Is Romanticism the cause of world wars and dreams of Utopia leading to mass murder and tyranny? — Athena
we seem on the brink of disintegration — Athena
It takes two to tangle. So idealistic liberal poetic Romantics might build their Utopias & cloud castles, if not for the obstruction of pragmatic conservative prosaic Realists, who prefer to build on a solid foundation. Pain & War result, not from Romanticism or Realism, but from the inability to compromise on a blend of poetry & prose. :smile:Is Romanticism the cause of world wars and dreams of Utopia leading to mass murder and tyranny? — Athena
Tragedians and pessimists of every stripe have been at this trope since Year Zero:
Tragedians need some background or stimulus to act in such way. — javi2541997
romanticism itself works as propaganda — javi2541997
Here we sit with the ability to communicate with people around the world and we seem on the brink of disintegration and possibly another world war. Our reality is not the expectation of reason. Could Romanticism be the problem? — Athena
Our reality is not the expectation of reason. Could Romanticism be the problem? — Athena
Naiveté isn't romanticism; viciousness (Hitler, Stalin) isn't romanticism either. — Bitter Crank
Hitler's art reveals a 'decadent romantic' - CSMonitor.comhttps://www.csmonitor.com › ...
Dec 12, 1984 — As an artist, Hitler's taste and ability never rose above the level of a decadent romanticism. The 20 paintings now on view at the Palazzo ... — Harold Rogers
When I look for synonyms of "Romanticism", most of the alternatives sound like innocent adolescent sentimental mawkishness. So, I suspect what you are actually referring to is "Extremism" in the form of unbridled Utopianism or Idealism. It's not the dreams of a perfect world that cause trouble, but the willingness to compel others to live in your dream-world. Obviously, enthusiastic & charismatic leaders have been able to persuade a significant portion of compatriots to join their Quixotic quest for an idealized reality : If not a perfect world, at least a better world for Us without Them.Could Romanticism be the problem? — Athena
Exactly where to place Limits on Liberty is an ancient philosophical conundrum. Supreme court justice Oliver Wendell Holmes once said something like "your freedom to swing your arm ends at my nose". :smile:I value liberty but hate the ugliness that results from the liberties some people take — Athena
Is Romanticism the cause of world wars and dreams of Utopia leading to mass murder and tyranny? — Athena
Is Romanticism the cause of world wars and dreams of Utopia leading to mass murder and tyranny? — Athena
Alain de Botton glides over the history that brings us to today's unrealistic expectations. — Athena
Here we sit with the ability to communicate with people around the world and we seem on the brink of disintegration and possibly another world war. — Athena
Could Romanticism be the problem? — Athena
Exactly where to place Limits on Liberty is an ancient philosophical conundrum. Supreme court justice Oliver Wendell Holmes once said something like "your freedom to swing your arm ends at my nose". :smile: — Gnomon
Unrealistic expectations is a failure of individual rational assessment, which is a requirement of long-term homeostasis. — Garrett Travers
I know that terrible things happened before Romanticism raised its self-absorbed, narcissistic, irrational, mystical, emotional head, but assume we refer to what took place after it did so. — Ciceronianus
The "general will" of Rousseau, and other collectivist musings, such as in Hegel and Fichte, could be read as justifying mass war and state power. — NOS4A2
How is general will different from the will of all?
While the general will looks out for the common good, the will of all looks out for private interests and is simply the sum of these competing interests. ... When dealing with the general will, however, the overriding objective is the common good and everyone cooperates to achieve it. — Alexander Pfander
Okay, I had to look up "homeostasis" and "general will". Homeostasis in the context of human behavior needs a better explanation. — Athena
The "general will" of Rousseau, and other collectivist musings, such as in Hegel and Fichte, could be read as justifying mass war and state power. — NOS4A2
unrealistic expectations
Could Romanticism be the problem? — Athena
Here's an excerpt from old post ...180 Proof How did you put it? Align expectations with reality? — Agent Smith
I think a "good philosophy" consists in reflective exercises for aligning one's expectations - minimizing one's frustration/distress - with the real ... — 180 Proof
Romanticism - A literary, artistic, and philosophical movement originating in the 18th century, characterized chiefly by a reaction against neoclassicism and an emphasis on the imagination and emotions, and marked especially in English literature by sensibility and the use of autobiographical material, an exaltation of the primitive and the common man, an appreciation of external nature, an interest in the remote, a predilection for melancholy, and the use in poetry of older verse forms. — T Clark
Romantic - Marked by the imaginative or emotional appeal of what is heroic, adventurous, remote, mysterious, or idealized. — T Clark
By the definition above, I think Nazism, communism, jingoistic patriotism, and other similar ideologies can be defined as romanticism. — T Clark
Progress has (always) been, in my humble opinion, a function of dissatisfaction (dukkha): we're dissatisfied, we wanna do something about it, and then so-called progress. — Agent Smith
I think we need some homeostasis right now. It feels like things are flying out of control in many directions. Dreams are wonderful but we need to ground ourselves with reality so our dreams don't become nightmares?Homeostasis — Garrett Travers
Wikipedia explains neoclassicism like this "The main Neoclassical movement coincided with the 18th-century Age of Enlightenment, and continued into the early 19th century, laterally competing with Romanticism." — Athena
Is that a class struggle? I am quite distressed by what I perceive as foolish liberty today. A breaking of the social rules that gives us hope of overcoming racism and has meant the liberation of women, but destroys family order and may have negative social ramifications as well. I guess that makes me a conservative although many think I am liberal. — Athena
Romantic - Marked by the imaginative or emotional appeal of what is heroic, adventurous, remote, mysterious, or idealized.
— T Clark
That is what I am comfortable with. — Athena
By the definition above, I think Nazism, communism, jingoistic patriotism, and other similar ideologies can be defined as romanticism.
— T Clark
I think that is so but so was the democracy we were manifesting through education a Romantic notion. — Athena
I think we need some homeostasis right now. It feels like things are flying out of control in many directions. Dreams are wonderful but we need to ground ourselves with reality so our dreams don't become nightmares? — Athena
Here's a link to a YouTube video of a Ukrainian woman handing an invading Russian soldier some flower seeds to plant on her martyr's grave. Now isn't that a Romantic idea? :smile:I absolutely love the picture you posted. I would like to enlarge it and put it on my wall. — Athena
At least a romantic way to say "f*ck you, and the tank you rode in on". :angry: — Gnomon
borrowed from the Stoics — schopenhauer1
However, the scientific worldview seemed to constantly focus on the empirical and even with that, Political Science was the main focus. The individual human condition was given short-shrift. The 19th century can be seen as a sort of backlash.. Existentialism started the trend of "the individual" and the existential questions of life. What does it mean to be a human consciousness, from the interior perspective, not just the empirical one. These types of human struggles are captured more in art, literature, feelings, personal observations and experiences, etc.. The individual was being more captured by people like Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, etc.
But one can say Romanticism proper was this kind of middle ground in the early 1800s between the "political-oriented" 18th century and the personal oriented 19th century. It was from late 1700s-early 1800s and often turned politics into identity-politics.. Rousseau and his general "General Will", Herder, or Schelling and Fichte's emphasis on ethnic politics helped push movements that divided Europe less on Imperial or Universal lines and more on common cultural and historical ties. It was not universal in the Enlightenment sense of only worrying about the individual's rights and securities, but about cultural identity. Individualistic, but at the level of culture, not the person. That would be more emphasized with the Existentialists. — schopenhauer1
I certainly think support for our nation and government is often expressed in romantic terms, but I think democracy is a down-to-earth, practical way of governing. I don't think the founders of the US were romantics at all. You, on the other hand, seem to be. Is that something that might lead you to support risky policies in the name of national solidarity and tradition? — T Clark
The "liberal arts" were originally those disciplines deemed by the Ancient Greeks to be essential preparation for effective participation in public life. Grammar, logic, and rhetoric were regarded as the core liberal arts, with arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy playing a secondary, if important, role. This model inspired the early European universities (though the grammar taught was Latin, not Greek) and by the end of the Renaissance other subjects had been added to this core—Greek grammar, history, moral philosophy and poetry. Even as specialization at the undergraduate level was embraced in some countries from the 19th century onwards, some vestige of a liberal arts idea persisted: well into the second half of the 20th century competence in Latin and Greek was an admissions requirements for matriculation of all students at some elite universities (e.g. Oxford and Cambridge). — Harry Brighouse
The Age of Enlightenment (also known as the Age of Reason or simply the Enlightenment)[note 2] was an intellectual and philosophical movement that dominated Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries with global influences and effects.[2][3] The Enlightenment included a range of ideas centered on the value of human happiness, the pursuit of knowledge obtained by means of reason and the evidence of the senses, and ideals such as liberty, progress, toleration, fraternity, constitutional government, and separation of church and state.[4][5] — wikipedia
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