• intrapersona
    579


    A short scene from "Love and Death," Which makes absolutely no sense to me. Something to do with how God forms the basis of morality. Does this actually make sense to anyone?

    Immorality is subjective,
    yes but subjectivity is objective,
    not in a irrational sceme of perception,
    perception is irrational and implies imminence,
    but judgement of any system or a priori relation of phenomenon exists in any rational or metaphysical or at least epistemological contradiction to an abstract and empirical concept such as being, or to be, or to occur in the thing itself or of the thing itself.....

    If you interested in the movie, Woody Allen invades the spirit of Tolstoy in this hilarious spoof of 18th Century Russia, when Napoleon is preoccupied with perfecting his pastry and before Wellington markets his beef.
  • Baden
    16.3k
    Does this actually make sense to anyone?intrapersona

    I hope not. We may need to call a philosophodoctor.
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    not in a irrational sceme of perception

    'Not in any rational scheme of perception.'

    There, it ll makes sense now, right?
  • Wayfarer
    22.6k
    I love some Woody Allen films, but he's a schmuck philosopher (although some of his lines are terrific: '"What if everything is an illusion and nothing exists? In that case, I definitely overpaid for my carpet.")
  • John Days
    146
    "Lets say there is no God and each man is free to do exactly as he chooses."

    Even with God, man is free to do as he chooses. That's the point of righteousness and sin.
  • BC
    13.6k
    In the short video clips that were linked after the one from Love and Death, Dick Cavett is interviewing Woody Allen on his show. Dick invites Woody to talk about his legal problems.

    "Yes, my wife is suing me because I made a humorous comment about her. My wife lives on the Upper West Side, and one night she was coming home and was "violated". That's the way the newspapers phrased it, "she was violated." I was asked by a reporter if I had any comment on my wife. I said, 'Knowing my wife, it probably wasn't a moving violation.' So she's suing me."
  • szardosszemagad
    150
    The op forgot to add the immediately following next line, "But WHY do we ALWAYS talk about sex?"
  • Janus
    16.3k


    It's philosophobabble.

    It almost makes sense, or rather alludes to the possibility of its making sense, and therein lies the humour.

    Allen's interlocutor could have used as a rejoinder this line (from either Ronnie Corbett or Ronnie Barker, I can't remember which):

    " I couldn't possibly fail to disagree with you less".
  • 0af
    44

    Hi. I've seen that film twice. In my view, that's a parody of philosophy. You may remember the subtitles in that brilliant scene in Annie Hall. Underneath the pretentious gab lurks sex. Old Woody is a fascinating character. I think he has something like a Schopenhauerian vision of the world. Sex and vanity.
  • Tab
    1
    Sonya: ...What prevents you from murdering somebody?
    Boris: Murder is immoral.
    Sonya: Immorality is subjective.
    Boris: Objectivity is subjective.
    Sonya: Not in the irrational scheme of perception.
    Boris: Perception is irrational. It implies immanence.
    Sonya: But judgment of any system or a priori relation of phenomena exists in any rational or metaphysical or at least epistemological contradiction to an abstract and empirical concept such as being or to be or to occur in the thing itself or of the thing itself!
    Boris: I’ve said that many times...

    I left out what Sonya says about God just before these lines. if there is no God and man does as he pleases... as this statement has its own flaws. God says man can do as he pleases also. Leaving that aside,

    *Murder is immoral.*
    *Immorality is subjective.*
    So far so good... society decides morality, and it is subjective.

    *Subjectivity is objective*...really? We can argue that to us objectivity is subjective, but does that mean there is no objective reality outside of ourselves... What if there is and we try to meet it as close as we can, which brings us to Sonya’s point.

    *Not in the irrational scheme of perception...*
    We cannot achieve objectivity because of perception which is subjective and a distortion of reality. None of our subjective experiences perfectly align with reality.

    *Perception is irrational. It implies immanence.*
    Boris is speaking nonsense... He says he is happy to have deep conversations with Sonya, but he is out of his league... In traditional thinking perception is neither rational or irrational... BUT this is part of Woody’s genius screenplay, recent philosophers at Harvard 2017 published a book arguing that perception itself CAN be irrational because of irrational influences. So is that Woody being completely ironic and/or ahead of his time?

    But then Boris goes on to say that irrationality implies immanence, which is also hilariously absurd when the opposite would be true. First, why does Boris bring in the idea of God when he has already argued against God’s existence? Second if God is an ever present guide, wouldn’t God ensure that perception is rational, not irrational?

    Boris can only repeat what he has heard (murder is immoral) but even these basic ideas are just inherited, left unexamined. As the argument gets deeper he falls apart or sounds like a child... or both... remember “the way I see it the universe is big fish eating little fish, plants eating plants... it’s like an enormous restaurant. That’s the way I see it.” This is also brilliant because Woody can pull things apart and go into one of his typical irreverent comic routines...

    And that’s not even Sonya’s major point that follows... Her words sound gorgeous and poetic (with quick delivery), and she is serious and absolutely out of his league and over his head. I think she says that there is a paradox in the abstract concepts of existence or occurrences and the judgment of phenomena within that existence is like a chicken and en egg. There is an inherent contradiction between existence and judgment.

    Her words and delivery are like so many of the classical philosophers, excessively fancy like a textbook or a dictionary definition or even a treatise, for example “being or to be or to occur in the thing itself or of the thing itself.” And I think the genius writer Woody Allen and the genius deliverer Diane Keaton are doing a damn good mockery of that point, at the same time that Sonja beats Boris. After all as he observes in this same scene with admiration, “Hey, you’ve been going to finishing school!”

    Because Boris made Sonya’s language like a treatise, he mocks the fact that no one actually talks that way. “I’ve said that many times...”

    Hope I did this justice... one of my favorite scenes in one of my favorite films of all time...
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