Untimely Reflections #7: Paul Katsafanas - Nietzschean Constitutivism

Untimely Reflections #7: Paul Katsafanas - Nietzschean Constitutivism

This time, I'm having a conversation with Paul Katsafanas, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Boston University. He is the author of Nietzschean Constitutivism, an analytical approach to Nietzsche's ethics. This is the primary focus of our conversation, though I also talked to Professor Katfasanas about changes in the analytical/continental divide, his take on my own fictionalist approach to metaphysics, and the state of philosophy in 2021. I found Paul to have a wealth of insights into Nietzsche's work which were stated with utter clarity and directness.

Katsafanas' moral constitutivism, based on Nietzsche, stands in opposition to the work of Kantian constitutivists such as Christine Korsgaard and David Velleman. Katsafanas argues that the Nietzschean theory of meta-ethics, based on will to power, more coherently explains human action than the Kantian insistence on universalization and adherence to rational principles. Nietzschean constitutivism includes the unconscious and habitual side of man, not just his deliberating, rational side.

There was some glitching on his end but I think it was just my own poor connection. Or maybe this is just an inevitability of recording on Zoom from far-flung parts of the country.

Avsnitt(229)

Birth of Tragedy #8: 22-25 (Conclusion)

Birth of Tragedy #8: 22-25 (Conclusion)

Nietzsche recapitulates and summarizes his positions, and provides us with a few relatively simple formulas for understanding the interaction of the two art-forces. He hopes for a rebirth of tragic art in Europe. We conclude with my distillation of the main philosophical concepts, the significance of which can be expanded beyond the work.

4 Okt 20222h 4min

Birth of Tragedy #7: 18-21 (Alexandrianism)

Birth of Tragedy #7: 18-21 (Alexandrianism)

Here we find the idea of cultures as admixtures of the Apollinian, Dionysian, or Socratic approaches to life. The Socratic is distinguished from the Apollinian, and modern art and culture is assessed as theoretic parasitism on art.

27 Sep 20221h 59min

Birth of Tragedy #6: 14-17 (The Theoretic v/s the Tragic)

Birth of Tragedy #6: 14-17 (The Theoretic v/s the Tragic)

Socrates, having been introduced in the last chapter we studied in the previous section, appears now to threaten all art, with a worldview described as "the theoretic", which is fundamentally opposed to the tragic. The theoretical worldview is, by nature, optimistic, moralistic, and against all illusion and ignorance. Nietzsche first raises the prospect of "an artistic Socrates", and rails against the New Attic Comedy as a degenerated artform in comparison to Attic Tragedy.

20 Sep 20222h 36min

Birth of Tragedy #5: 11-13 (Euripedes & The Death of Tragedy)

Birth of Tragedy #5: 11-13 (Euripedes & The Death of Tragedy)

Now we turn to the effect of Euripedes, and Nietzsche’s charge that this tragedian came under the influence of Socrates, and the new form of drama, New Attic Comedy, that followed.

13 Sep 20222h

Birth of Tragedy #4: 8-10 (Evolution of the Satyr Chorus & Suffering Hero)

Birth of Tragedy #4: 8-10 (Evolution of the Satyr Chorus & Suffering Hero)

Let’s talk about the evolution of the Attic Tragedy: from solo dithyrambic poet, to dithyrambic chorus, to chorus plus the ritualized portrayal of a masked Dionysus, to an entire tragedy performed on stage behind the “magic wall” of the chorus.

6 Sep 20222h 12min

Birth of Tragedy #3: 4-7 ("Objective" v/s "Subjective" Art)

Birth of Tragedy #3: 4-7 ("Objective" v/s "Subjective" Art)

We continue our analysis of Birth of Tragedy, and enter one of the most byzantine sections of the text. Don’t worry, I shall be your Ariadne.

30 Aug 20222h 4min

Birth of Tragedy #2: 1-3 (The Two Art-Forces)

Birth of Tragedy #2: 1-3 (The Two Art-Forces)

Today we cover the first three sections of Birth of Tragedy. Slow going, I know- but things will begin to move at a faster clip as we continue. In this episode the core concepts of the Apollinian and Dionysian art forces are explained, their relation to one another, and their origin in dreams and intoxication.

23 Aug 20221h 56min

Birth of Tragedy #1: Attempt At Self-Criticism/Preface to Wagner

Birth of Tragedy #1: Attempt At Self-Criticism/Preface to Wagner

In the name of Lord Dionysus, it with great joy and solemnity that we commence this, the first of our Nietzschean bookclubs. This series will see me undertake an in-depth analysis, moving section-by-section, through Nietzsche’s first book: The Birth of Tragedy. In the first episode, we’ll look at Nietzsche’s masterful second preface, written in 1886 and attached to the beginning of the work. This episode will therefore serve as a sort of introduction to the text, contextualizing it within Nietzsche’s own understanding of his early text and how it laid the foundations for many of his later ideas.

16 Aug 20222h 25min

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