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“so that’s an image of my childhood: the workers hunched over in the middle, a line of policemen with their billy clubs and pistols in the back, and the priests in the front pontificating”
it’s so cute when he gets all choked up at 00:38:00 talking about bookshops
ah yea this is the interview where he says it (01:26:00): “i rewrote [the book] every year [for five years]. it went from 600 pages to 98 pages in the last two rounds of revision, and i decided i had to publish it or else it might stop existing”
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01:33:00 “everyone says to me: ‘you’re very pessimistic, very bleak, you give no hope. you have no positive project.’ i’m not a priest; my job is not to give people hope - i’m trying to understand something. i loathe to censor the results i come to jolly people along.”
it’s the very standard philosophy-bro response but i think it means a lot more in the context of the development of a critical theory.
there are so many sickeningly saccharine lefty analyses that are activistic and flacidly gesturing at a positive vision of the future. it’s placative and wishful thinking and misdirects their entire project.
01:44:00 “everyone kept telling me there was this great philosopher immanuel kant[…] i spent 10 years of my life reading and teaching kant. i’m afraid i had the experience every time i read his books that i found his views less plausible and more repellant. why would anyone subject themselves?”
02:07:00 “[the essays in each book] form a kind of mosaic. they aren’t intended to be a strictly reasoned argument from a to b nor necessarily completely coherent. rather they’re intended to be grouped around general topics approached indirectly and illuminated peripherally”
02:25:00 “kant is a form of resistance to the french revolution, and rawls is the ideology of the thatcher-reagan reaction against the progressive forces of ‘45-‘75.”
02:32:30 “we live in a world that is pervaded by lots of assumptions that we can’t fully abstract ourselves from because they’re too much of the air we breathe - they’re a part of the language we speak. although we don’t agree with the implications, if we abstract we make ourselves incomprehensible”
i want to go back and summarize a crucial section around 00:52:00. paraphrasing: “my ideas haven’t changed much since 1971. there is one area that is the exception, and that’s the centrality of the concept of freedom. i thought all these philosophers were talking about the same thing;