Recent Posts
SGTOW ideological thread
Physiognomy
राम के नाम, बाबरी के विध्वंसकों का स्मरण
Poetry Thread.
Critique/Critiqueing, or: Rationality/Irrationalit...
Question to /iti/hAskars
Parliamentary Debating
Can you speak any special dialect besides the gene...
Bihar eastern up is source of all major religions in India post hinduism, >Jainism >Buddhism >Sikhism In fact, same region was hub for North Black Polish Ware culture which coincides with first set of urbanization post fall IVC and it was first ...
The British Raj archives
Why do women love him?
Schopenhauer
chart thread
Book recommendations
/erg/ e-reader general
Didn't know there was a new Dan Brown novel out bh...
Reading it now. It's great. Feel like I'm back in my school and college days.
Greco-Romans
Ayatollah
Youtube essays
Tareekh e Lahore by Kanhiya Lal
हिंदी दिवस
Bihari Pyscho
OrZjnD
No.760
Thoughts?

Gk9qJs
No.761
Hegel ki ma ki chut
DSHbaG
No.762
>>761
Goethes problem with hegel or something

Gk9qJs
No.763
>>762
> One day Goethe announced to his daughter-in-law that there would be a guest for lunch, but did not tell her his name, which he had never omitted to do before, and did not introduce the guest when he arrived. Mute bows on both sides. During the meal Goethe said comparatively little, presumably in order to give free rein to his very talkative guest, who unfolded his thoughts with great logical acumen and in oddly complicated syntax. His increasingly animated exposition, with its quite new terminology, its intellectually elliptical style of expression, and its strange philosophical formulae, finally reduced Goethe to complete silence, though the guest did not notice this. The hostess also listened silently, no doubt glancing at her papa (as she always called Goethe) in some surprise. When the meal had come to an end and their guest departed, Goethe asked his daughter-in-law: "Well, how do you like him?" "How very strange he is. I can't make out whether he's brilliant or crazy. He didn't seem to me to be a very clear thinker." Goethe smiled ironically, "Well, well! We have just had lunch with a man who is now the most famous of modern philosophers—Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Hegel.”
M.J. Petry’s translation, Hegel's Philosophy of Nature: Volume I, 1970, pp. 63-64.
sGYtLP
No.896


DUOToM
No.900
>>760(OP)
S tier wordceller, perhaps the greatest wordcel to ever exist, but he has tough competition from other germans and Hon. Men. : Jameson.




















































