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/lit/ - Literature


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11149297 No.11149297 [Reply] [Original]

>Coffee must be brought ‘upon the spot,’ (a word he had constantly in his mouth during his latter days,) ‘in a moment.’
>And the expressions of his impatience, though from old habit still gentle, were so lively, and had so much of infantine naïveté about them, that none of us could forbear smiling. Knowing what would happen, I had taken care that all the preparations should be made beforehand; the coffee was ground; the water was boiling; and the very moment the word was given, his servant shot in like an arrow, and plunged the coffee into the water.
>All that remained, therefore, was to give it time to boil up. But this trifling delay seemed unendurable to Kant. All consolations were thrown away upon him: vary the formula as we might, he was never at a loss for a reply.
>If it was said—‘Dear Professor, the coffee will be brought up in a moment.'
>’Will be!’ he would say, ‘but there’s the rub, that it only will be:
Man never is, but always to be blest.’
>If another cried out—‘The coffee is coming immediately.’
>‘Yes,’ he would retort, ‘and so is the next hour: and, by the way, it’s about that length of time that I have waited for it.’ Then he would collect himself with a stoical air, and say—‘Well, one can die after all: it is but dying; and in the next world, thank God! there is no drinking of coffee, and consequently no—waiting for it.’
>Sometimes he would rise from his chair, open the door, and cry out with a feeble querulousness—‘Coffee! coffee!’ And when at length he heard the servant’s step upon the stairs, he would turn round to us, and, as joyfully as ever sailor from the mast-head, he would call out
>‘Land, land! my dear friends, I see land.’

- The Last Days of Immanuel Kant, Thomas de Quincey
(https://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/…/last-days-of-immanuel-kant/)

>> No.11149304

We don't care about that autistic hack here, we only like EVOLA and LAND and GUENON and SCHOPENHAUER
Now kys, numale

>> No.11149312
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11149312

>>11149304
Silence, amphibian!

>> No.11149315

>>11149304
Weak b8

>> No.11149326

>>11149297
What would Kant think of amphetamine? I'd imagine he'd react against it like the boring straight-edge autist he was, but maybe somebody with better knowledge of his lifestyle could prove me wrong.

>> No.11149333

>>11149312
Donald Trump is a devout neokantian.

>> No.11149336
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11149336

>For a while — for a week or two at most — you can obtain the right amount of stimulation with one, then two cups of coffee brewed from beans that have been crushed with gradually increasing force and infused with hot water.

>For another week, by decreasing the amount of water used, by pulverizing the coffee even more finely, and by infusing the grounds with cold water, you can continue to obtain the same cerebral power.

>When you have produced the finest grind with the least water possible, you double the dose by drinking two cups at a time; particularly vigorous constitutions can tolerate three cups. In this manner one can continue working for several more days.

>> No.11149341

>>11149326
He was infirm most of his life. I'm sure he would've tried something to make him have energy, just as he had coffee in his old age (especially since he was probably senile).

>>11149333
Ah, yes. Epic memes from Kantbot xD

>> No.11149344

>>11149336
didn't he also write one handed while masturbating for 12 hours straight on a regular basis?

>> No.11149356

>>11149297
BASED

>> No.11149361
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11149361

LAND, LAND! MY DEAR FRIENDS, I SEE LAND.

>> No.11149373

>>11149312
>reads the Groundwork once

>> No.11150600
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11150600

redpill me on kant

>> No.11150654

>>11149297
Philosophy for Beginners was awesome man, I remember that cartoon. It holds a place of honour on my shelf.

>> No.11150709

>>11149297
Amazing how this man benefited so heavily from coffee and tobacco.
It begs the question, would he have accomplished as much without these venerable cognitive enhancers.
The creativity induced, the neuronal alterations (default mode network), the bliss inspired.
Without their and, Kant may not even have been an obscurity. He would awake early and smoke a large bowl of tobacco in his pipe, going for a stroll at times. What I would give to experience the insights and pure intellectual bliss experienced by him.

>> No.11151017

>>11150600
guys, this Nathan is for me

>> No.11151024

>>11150709
if only we still had coffee and cigarettes!

>> No.11151034
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11151034

>>11150709
>caffeine and nicotine increase creativity!

>> No.11151039

>>11151034
not him but everytime I drink coffee or anything containing caffeine I go on a creation frenzy and start writing a lot. Now, I never managed to produce something that wasn't disjointed garbage, but I would imagine that if I found a way to control and direct my creative impulse I could come up with something good.

>> No.11151059

>>11150709
>It begs the question, would he have accomplished as much without these venerable cognitive enhancers.
>it begs the question
You don't know what this means

>> No.11151646

>>11151059
Elaborate.

>> No.11151673
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11151673

>>11149344
Ah yes, the good ol' Handon de Ballsack technique.

>> No.11151676

>>11149361
Thus Nick Land was born.

>> No.11151683

>>11149361
T H A L A T T A
H
A
L
A
T
T
A

>> No.11151719

>>11151646

> Begging the question is a logical fallacy which occurs when an argument's premises assume the truth of the conclusion, instead of supporting it. It is a type of circular reasoning and an informal fallacy, in which an arguer makes an argument that requires the desired conclusion to be true. This often occurs in an indirect way such that the fallacy's presence is hidden or at least not easily apparent.

> The term "begging the question", as it is usually phrased, originated in the 16th century as a mistranslation of the Latin petitio principii, which actually translates to "assuming the initial point".[1] In modern vernacular usage, "begging the question" frequently[2] appears to mean "raising the question" or "dodging the question".[1] In contexts that demand strict adherence to a technical definition of the term, many consider these usages incorrect.[3]

Not necessarily wrong since there is an informal usage of the phrase. Untechnical use isn't the most interesting thing to call out though.

>> No.11151746

>>11151719
That anon clearly used it in the sense of "raising the question". No need to sperg out about it.

>> No.11151757

>>11151719
Hmmm
Lesson learned.

>> No.11151758

>>11151646
begging the question is an informal fallacy where the truth of the conclusion of an argument is assumed by the premises.
in it's simplest form, the conclusion is merely a restatement of one or more of the premises; a circular argument.
instead of 'begging the question', try 'raises the question' or 'leads one to [the] question' or some other variant