Jonathan and Jeff are finally back with a conversation that picks up the threads that were left in the previous episode's topics of Daoist philosophy and technology. Jeff asks Jon if he's seen Spirited Away and tries to make a connection without revealing too much (since as of the time of the recording, Jon had no seen it). They discuss their mutual friend Troy. Digging into their admittedly surface-level understanding of Daoism, they discuss some key themes as they relate to our desire and longing for a worthwhile existence. Jeff suggests there is an empathetic element to Bo Burnham's song about white women on Instagram that is connected to his deeper critique of technology. This leads to a brief inquiry into whether all comedians were nihilists or not -- they suggest that the late great Norm MacDonald did not seem to be.
They circle back to the anarchic underpinnings of Daoist philosophy. They talk about the differences between morality and virtue (in the Daoist sense). They link the Daoist resistance to social norms to Nietzsche's concept of the Apollonian and the Dionysian. Jeff talks about the difference between Bacchus as exhuberance and fecundity (at least as he appears in the Narnian Universe) and Dionysius as destruction and death drive (at least as he appears in Nietzsche). Jon and Jeff bring up (and disagree about) the difference between an understanding of the Way as a kind of origin versus an understanding of it as a kind of ideal. Jeff reflects on the relation of anxiety and Lacanian psychoanalytical thought and the Daoist concept of the uncarved block.
During the second half, they again debate whether the Way is about returning to an originary state of non-striving or whether it is about finding what is nourishing. They discuss the difference between dopamine hits (like if Troy likes one of Jeff's tweets) and true satisfaction or contentment. They return to the topic of technology and its positioning ideologically as a mechanism for freeing us from toil. They talk about the similarities and differences between Daoist and Christian thought. Jon talks about the disgusting way Dale Carnegie's book about winning friends has been used in the business world. Jeff asks about whether evolutionary thought is working to leave certain Victorian-era metaphors behind, and Jon talks about the role of reciprocity in nature and its relationship to the idea of contentment. Jeff finishes with the story of how he recently acquired a stack of books on eastern philosophy (and some other stuff).
Got something to say? Email us at [email protected]
Show Notes
Tao Te Ching, by Lao Tzu
Taoism: The Parting of the Way, by Holmes Welch Jr.
Spirited Away (Film)
"White Woman's Instagram" by Bo Burnham
Mythos, by Stephen Fry
The Birth of Tragedy, by Friedrich Nietzsche
Prince Caspian, by C.S. Lewis
Happiness is Not a Fish You Can Catch, by Our Lady Peace
How to Win Friends and Influence People, by Dale Carnegie
10,000 Dreams Interpreted
Music
Theme Music: "What u Thinkin? (Instrumental)" by Wataboi on Pixabay
Intermission Music: "Lazy Morning" by Tim Moor on Pixabay
Flere episoder fra "Subjects in Process"
Gå ikke glip af nogen episoder af “Subjects in Process” - abonnér på podcasten med gratisapp GetPodcast.