I mean, I guess the Vinening I had had hopes in that direction that doesn't appear to...
00:48:19.880
Freud entirely got that.
00:48:21.880
And Wittgenstein was very impressed with Vineningers work.
00:48:26.880
Even though, of course, not by its rigor.
00:48:29.880
And he says, it is his enormous mistake, which is great.
00:48:33.880
I mean, he really admired, you know, the Hutzba.
00:48:35.880
He admired the...
00:48:37.880
I liked that quote actually.
00:48:39.880
...vigor rather than anything that he was saying.
00:48:42.880
And I think that's outside of extreme right-wing circles that was essentially how Vinening was received.
00:48:49.880
As someone who was just being incredibly bold, and then had sort of blown up before his time.
00:48:55.880
He was very interesting psychologically because he had...
00:48:58.880
He was Jewish, absolutely.
00:49:01.880
His...
00:49:02.880
His share was an unceations in this book from what I recall are of women, but how more sexual and Jews.
00:49:11.880
Which for him tend to be not entirely distinct.
00:49:15.880
So, I'll give it a rundown of his theory.
00:49:18.880
And I mean, this is the work of a 23-year-old.
00:49:22.880
It's not... you know, it feels like one of those term papers that you feel like you have to do a few more revisions on.
00:49:28.880
So, it isn't entirely coherent.
00:49:30.880
But the general idea is he takes an idea from Schopenhauer, namely that masculinity and femininity are distributed.
00:49:39.880
Can be distributed differently in men and women.
00:49:41.880
That is to say, there are degrees of masculinity and femininity in each person.
00:49:46.880
He radicalizes that notion.
00:49:48.880
Instead of postulating a man and a woman, he postulates a male and female principal, M&F essentially.
00:49:57.880
And he claims that every individual has a complementary distributions of M&F.
00:50:04.880
No one is completely male or completely female.
00:50:08.880
Everybody has a distribution as a ratio of M&F.
00:50:14.880
And moreover, in some chapters, he seems to claim that not just you as a person, I don't know, 75% M, 25% F, or whatever,
00:50:24.880
you are... even your different body parts that are differently gendered.
00:50:29.880
So, I mean, he really takes this idea of pulling more of his perversity to a extremely strange and suggestive place.
00:50:42.880
And he thinks that precisely a femininity is essentially allied with passivity and receptivity,
00:50:51.880
whereas masculinity is allied exactly with activity just like in Fichte.
00:50:57.880
And his ultimate claim is that women, Jews, and homosexuals are alike in that.
00:51:06.880
And he is a lack of activity in a sort of indolence and an excessive receptivity.
00:51:12.880
How do you explain the enormous appeal at this book had at the time for a while anyway?
00:51:17.880
Well, I think his life helped.
00:51:19.880
I think this was just a very interesting life story.
00:51:24.880
And of course, there are some on the right side of the spectrum that, of course, were delighted to have a Jewish anti-Semite
00:51:33.880
who also committed suicide. I mean, that's in some way, you know, that's an anti-Semite stream come true.
00:51:38.880
On the other hand, there were very serious people like Wittgenstein, like Freud, who took this book with a great deal of interest.
00:51:45.880
And not agree with it, but I think the idea of a bisexual predisposition was only now taking hold in the wider populace.
00:51:57.880
And I think Binder is one of the first to really write excessively about that, and what that might mean.
00:52:03.880
And he is also one of the first to offer an explanation of homosexuality.
00:52:09.880
You know, not in terms of nature or in terms of natural and unnatural, he instead relies on something like...
00:52:20.880
Yeah, it was actually all these natural. It's just degenerate, essentially, for finding out.
00:52:27.880
Well, before we close, you mentioned Freud. I suppose that he could be amalgamated within this tribe of people we've been discussing today.
00:52:39.880
Yes, I think, I mean, certainly some of his...
00:52:43.880
Some of his more misogynistic statements could easily be understood in that way.
00:52:47.880
And of course, especially this insistence on women as both mysterious and profoundly legible.
00:52:52.880
Right? As someone who needs figuring out, but who you shouldn't really ask about it herself, because she doesn't know.
00:52:57.880
That's certainly something that comes straight out of show-up and how out of nature, you know, truth as a woman.
00:53:03.880
This is also something that simply was a big part of the intellectual climate at the time.
00:53:11.880
On the other hand, I think he's not a metaphysician in the sense of a show-up and how are the sense of a fiestense, in the sense of a higa anymore, precisely because for him, you know, sexuality is profoundly made.
00:53:27.880
Right? And that's something that kind of forbids...
00:53:31.880
You know, he still operates with a strong, gendered economy, but that economy is essentially narratively explained.
00:53:38.880
So I would have to say that he provides many ways of coda, but he also points far beyond what someone like Schopenhauer and Nietzsche would have thought about sexuality.
00:53:48.880
Even though, of course, he really picks up on a lot of thought from Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, but he simply doesn't quite...
00:53:57.880
He doesn't do it on their terms anymore.
00:53:59.880
I'm trying to think just to conclude up a counter figure within this arena and just, I'm wondering if good day could be the other story in this...
00:54:14.880
Certainly, I think...
00:54:15.880
If you were going to look for counterweights, they would be in literature, I guess.
00:54:20.880
Precisely because that is also where women became most active at the time in Germany, and it is a frequent occurrence that women that had read very carefully these philosophers would provide
00:54:34.880
fictions that suspiciously resembled these philosophers' discourses about gender and yet undercut them in very strange and interesting ways.
00:54:42.880
I think that's clear, it's a fista because he had the most immediate resonance where Schopenhauer, of course, labored in obscurity for about 20 years before he got any kind of attention.
00:54:54.880
But yeah, I think it is as good as maybe one good example, but I would say that people like Doteer Schleger, the wife of Friedrich Leger, or with Hina Bonnano von Alnam,
00:55:08.880
that really both turned to literature to critique these guys, but also by moving to literature very,
00:55:19.880
and that's a very common move against this metaphysical misogyny, I would say, because of course, how else are you going to argue against it?
00:55:46.880
If you can attack misogynists historically, logically, all that will work, but with the metaphysics it's more difficult, and so what they end up doing is simply saying what you're spinning our bunch of fictions.
00:56:02.880
Well said, we've been speaking with Professor Adrian Daupe here on the entitled "Pinnance by Amos Robert Harrison" will be with you again next week, but in the meantime I think Adrian we're going to leave our listeners with a little Janice Jopland.
00:56:15.880
Oh, lovely.
00:56:16.880
What a nice voice, a big.
00:56:17.880
I don't know if you like her, but...
00:56:19.880
Oh, how could I not?
00:56:22.880
Was she once voted the "Gleus Man"?
00:56:26.880
At least man at UT Austin is what I heard.
00:56:30.880
I knew she was a local girl too, she was in San Francisco for quite a while.
00:56:37.880
Thanks for coming on.
00:56:38.880
Well, thank you so much for having me.
00:56:39.880
You're on again in the future.
00:56:40.880
Bye-bye.
00:56:41.880
Bye-bye.
00:56:42.880
Thank you so much for having me.
00:56:43.880
Bye-bye, Peter.
00:56:44.880
Oh, well done.
00:56:45.880
[MUSIC]
00:56:46.880
[MUSIC]
00:56:47.880
[MUSIC]
00:56:52.880
[MUSIC]
00:56:54.880
(upbeat music)
00:56:57.460
(upbeat music)
00:57:00.040
(upbeat music)
00:57:02.620
(upbeat music)
00:57:05.200
(upbeat music)
00:57:09.800
(upbeat music)
00:57:14.800
(upbeat music)
00:57:19.800
(upbeat music)
00:57:24.800
(upbeat music)
00:57:35.800
(upbeat music)
00:57:40.800
00:57:43.040
00:57:47.040
00:57:49.200
00:57:51.020
00:57:54.780
00:57:59.000
00:58:01.320
00:58:04.860
00:58:07.120
00:58:09.400
00:58:11.400
00:58:12.400
00:58:13.400
All around I felt it.
00:58:14.400
All I could see was a ray-eye.
00:58:17.400
00:58:19.400
00:58:21.400
Something right a hole in me.
00:58:23.400
00:58:25.400
Filting me.
00:58:27.400
00:58:29.400
00:58:29.400
On a laggle, on a ball too.
00:58:32.400
00:58:33.400
00:58:34.400
Hey, get out of pain.
00:58:36.400
Let's wait too heavy for you.
00:58:37.400
You can't hold it alone.
00:58:38.400
Say hello, hello, hello.
00:58:43.400
On a laggle, can't play you just because I got the world.
00:58:47.400
You'll now play me.
00:58:49.400
00:58:51.400
00:58:53.400
00:58:54.400
Wow.
00:58:55.400
00:58:56.400
00:58:57.400
00:58:59.400
Wow.
00:59:00.400
00:59:01.400
Wow.
00:59:02.400
On a laggle, can't play just because I got to need your day.
00:59:06.400
00:59:07.400
00:59:08.400
Please don't turn that way down now.
00:59:10.400
00:59:11.400
00:59:12.400
Hey!
00:59:13.400
00:59:14.400
Hey!
00:59:15.400
00:59:16.400
00:59:17.400
00:59:18.400
Hey, you go today.
00:59:20.400
What I wanted to love you.
00:59:22.400
I wanted to hold on just, yeah.
00:59:25.400
Do the day I die.
00:59:27.400
I did.
00:59:28.400
Because I did.
00:59:29.400
Yeah.
00:59:30.400
Hey!
00:59:31.400
Hey!
00:59:32.400
Hey!
00:59:33.400
All right.
00:59:34.400
(upbeat music)
00:59:36.980
(upbeat music)
00:59:39.560
(upbeat music)
00:59:42.140
(upbeat music)
00:59:44.720
(upbeat music)
00:59:47.300
(upbeat music)
00:59:49.880
(upbeat music)
00:59:54.960
(upbeat music)
01:00:03.540
(upbeat music)
01:00:11.900
(upbeat music)
01:00:16.780
(upbeat music)
01:00:27.800
(upbeat music)
01:00:34.840
(upbeat music)
01:00:43.780
(upbeat music)
01:00:50.780
(upbeat music)
01:01:07.780
(upbeat music)
01:01:09.780
(upbeat music)
01:01:14.780
(upbeat music)
01:01:19.780
(upbeat music)
01:01:28.780
(upbeat music)
01:01:36.780
( larger, happy music)
01:01:40.280
One of them from the other body in the world
01:01:48.680
was the same daily.
01:01:50.780
Whenever in the world we need the same lobby.
01:01:57.120
When I want a work for your love then,
01:02:02.200
when I want a try for your love then
01:02:05.440
I don't understand how come you go, man.
01:02:10.440
(audience cheering)
01:02:15.740
I don't understand why half the world is still crying, man.
01:02:21.060
When the other half the world is still crying too, man,
01:02:24.400
I can't get it together.
01:02:26.000
I mean, if you got a cat for one day, man,
01:02:33.600
I mean, say maybe you want a cat for 365 days, right?
01:02:38.440
You ain't got it for 365 days.
01:02:40.440
You got it for one day, man.
01:02:42.520
Well, I'll tell you that one day, man, better be your life, man.
01:02:46.280
Because, you know, you can say, oh man,
01:02:49.620
you can cry about the other 364, man.
01:02:53.120
But you're gonna lose that one day, man.
01:02:55.360
And that's all you got.
01:02:56.200
You gotta call that love, man.
01:02:57.920
That's what it is, man.
01:03:01.000
If you got it today, you don't wear it tomorrow, man.
01:03:04.520
(audience cheering)
01:03:06.520
'Cause you don't need it.
01:03:08.660
'Cause as a matter of fact, as we discovered in the train,
01:03:11.460
tomorrow never happens, man.
01:03:13.500
It's all the same fucking day, man.
01:03:17.180
(audience cheering)
01:03:20.680
So you gotta, when you wanna hold someone,
01:03:24.180
you gotta hold 'em like it's a last minute of your life.
01:03:28.460
You gotta hold,
01:03:32.740
(audience cheering)
01:03:35.740
Hold it.
01:03:49.860
'Cause somebody's the way you're gonna come on your shoulders, babe.
01:03:54.620
It's gonna feel too heavy.
01:03:56.360
It's gonna wear in your, it's gonna feel just like a boy.
01:04:01.360
(audience cheering)
01:04:04.360
(audience cheering)
01:04:07.360
Wow!
01:04:17.560
O'Datta in a chain.
01:04:21.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:23.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:26.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:28.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:30.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:32.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:34.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:35.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:36.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:37.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:38.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:39.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:40.660
O'Datta in a chain?
01:04:41.660
O'Datta in a chain?