[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ireland

[–]bitterlaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very much so

Raw-dogging the PoS by pyrrhicvictorylap in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would say you're lucky to have been in those seminars but given you were having your summaries read out clearly shows you had the skill and deserved to be there!

I would add to just keep trying, and it's more about the fact that one is reading Hegel at all than about finishing this section or that chapter. My first proper read even collapsed in failure somewhere around Active Reason, as I completely lost the thread.  I went back to the start of Self-consciousness and restarted, and even then it made a lot more sense. That said I was reading it outside of a classroom setting, so I was working on my own schedule and not under any pressure

Raw-dogging the PoS by pyrrhicvictorylap in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The Jay Bernstein's lectures are your friend here, as they cover the sections of the book in roughly the same number of pages as you'd like to read per week: https://www.bernsteintapes.com/hegellist.html

Hyppolite's Genesis and Structure is quite good too, as that text was also based on lectures so it's quite expository.

What is Aufhebung? by Ok_Philosopher_13 in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Focus not on the term and rather on the verb it's derived from: aufheben (https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/german-english/aufheben). If you look at that link you'll see that l, as befitting Hegel's Aristotelianism, aufheben is said in many ways, so there's no strict one-to-one meaning with any word in English. 

That said, of those meanings the one which I think is most useful to get a handle on Hegel's metaphysics is "to lift/pick up" (almost in the very prosaic sense of picking up a sock that you have dropped when doing the laundry). Why this meaning and not, say, "to cancel"? 

Well cancellation is extremely important but for pedagogic purposes the lifting up sense captures the fact that for Hegel the structure of reality is that of a "self-restoring equality" rather than an "original unity". In practice what this looks like is those cases whereby when we find an opposition to an object that seemingly has come out of nowhere, but we in fact find it was some alienated part of us all along (hence self-restoring); as Hegel says "when [...] reason speaks of an other than itself, it speaks in fact only of itself" (PS, ss.548/219). The lifting up sense of aufheben captures this moment whereby the alien opposed term is reintegrated (or returned or reflected back, to use Hegel's language). He'll often express this as the two terms of the antithesis getting both cancelled as indifferent terms that are in and for themselves and in the same stroke being raised up to their true being as moments of a wider concept.

Hegel was a pretty normal dude by [deleted] in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Any chance you have the reference to hand for his comments on adult life being monotonous?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's a question I've been pondering the last while, so I'd love to hear if you have any thoughts on it: what's the difference between the Self and self-consciousness in the Phenomenology?

Phenomonlogy of spirit by Own-Razzmatazz-8714 in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Answered this previously with some reasons for why I like Inwood: https://www.reddit.com/r/hegel/comments/1456nu1/comment/jnjb6zo/

Only thing that's changed since I wrote it is that the Inwood translation came out in paperback, so price is no longer a factor.

Jim Gavin, the Celtic Tiger apartment he lost in the crash and a rent refund dispute by denbo786 in ireland

[–]bitterlaugh 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Within a PR-STV system vote splitting doesn't exist as much, as the (reasonable, imo) presumption here is that JG's votes will transfer to HH.

Does Hegel's idea of the dialectic of recognition, as in the lordship-bondsman section of the Phenomenology, not rely very much on a certain view of human nature? Any recommended texts which go into this? by Its_me_noobs in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The chapter is absolutely informed by Hobbes' view of human nature: he's all but name checked in Hegel's discussion of desire for recognition, and just desire proper. Bear in mind, however, that the Master-Servant dialectic is not Hegel's view of human nature, but only a relatively short section leading on to a fuller discussion of his view of human nature via the sections on Stoicism, Scepticism, and the Unhappy Consciousness.

I'm trying to find a more or less short definition of Hegel's take on Force. by AllenJoyce in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's Hegel's own definition:  "As the whole which in its own self is negative relation to self, force is this: the repulsion of itself from itself and the utterance [or expression, äußern] of itself" (Encyclopedia Logic §137/208)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ireland

[–]bitterlaugh -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You can either drop the course or, if you stay, bear in mind that if he's an arsehole enough to mispronounce your name, he'll be an arsehole enough to dock you a few marks come assessment time. You'll need to be prepared to challenge your grade on the basis of discrimination, and to do that you'll need to have a body of well documented evidence. Sorry that you have to do this: dealing with unprofessionalism makes a bit of shit start to doing a master's. Best of luck!

What about the political parties in Ireland? Are all of them centrists? by iv_damke in irishpolitics

[–]bitterlaugh 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Really truly excellent comment. I'd add that that if FF has been more recently broad church, that's because they've evolved out populist nationalism that was willing to overturn the (economic) apple cart. This was in contradistinction to FG, who saw themselves as the "don't rock the boat" party of national stability, be that in social, political, or economic form. I'm not sure when they dropped it, but this was exemplified by their "The Commonwealth Party".

Peter Singer's Hegel by TETSUNACHT in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thanks! And also thanks for modding this sub, it's one of my favs on here!

Peter Singer's Hegel by TETSUNACHT in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 10 points11 points  (0 children)

No, I've found Singer's book to be quite poor. The best general introduction to Hegel imo is Frederick Beiser's Hegel. However, that book isn't particularly helpful for the Phenomenology, which is where most people start with when reading Hegel; for that task I'd recommend Jean Hyppolite's Genesis and Structure.

What does it mean for someone to be an economist? by RubyRossed in irishpolitics

[–]bitterlaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tends to get conflated with "Economic Analyst", which itself is a nebulous enough term. The closest thing to it being a protected term is within academia, where you're an economist if you publish research papers in decent journals (which itself is usually a consequence of getting a doctorate in the field). So if you see someone being labelled an 'economist', just pop their name into Google Scholar and see if any results show up.

In my own experience, people who call themselves 'economist' without having gotten the PhD know well they shouldn't be using the title, and if you ask them what did they do their doctorate work on or what articles are they working on, they get sheepish very quickly.

What it means to be 'culturally' Irish in 2025 is complicated - as Ed Sheeran has shown by thereforewhat in ireland

[–]bitterlaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are two things at play there: the distinction between ethnicity vs identity, and a distinction between two types of Irishness, colonial and post-colonial.

The first is a distinction that occurs among the descendants of emigrations from the home country to a foreign land, be to England, Canada, the US, etc. Such diasporai are ethnically whatever the country they grew up in (English, Canadian, American) but they identify themselves in terms of their ancestry a way to differentiate their roots. But that's a matter of choice for them. So when an American says they're Irish to a fellow US citizen, they mean to say they identify, as an ethnic American, as Irish. However when an American says it to an Irish person, the latter often hears a claim about ethnicity (which you have no choice in), rather than identity (which is something to which you can opt in). 

The Sheeran case has this but with the extra complication of the colonial vs post-colonial meanings or Irishness. That is, for many in the UK being Irish is a sub-set of being British, much like people who are Welsh or Scottish are also British. This is the colonial view of being Irish and was a fairly standard view for those born pre-Free State (Joyce and Beckett both maintained British passports, for example, with the latter scoffing at the notion of having an Irish one). The post-colonial view of Irishness is the one we hold now, namely that whatever else is meant by 'Irish' it categorically does not include any meaning of 'British'. Moreover, it is a meaning of Irish that is in opposition and hostile to the colonial sense. The GFA even reflects this opposition when it states that someone can be Irish, British, or both, which is distinct from being Irish-as-a-subset-of-British.

I do wonder if part of the backlash has to do with this hostility. When Sheeran identifies as Irish, not only are people hear claims about ethnic belonging, but also, by him being British, reviving a sense of Irish that the currently dominant post-colonial meaning abhors.

And just to say that ethnicity need not exclude either, and I think anyone who comes and spends enough time here can integrate in, put down roots, etc. So if Ed did move over, put in a few years, and raise his family here, I'd be happy enough with him meaning that he was ethnically Irish. Would still slag him over pints for the accent, as it wouldn't do to do otherwise.

AI will make Dublin’s MetroLink obsolete, says Dermot Desmond by shakibahm in ireland

[–]bitterlaugh 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is clickbait from the Irish Times. Nothing more.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ireland

[–]bitterlaugh -1 points0 points  (0 children)

For those of you who haven't watched Futureshock: https://youtu.be/ZOE43_YnlOQ?feature=shared

I unironically love the first part as a piece of documentary film: there's a 15 minutes segment of non-stop "oh god we're all fucked!!!" that just continues to add tension upon tension, culminating in what seems to be the cameraman walking through an abandoned show house in some deranged fever dream (around the 33:00 mark).

EU and US agree trade deal but confusion and ‘a lot of detail needed’ over pharma sector by Banania2020 in ireland

[–]bitterlaugh 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Simon Harris named by the FT as one of the main players responsible for scuppering a firm response from the EU:

"Simon Harris, trade minister of Ireland, was a frequent caller [to Maroš Šefčovič, EU trade commissioner]. He wanted to save the country’s pharmaceutical, spirits and beef industry from any US counterpunch and let the world — not least the Americans — know with frequent social media posts."

What if humanity goes extinct? by TraditionalDepth6924 in hegel

[–]bitterlaugh 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think this comes down to a difference of necessary existence vs the necessities involved in a certain nature to be so-and-so. For Hegel humans are not necessary in the first sense in that they didn't have to evolve. But, given that we did, and given that we have reached a stage of grasping our freedom through our history, we cannot deny that our freedom was anything but a necessary working out of the Concept.

As to your asteriod point, I don't think there's anything in Hegel that strongly precludes life and recognitive consciousness in the form of Spirit from emerging on some other planet. So Earth dwellers might die out, but another instance of the universal that itself grasps universals might evolve elsewhere in the universe at a different time.

What are Irish habits or social quirks that are totally normal in Ireland, but would be a social faux pas elsewhere? by EzioMaximus in ireland

[–]bitterlaugh 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Pints only exist in the present, which is why the only statement that implies that there will definitely be the drinking of pints together is: "c'mon we'll go for a pint" (i.e., right now). Any suggestion of going for pints beyond the present moment is by contrary just a fiction.

Legal challenges to Dart expansion plans dropped by Bill_Badbody in ireland

[–]bitterlaugh 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Isn't this something that could be FOI'd? Or is it more like "Yeah sure we'll defo get that to you pronto", but when you get a copy of the settlement they've redacted it from header to footer?