Homecoming: Roger Scruton
Van de Schoonheid en de Troost - S1 - E2
Reactionary, contrary, controversial: all labels that have been stuck on the British philosopher Roger Scruton over the years. Once a modernist philosopher, Scruton is now averse to modern philosophical movements such as poststructuralism and postmodernism. An important theme in his work is the alienation of contemporary man from the true values of life.
Van de Schoonheid en de Troost: Season 1 - 27 Episode s
1x1 - Fathers Roses: Wole Soyinka
January 2, 2000
The African Nobel Prize winner for literature 1986 reflects on beauty and consolation during the civil war and his imprisonment during the military coup in Nigeria (1966) in which he was politically active. Soyinka tells the story of the singing by the prisoners on an execution day.
1x2 - Homecoming: Roger Scruton
January 9, 2000
Reactionary, contrary, controversial: all labels that have been stuck on the British philosopher Roger Scruton over the years. Once a modernist philosopher, Scruton is now averse to modern philosophical movements such as poststructuralism and postmodernism. An important theme in his work is the alienation of contemporary man from the true values of life.
1x3 - Alone on the mountain: Jane Goodall
January 16, 2000
Interview with Jane Goodall, British writer and ethologist (in a studio). Goodall left for Africa at the age of 23 and has since been studying a group of wild chimpanzees in Gombe or Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania. Goodall talks about nature, the rainforest as solace, love, the death of her husband, life after this life, grief, loneliness, mysticism, reconciliation, ecstasy, peacefulness, chimpanzees, telepathy, life goals, beauty, spiritual evolution, God, hope, awareness of death, fear, humor and dogs.
1x4 - The Code of Pasternak: George Steiner
January 23, 2000
Interview with George Steiner, British literary critic and writer (in his home in Cambridge, Great Britain). Steiner talks about beauty, solace, fear, wonder, memory, his photographic memory and the extinction of collective memory: the fact that readers no longer recognize references in literature. In this context, Steiner reads a fragment from Ernest Hemingway's 'Fiesta: The sun also rises'. He also talks about Chinese wisdom following the excavation and reburial of terracotta statues from graves in Szetsjwan in China, Pasternak's code, the work of Sören Kierkegaard and Martin Heidegger, the innumerability/beauty of detail, the painting 'The Reading Philosopher' by Jean-Baptiste Siméon Chardin, falling in love, love and friendship, his passion for art, literature, music, philosophy, love for animals, humanity, self-knowledge, Franz Schubert, the dark side of life and atrocities such as those committed during the Second World War.
1x5 - The End of the Thirteenth: Vladimir Ashkenazy
January 30, 2000
Interview with Vladimir Ashkenazy, Russian pianist and conductor (in the large rehearsal hall of the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester in the building of the Sender Freies Berlin on Masurenallee in Berlin). Ashkenzay sits at a piano and talks about beauty, consolation, love and hope. He has chosen a number of pieces of music as examples of beauty and consolation, parts of which he plays at the piano.
1x6 - Episode 6
1x7 - Episode 7
1x8 - Episode 8
1x9 - Episode 9
1x10 - Episode 10
1x11 - Episode 11
1x12 - Episode 12
1x13 - Episode 13
1x14 - Episode 14
1x15 - Episode 15
1x16 - Episode 16
1x17 - Episode 17
1x18 - Episode 18
1x19 - Episode 19
1x20 - Episode 20
1x21 - Episode 21
1x22 - Episode 22
1x23 - Episode 23
1x24 - Episode 24
1x25 - Episode 25
1x26 - Episode 26
1x27 - Episode 27
July 9, 2000