How empathy is done

Shawna 2022-01-25 08:03:32

It was an accident to be able to see this movie, because I hardly watch any movie with the word "storm" in the title.. This series of accidents happened like this: I read "The Kingslayer" a few days ago. , I have some interest in international law and domestic law. When I took the G test, I took the civil disobedience test. After consulting some information, I found that it was a huge pit, and I became more and more confused,,, and then I read the 1961 edition. The Nuremberg Trial>, I fell in love with Mrs. Bertholt at first sight. Compared with the 1995 version, the subject of the trial is the judge of the Supreme Military Court. This shifted from the issue of international law to the issue of natural law, in order to remove this matter. To figure it out, I had to start to nibble on Cicero, Austin, Aquinas, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Hegel, Bentham, Langfuller, Hart, Phoenix, etc., etc. ,, A series of legal philosophy works, to achieve my goal of "becoming a person with sound common sense" is only out of ten. It seems that it will take at least another month to get a general understanding. This is not the list, and I will write a film review after I have formed a general view of history...

Close to the subject, watching the eavesdropping storm is because it contains Sebastian Koch, and my other spiritual mentor Sebastian Bach is only three letters away. .. And this one is the handsome guy who plays the German captain in the "Black Book". Yesterday I read the Black Book and I fell in love with him... and he said he is handsome and actually has more than four. Some people say he is long. A face full of sensuality, I very much agree with this, but what a good word sensuality is.At about 00:49, Alice first sang a song of Ich bin die fesche lola, which is very coquettish. The captain watched her singing with her tongue in her mouth. She was also coquettish,,, after the meeting, the captain lay half on the sofa and said , What do you want to do, look innocent, ah, I'm going to Germany, I'm going to get him.. Then the first step is to watch all the movies he has played, so I watched the tapping storm again today , Um, it's not bad as expected! Although Koch's acting is average, I'm satisfied to see his big face sway in front of me!

Looking at the film reviews for a while, it seems that everyone is very moved by the moral law of eavesdropping in people’s hearts, but they feel that his anger process has not been expressed through good enough artistic means. For this kind of criticism, I can only say: "You really are. It’s too delicate!” In fact, Hauptmann’s transformation is very reasonable. He was originally in the academy. Although he was a teacher training special agents, he still lacked a perceptual understanding of the system. From theory to theory, he was so firm, and the real world is always It's gray and fuzzy,,, when he saw the poor intelligence department 1 while he was eating, the little Stiller was half-truth teased and mocked by the chief because he started a joke. The floor plan of the Dreyman’s home was drawn in the room. This 00:38 plot made me very excited. At this moment, the field that Hauptman monitors has changed. I think of the relationship between "field" and "power" as Foucault said. , And the law of touch in primitive thinking, from wiring at Dreyman's house to drawing a simulated home picture upstairs, to later walking into Dreyman's house and flicking around. In my opinion, this is more important than listening to music and reading poetry. During the process, Hauptmann gradually empathized with Dreyman because he exists in a space similar to his home, hearing all the sounds D can hear, reading books D reading, listening to music D listening, even in D and When my wife has sex, she clings to her chair and imagines that she is D. In short, I think that what changes H is not art at all, but experience. Of course, it can also be said that art is a condensed form of experience, but definitely Not all,,, the only thing that can contend with ideas is experience. If I want to summarize, this is a story of a typical German "idea man" being overwhelmed by British and American "experiencers", a story of a theoretician being corrupted by a poet , So Hauptman's final ending is from a decent professor to a messenger who delivers newspapers. Of course, I also cried in the end. I think it is still very good to regularly and empirically clean the smelly and hard intellectuals. Necessary. This may be the common moral intuition in the legend.

The Black Book and the Destruction of the Empire depict the crumbling Third Reich, and the eavesdropping storm depicts the crumbling East Germany. The Germans were really busy in the 20th century, and my admiration for them has become more and more I remember. When I was in Berlin, in a bar with heavy rain, I heard from friends that in the 1980s, people would guess that the mainland would return to Taiwan and that South and North Korea would be reunified. But I didn’t expect that the first thing that would usher in was the fall of the Berlin Wall. I heard it at the time. Depressed. In the storm of eavesdropping, the old director who committed suicide looked at the happy party people and said, people can now tolerate things that were previously unbearable. Before the voice was over, someone quarreled with the security bureau, proving that his words were at least right. For the Germans, it is overly lyrical. What about us? What about us Chinese? It doesn't seem to be difficult for us to endure this now, probably because we have never before, we have always endured this way, and will always endure this way.

View more about The Lives of Others reviews

Extended Reading

The Lives of Others quotes

  • [last lines]

    Buchverkäufer: 29.80. Would you like it gift wrapped?

    Hauptmann Gerd Wiesler: No. It's for me.

  • Hauptmann Gerd Wiesler: An innocent prisoner will become more angry by the hour due to the injustice suffered. He will shout and rage. A guilty prisoner becomes more calm and quiet. Or he cries. He knows he's there for a reason. The best way to establish guilt or innocence is non-stop interrogation.