Zon-Kuthon

Jean-Paul Sartre, Intrnet Troll's page

483 posts. Alias of Doodlebug Anklebiter.


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Kajehase wrote:
Ah, that lesson in philosophy class, after a year of reading about people who failing to prove God's existence in ever more convoluted logical knots and you get to Sartre who actually has something interesting to say.

'S true. I'm an interesting guy.


My favorite webcomic does some of my favorite French philosophers in one of my favorite TV shows:

It's Always Sunny in Paris


Comrade Anklebiter wrote:

Responding to Facebook comments about Edmund Wilson brought me to this essay about the only other book of his that I ever read. Probably should go into the Good Books thread, but whatever.

“Patriotic Gore is Not Really Much Like Any Other Book by Anyone”

Revisiting one of the most important and confounding books ever written about the Civil War.

Cross Post from Books Thread

First section of To the Finland Station deals with Frenchmen that I know very little about and have never read:

Jules Michelet
Ernest Renan
Hippolyte Taine
Anatole France

Oh, and an Italian:

Giambattista Vico


First section of To the Finland Station deals with Frenchmen that I know very little about and have never read:

Jules Michelet
Ernest Renan
Hippolyte Taine
Anatole France

Oh, and an Italian:

Giambattista Vico


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Existential Comics: Jury Selection

No Karl this time, but Kropotkin shows up...and moi!


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Sexy Vampires and Existential Philosophy

With a joke at my expense.


Haven't said much (anything) about France in here lately.

Vive le Galt!


How Brits and French people protest very differently

Although, it could just as easily be Yanks.


My gal pal DMs again:

Dungeons and Dragons and Philosophers VI: The Angsty Dragon of Angst


Limeylongears wrote:
The Coming of the French Revolution by Georges Lefebvre

Vive le Galt!

About halfway done Parable and started reading some comics.

Marx's Capital Illustrated


Radical freedom, indeed.

Here's my girlfriend playing D&D:

Dungeons and Dragons and Philosophers III: Ladies' Night


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More on trolleys


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"Utilitarian"?!?

That's f~~~ing philosophy, Comrade BeeNee!


Star Wars philosophers


Foutre, philistines!

[Rocks out]


Krensky wrote:
LazarX wrote:
Nor does it have any impact on the society at large, after all who's heard of Kirkegard, Kant, or Camu?
Educated people have heard of Kierkegaard, Kant, and Camu. Plus Hume, Hegel, Descartes, Bacon, Wittgenstein, de Beauvoir, Gautama, Gandhi, Augustine, Chomsky, and plenty of others.

[Shakes fist after he sees that dear Simone and execrable Al are included, but not me]


Limeylongears wrote:
'The Second Sex' is proving to be excellent, especially as we're now into the rude bits

Oh, Simone, mon amour, je t'aime, baby...Now go find me some other partners, ooh la la!


Kajehase wrote:
Edith Piaff - Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien


thejeff wrote:
Doodlebug Anklebiter wrote:
read a short Filmguide to The Battle of Algiers by one Joan Mellen,
I'm actually watching the Battle of Algiers right now. It's kind of rough.

The Battle of Algiers, bien sur, was kind enough to name drop moi.


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Hell is--other posters!


DM Lil" Eschie wrote:


But honestly, when you've read Sade... 50 Shades is nothing.

I wonder when the Pasolini revival's gonna begin.


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I'd expect Frenchies, even ones who's nation didn't modernize until the '60s, to be less sexually repressed than Anglos any day of the week.


Hands off the Boston School Bus Union Five!

MLK Message from the Fired Leaders of Local 8751, Boston School Bus Drivers

Down with Veolia, Transdev, whatever they're called now!

For tankie-led unions everywhere!


And, finally, my favorite article about the Charlie Hebdo massacre thus far:

French Leaders Declare War After Charlie Hebdo Massacre--Defend Muslims in Europe Against Racist “War on Terror” Backlash! Imperialist Mass Murderers Seek to Exploit Indignation


Jean Jaures: The Musical Interlude

Vive le Galt!!!

Online English translation for monolinguists like moi

Spoiler:
They were worn out at fifteen
They neared the end right from the start
It was December all the year round
What a life our grandparents had
Between absinthe and high mass!
They were old before being born
Bodies on a leash fifteen hours a day
Turned their faces ashen grey
Yes our Lordship, yes our good Master
Why did they kill Jaurès?
Why did they kill Jaurès?

If it can’t be said they were slaves
That’s no reason to claim they had a life
When you start up already defeated
It’s hard to get out of your patch
And yet hope flourished
In the dreams that came to the eyes
Of the few who refused
To grovel until old age
Yes our good Master, yes our Lordship
Why did they kill Jaurès?
Why did they kill Jaurès?

If, God forbid, they survived
It was to go off to the war
It was to snuff it in the war
Under orders from some swashbucklers
Who grudgingly demanded
That they go and gamble their stillborn youth
In the battlefield of horror
And they died in full terror
All destitute, yes, our good Master
With priests’ blessings, yes, our Lordship

Ask yourselves, you bright young things
Just long enough for a fleeting memory
Just long enough to let out a sigh
Why did they kill Jaurès?
Why did they kill Jaurès?


Sorry I have nothing better to offer than Russia Today, comrades, but...

From Ferguson to France, It's Right to Resist!

Only Workers Revolution Will Avenge Remi Fraisse!

Vive le Galt!


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I don't mean to dissuade you. It wasn't terrible, it was just kind of blah. It was pretty much everything you've ever heard about it and not much more. Wordly attachments are bad. Do your duty. Be virtuous. Life is transient. Worldy attachments are bad. Now I'm going to go invade this country over here and take their people into slavery and concubinage. (It might not say that last part.)

Anyway, I mostly just posted to say "See Limey, me too!" and to tell the story about my Buddhist monk player's daughter. And to taunt the horseface.

Although, tomorrow morning, Kirth Gersen is going to hee hee! mightily when he sees us discussing The Republic.


I usually hesitate to comment on books I didn't much care for, but seeing as how it was written by a long, long dead stooge of the plutocracy:

I was very disappointed when I read Meditations. Happily, my edition was printed in 1945 as part of something called "The Classics Club" and it came with two highly enjoyable dialogues by Lucian of Samasota (yes, I only wrote this post to further bond with Comrade Longears), as well as an excerpt from Pater's Marius the Epicurean and an Apology by some Christian martyr named Justin who may or may not, I wouldn't know, have been a big horseface.

In other ancient Stoic news, my Buddhist monk player stopped playing with us a while back after his daughter was born. Not only is he a Buddhist monk, but his wife is a new-age hippie and they named her Aurelia. [Says it aloud]

Poor thing. Puberty's gonna be hell.


Blondie does Randy and the Rainbows

Ooohw-fa-fa!


Godot wrote:
As long as they remember to wait up for me, it's fine.

I flipped through that Existential Comics and I found you, Sam, Dungeon Mastering for Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky and a couple of mathematicians. Hee hee!


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You might as well argue about each other. We authors are on strike. You ain't gettin' another word out of us, pinksins!


More google results

Peregrinus Proteus?

Figures he comes from a work of Lucian's.


Simon Legrande wrote:
Jean-Paul Sartre, Intrnet Troll wrote:

"But it must be said that of the thinkers who refused a meaning to life none except Kirilov who belongs to literature, Peregrinos who is born of legend*, and Jules Lequier who belongs to hypothesis, admitted his logic to the point of refusing that life.

"*I have heard of an emulator of Peregrinos, a post-war writer who, after having finished his first book, committed suicide to attract attention to his work. Attention was in fact, attracted, but the book was judged no good."

Btw, Al stills owes me fifty bucks from that epic pub crawl we went on after Liberation. I think he went home with Simone that night...

[Curses in French]

I've seen references to this now in a number of places, but nobody seems to know what book it's from. I've only finished through the section on Don Juanism in The Myth and haven't seen any mention along these lines. Based on what I know of it, it seems more likely to be found in The Rebel.

Page seven in the Vintage edition, although no combination of "French writer suicide sell books" gets me any google results. Although, I suppose I am just assuming the suicidal writer was French. Also, I can't figure out who Peregrinos was.

Al was such a show-off.


"But it must be said that of the thinkers who refused a meaning to life none except Kirilov who belongs to literature, Peregrinos who is born of legend*, and Jules Lequier who belongs to hypothesis, admitted his logic to the point of refusing that life.

"*I have heard of an emulator of Peregrinos, a post-war writer who, after having finished his first book, committed suicide to attract attention to his work. Attention was in fact, attracted, but the book was judged no good."

Btw, Al stills owes me fifty bucks from that epic pub crawl we went on after Liberation. I think he went home with Simone that night...

[Curses in French]


Simon, have you started Myth of Sisyphus yet? If so, I forget, who was the dude who wrote his book and then killed himself as a publicity stunt in order to assure sales? And then his book wasn't any good?


Calexico--"The Ballad of Cable Hogue"


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Zut alors, I ain't writing shiznit for you, pinkskins!

Authors strike!!!


Zeugma wrote:
But once you read the truly brilliant, such as by Albert Camus,

[Curses in French]


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Yeah, I don't owe you shiznit, pinkskins.


I watched Contempt again last night. Holy f%~+ing shiznit, and that's not because of Brigitte Bardot's bare bum in the opening scene. [Ooohw-fa-fa!]

You know, I think the Boston Phoenix ran articles on it every time it played at the Brattle or the Harvard Film Archives and I still waited 37 years before I saw it.

If you like pretentious French flicks, this one's for you!


Comrade Anklebiter wrote:

Which reminds me of another flick in French that I've got on my shelf waiting for a re-watch:

La battaglia di Algeri

Vive le Galt!

I forgot that this film includes a pleasing tribute to me.


Obligatory Musical Interludes:

Eyes Without a Face
Debaser


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I preferred Le salaire de la peur.


thejeff wrote:
a) I really don't remember the Satanism scare as being that big a deal on a personal/local level.

No stats or nothing, but I don't think that it was.

I met a guy during Occupy who was raised in some Southern evangelical church that spoke in tongues and all that. He told me that when he first came to New Hampshire, he did some missionary work and the consensus among his brethren was that New Englanders were the worst bunch of irreligious heretical apostates in the country. According to his brethren, we are "too practical."

The Black Goblin's mother excepted, of course.

EDIT: Of course, this is assuming you were raised in New England.


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Limeylongears wrote:
My parents, while despairing at my taste in literature (Michael Moorcock, etc), were never bothered about it and didn't have a problem with D&D , either. My mother did make me throw my Black Sabbath albums away, though.

I lent a kid in my neighborhood a copy of the classic book Saga of Old City by Gary Gygax and his mother found it and threw it away! Later, I found his older brother had squirrelled it out of the trash and hidden it away with his porno mags.

Down with mothers!!!


My hetero life partner, The Black Goblin, played D&D in a middle school and had great fun until some busy-body demented Christian maniac intervened and made the school revoke the club's charter.

Worst part was, it was The Black Goblin's mother.

He's got subscriptions to every one of the game-material related subscriptions, so I think he's trying to make up for lost time.


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Allegedly, Honore Balzac changed his name to Honore de Balzac because he got paid by the word.

I only kinda skimmed the last bunch, so I'm not really sure what's under contention, but the interplay of artistic genius and hackdom has provided a wondrous array of fabulous results in the world of literature, as every fan of sci-fi and fantasy novels should know.


Simon Legrande wrote:
Picked up The Myth of Sisyphus yesterday.

Tell that [French swearing] that I said [French swearing].


Vlad Koroboff wrote:


You do not need to tell ME that)
And it was funny)

Well, then, Ecrasez l'infame! (with various Frenchie punctuation marks)

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