TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

Why Study Greek Philosophy?

1h 12m 56s11,381 mots1,728 segmentsEnglish

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there's going to be some positive

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outcome from from an act of intellectual

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courage to actually go and challenge the

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sort of lies of the time.

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Welcome to another episode of the

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students. Today, should you be reading

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the old philosophers? So, Stephen,

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you're you're uh

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one of our one of our big fans at

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Palladium. I remember you wrote some

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great stuff for us. You were always

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there supporting us. Uh I really enjoyed

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that. That's kind of where we met. Uh

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you did one of the earliest interesting

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sort of substantive reviews of um

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Costamaru's

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selective breeding and the birth of

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philosophy and you've definitely been

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kind of a a fixture in terms of bringing

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the classical philosophy angle on a lot

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of topics. So, I thought it would be fun

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to kind of get together and talk about

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this topic that, you know, vexes me

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sometimes, which is should a modern

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student of the 21st century be reading

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the ancient philosophers, especially

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obviously we mean Aristotle, we mean

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Plato, we mean Socrates, but uh I I

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wanted to get to the bottom of that

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matter with you. So, Stephen, welcome to

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the show. Thank you for coming on.

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>> Absolutely. Glad to be here. So my

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initial answer would be maybe not. Um

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and we should take that possibility

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seriously. If uh if you are comfortable

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in the warm embrace of the cathedral, if

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you think our regime is basically

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roughly reasonable and heading in a good

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direction and just needs some writing

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here and there, um no. The answer is you

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probably don't need to be digging into

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what Aristotle or or Plato uh thought

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about that stuff. But if your

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perspective is quite different, if

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you're one of these people like myself

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who thinks that there is a very great

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deal wrong and it's not simply a

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question of, you know, minor tweaking

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here or there, that there's something

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very fundamentally wrong at the basis of

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um the kind of liberal democratic regime

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that has now slid into this managerial

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you know, some people would say soft

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totalitarianism

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and that we should really be rethinking

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things more fundamentally, then my

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answer is yeah, you want to be digging

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into the best resources for that.

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>> Mhm. So I guess part of it is at that

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time in history that these guys are

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writing this is 300 BC

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>> uh after the Palpeneian war they're kind

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of facing the decline of Greek society

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right this is this is the overall

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context as I understand and so you know

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on that purely kind of historical

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comparison basis they are trying to

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understand

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what makes a society be bad or good and

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through through the lens of dealing with

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their own time of historical decline at

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least at the beginnings of it. And uh

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you know for that reason maybe there's

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some relevance and so I'd love to hear

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though from you kind of what is it about

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that context that makes them in

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particular interesting? Like why why do

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we care about the Greeks? Isn't that

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just something, you know, a bunch of

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medieval fuddy duddies kind of thought

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was important because that's all they

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had? Like what what is what is it about

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the Greeks that makes them relevant to

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our situation? So I think you're right

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to say that they're writing in a period

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of decline as they themselves perceived

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it

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>> and there's all kinds of um if you just

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read you know through cities on the

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pelpeneisian war you know you can see

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the like total wreck of things that had

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gone on and they're writing in the

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aftermath of that but even prior to that

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there's a lot of features of their

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society where they had very clearly

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declined from sort of the more

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aristocratic

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ideals um that an earlier generation

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would have said were sources of strength

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in a in a society

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>> and they really are grappling with that.

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So So why them? Why are they important?

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Because really the they are the first

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thinkers in the west to grapple with the

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questions of what makes a regime good or

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bad? What are the foundations of a

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regime? How does politics fundamentally

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work? And it really is kind of a open

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exploration. So one thing that I would

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really emphasize is you don't go to

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Plato or Aristotle for doctrines. You're

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not looking for a blueprint. You're not

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looking for, you know, they said this is

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how to do it in sort of concrete object

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level terms.

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>> That's not the point. Um the point is

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that they opened up a way of exploring

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of asking fundamental questions not just

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about politics at its surface level but

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ultimately about human life like how

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should a man live? What is a good

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honorable flourishing life? and and they

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had a like very uh you know being a good

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warrior being able to contribute to the

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defense of your city was definitely a

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part of that. So by no means was this

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like some you know ivory tower you know

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kind of thing. We we we we think of of

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Socrates as this guy who just hung

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around and and talked with people and he

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sure did a lot of that, but we forget

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that he also served as a hoplight um you

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know for Athens in the Pelpeneisian War

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that that he um had this very impressive

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reputation. you know, Alsabides and

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others uh comment on how well he served

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and you know, how how powerfully he

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acted in that capacity. So, you know,

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there's a lot of very practical

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experience that goes into this. It's not

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just theoretical.

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>> I mean, and people always uh

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find it funny to find out that Plato was

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his kind of like his wrestling name, you

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know? It's like he's he's a wrestler. It

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means like he's the big guy. He's like a

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big, you know, plate of stone. Uh,

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>> and was reputed to be an extremely good

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wrestler. Not just that he did it

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sometimes,

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>> right? And so these guys, you know, it's

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very different from today where, you

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know, your average professor or

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something of philosophy is is this this

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kind of very pathetic creature that

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that,

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you know, you might read some

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interesting books, but but uh doesn't

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have this Marshall engagement with

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reality uh the way these guys did. And

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>> yeah, athletics was absolutely

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presupposed as foundational to

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education. um not just wrestling but a

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whole array of competitive I guess you

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could call them sports or athletics all

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of which were intended to reflect and

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prepare for skills you would actually

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need on the battlefield. So like javelin

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is an obvious example but running um

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strength sports that that reflected what

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you would have to do with armor on

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chariot races. Um, some of them are a

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bit archaic by the time you get to uh

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their period, but nonetheless very

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clearly derived from war and that was

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just like that's the foundation that's

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taken for granted. If you if you don't

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have that, you're not in a position to

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proceed further to the study of

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philosophy or whatever.

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>> Right. Well, that's an interesting kind

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of point to make these days, right? is

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is that to think coherently you have to

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have some kind of strength of the body.

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like the uh thought is a very it's

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grounded in physicality at some level

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and um

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you know we don't have to pursue that

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thought very far here but

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>> it's interesting that it's a little bit

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different than than uh I think your sort

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of typical kind of

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>> uh the nerd pretense or the

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>> a lot a lot of nerds think like okay you

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know actually the body is just this meat

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bag I don't need it I don't care about

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it uh I you know I'm just going to kind

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of abstract myself into the realm of

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thought entirely. Um and that does feel

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wrong. It it does seem that they they

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