Congrats! Cant wait to read the book when my copy arrives
@andreivolkov8219
11 ай бұрын
Congratulations comrades!! So proud of you all! You deserve it all so so much! Looking forward to finishing Anti-Oculus and to your future projects!🖤🫂
@o.s.h.4613
11 ай бұрын
You sold me on the book, ordering it now
@nietzschebietzsche
5 ай бұрын
Honestly, their graphic design probably sold me in part 😅 IDK who does their graphic design but it always slaps
@ryandudley3616
9 ай бұрын
I’m so deeply fascinated and inspired by what you guys are saying in this video and others I’ve watched ❤ keep it up! We need you
@Xanaduum
11 ай бұрын
Read this last month, good balance between readability and academia. Would like to see more collaborative publications from Acid Horizon in the future.
@drageben145
11 ай бұрын
yesterday i bought the book on repeater and i am very excited when it comes
@grief_hammer
11 ай бұрын
"psychoanalysis is the capital form of the image" is such a great observation.
@SeedsofJoy
9 ай бұрын
need someone to unpack that for me 🤔🤔
@stellar_queer
10 ай бұрын
got hold of this book while in the middle of reading 2 more, gotta speed through them now to get to this
@NY_Mountain_Man
11 ай бұрын
I got 35 minutes in and then got tired. I just wanted to express how the act of creativity is absolutely an avenue that can be explored to bring people on your side. On a related, I tried writing but it often re-focuses on my extreme trauma. haha. Now, I just focus on esoteric art after work. You should be shocked how many people are locked away in their own traumas without realizing all it serves a mechanism in which they keep allowing themselves to remain divided and exploited. It could even be marked as cheap art therapy. Anyway, I like this video. I'll explore it more in when I can. Personally, I like the third guy's practical approach to serious matters. I appreciate the American pedagogical perspective.
@cavalcadeofperversions
10 ай бұрын
🖤
@Sobbedelic
11 ай бұрын
you can really see how much this means to you guys :') need to order this
@nietzschebietzsche
5 ай бұрын
I'm admittedly still working through this book (it definitely would have helped to be familiar with D&G first) but one thing I'm struggling with is understanding some of the ideas in more concrete terms. The point about society-imposed community vs the argument for community in the book, I think, is about recognizing that pseudo-community imposed from the top down is what is to be escaped, resisted, or subverted, while organic, bottom-up communal assemblages that society has not imposed are the ones of value. And this kind of understanding of society, I think, is contingent on the interpretation of the society as completely mediated by the state's ocular practice, meaning the society is really formed in the image of the state and its dysfunctions are allowed to vent but never threaten the system. If I've even understood their ontology correctly, this leads me to the question, what are some concrete examples of society-imposed communities? The tension for me is I see identity groups everywhere that say they are communities. Many of them have an element of organic bottom-up organization. People who have faced gender/sex discrimination and alienation, it seems, often find each other in subcultures such as punk and unify. But then there are top-down elements where brands come in to try to mediate "communities" like LGBTQIA. DEI institutions in universities invent new terms to group people from the top down, and so on. So there's this complex tension where there is both a layer of organic networking that builds communities and a layer of infiltration by larger societal and capital forces. I really would appreciate being pointed to sources that can really get into the weeds of community organization and the organic and inorganic influences. Even a more thorough mapping of different degrees and types of community needs to be developed. For example, many communities have a real physical locus, but then they have an extension by a Facebook group that is global. Some 'communities' are super decentralized being entirely online. Well, we can't write them off as not real, though. Indeed in information architecture and user experience, an important part of interface design is giving users a sense of place. Material Design is so influential because it codifies the paradigm that touch screen interactions, information organization, and cues are intuitively understood by mimicking physical materials. So interfaces, especially with material visual elements and interactions, establish tangible senses of place, that are reinforced by coherent navigations and layouts to tell me "where am I in Reddit", etc. Then we have to contend with different psychological factors at play. We may be quick to criticize a decentralized social medium community as "phony" because of the incentive to curate our digital social images, but then we must realize that the psychology of interacting through a screen might also enable one to speak more honestly, because of a less tangible sense of social pressure. It's also critical to understand that "face management" is still at play in physical and virtual spaces. Figuring out the nuance of digital face management as opposed to it's physical analog is important in mapping the different types of community.
@lunis8819
11 ай бұрын
where can I read more on wills reading of foucault? Is there a blog post or podcast on it perhaps? Would be very interested if so :)
@AcidHorizon
11 ай бұрын
I will post it later here, but you can find Will’s blog in the show notes.
@AcidHorizon
11 ай бұрын
revoltingbodies.com/
@terminalglimmer
5 ай бұрын
This footage was in color, and then Will stepped in
@Anabsurdsuggestion
11 ай бұрын
I like Craig’s reaction to the idea of Marx and his perfect body. It is worth revisiting that idea. Maybe it’s in the book, which I will gift to myself immediately.
@AcidHorizon
11 ай бұрын
I probably was imagining a liver absolutely drowned in libations.
@jayjacobs1783
9 ай бұрын
No amount of philosophy can keep one away from bad wireless mic connection, bad audio is a curse on the left
@clumsydad7158
10 ай бұрын
i think it is about what to do with the will to power... each generation is born afresh as humans with the wills and lusts and desires, as is the natural order of things ... but as humans, at the top of the planet, we have the existential burden of determining what to do with our place of empowerment
@iamzuckerburger
11 ай бұрын
I used to be a criminal
@clumsydad7158
10 ай бұрын
i'm not even sure what a criminal is anymore in this world
@nietzschebietzsche
5 ай бұрын
Why aren't you still a criminal?
@Xanaduum
11 ай бұрын
In future could you go into more depth about why you think Nick Land is the enemy? I watched an earlier podcast where you talk about him but it didn't really explain that and didnt reference any of his work except very tangentially. People have said he is a fascist, but I haven't seen any direct evidence of that, say from his own quotes etc. Although concepts such as hyperstition I find quite fascinating, also I know he was in the acknowledgments for Sadie Plant's 'Zeros and One's'.
@Xanaduum
10 ай бұрын
@@mittageisen211 I'm not even sure why he's specifically right wing, an accelerationst yes, but then again there's accelarstionists on the Left and the Right.
@joyusachoobarb
6 ай бұрын
Read one chapter of dark enlightenment you’ll understand
@Xanaduum
6 ай бұрын
@@joyusachoobarb thanks for a point in the right direction. 👍
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