What am I in for?
>>25325533Hegel, according to a professor I once had
>>25325554sorry I meant to say Spinoza
>>25325555That's a relief... I detest Hegel
>In the end, the lost time was within us all along.Seriously
>>25325533Book that is good.
>>25325533One of the greatest literary experiences you'll ever have. The second volume is best.
>>25325554>>25325555>>25325576It's schop-core actually
>>25325533>fr no cap you finna do be remembering shit when certain stimuli affects your brain ong ong
>>25326030pretty much, it's schop but as a series of novels
>>25325533Seinfeld without the comedy.
>>25325555>quadschecked and blessed>>25325533lots of interlinked essays on culture, time, memory, regret, love, lust, architecture, literature, music, art, society, economics, and history that happen to take place in rooms with characters
Long descriptions of flowers and buggery. I wonder what Oscar Wilde would have thought of it
sounds cool
>>25326241So the final season of Seinfeld
>>25325533Schopenhauer but French and gay.
>>25325533The diary of a french aesthete, gay narcissist, neurotic jew, and sheltered nobleman all in one.
Idk I haven't read it even though I've owned it for four years.
>>25325554>>25326030>>25326059It’s Schopenhauer’s theory of music being one able way to transcend the physical world and achieve the Noumena or whatever of Kant. Beyond that I am hazy on German idealists. I have no idea what Hegel has to do with anything.
>>25327058Schopenhauer was a retarded hack fraud that literally never left his house and instead seethed eternally His hedgehogs dilemma bullshit literally doesn't even happen in nature, his entire worldview is a sham
Does he ever find his lost time? I gave up on volume 6.
>>25325533Tried to read it once but it was just dozens upon dozens of pages about a kid rambling about his mom and I gave up
>>25329098Exactly and its godly.
>>25325533The best book you won’t finish, not because it isn’t good but because it’s like trying to eat seven super heavy dense chocolate cakes at once. Eventually you take a break and then it’s been a year and you can’t remember the names well enough to restart halfway through the second book.It’s really really good though.
>>25330360This a really good explanation actually. I've started the book like 4 times. It is an immense pleasure. That I cannot finish.
>>25325533a search for lost time
>>25330360>>25330447opposite problem. whenever i talk about my obsessions and deep feelings and things that make my heart twinge and this and that everyone says ‘read proust’, but then i read the first page of the first book and it’s the most unimpressive, mawkish, pedestrian-sounding thing ever & i never got further.
>>25327058Ideas to patterns and patterns to perceptions that would get second or tertiary textures emerging as textures to compression fractaclly and on that plane the causality to that were abstract to experience on the dimension that the pattern were as culminated but culminated or fulfilled only as possibly potentiality to several sign systems which for this cause and case were something like notated music and the other cause were that about entanglement and the pattern and idea subject and object to composition also to the i to that i talked to someone else and maybe more than one that all obtain some relationship to schopenhauer and the theories of schopenhauer and part to that and part to as context that some of these patterns or ideas would get there as much as through translation as anything else that creates context that patterns might get which applies here because part to what proust gets concerned with were the architectonic pattern to perception and the other idea and for the novel and music for the nineteenth century were this subject and object pattern idea relationality and the destruction and deconstruction and to go on from there there these patterns to perception which seems very abstract but also some novel seems some pattern to pattern or an authors or writers tells us something or writers something and we believe the writer and often this were some pattern to the the play to patterns with nature as frame and for example falling water as name contains might get said of that architectonic play to patterns that writers communicate with and this were to part to why joyce’s poetry book got called chamber music and i think max jacob and guillaume apollinaire were also valuable as critic to writing that proust were setting out to write or something like that
>>25327058https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=982dQ44Nz9gSwann mistook the reification of Vinteuil's Sonate (Art) for Odette. He fell for Maya! the Fool!
>>25330455What do you like to read? What do you think is impressive?