JavaScript appears to be disabled. We recommend you enable JavaScript while visiting this site.

(All original content on this site is licensed under the Creative Commons License Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0.)

Waking Life: Chapter 3 - Life Lessons

Description: Script of the movie Waking Life, based on Tara Carreon's transcription, but with revisions based upon a viewing of the DVD version of the movie, which was watched with subtitles.

Revisions by James Richard Skemp III
This chapter last modified: May 25, 2006

Notes: Special thanks to Andrew, Larry Redden, and Ed Sandberg for pointing out errors in Tara's transcription (numerous errors were fixed here, along with some scene information clarifications). Absolutely let me know if anything slipped by my look-over, especially in the quicker and the 'like, like, you know,' sections ;)

Read the entire Waking Life movie transcript, with revisions.

Learn how to display this transcript on your blog or site. It's easy!

[3 Life Lessons]

(Philosophy professor Robert Solomon, at the University of Texas at Austin)

Waking Life: Chapter 4 - Life LessonsThe reason why I refuse to take existentialism as just another French fashion or historical curiosity is that I think it has something very important to offer us for the new century. I'm afraid we're losing the real virtues of living life passionately, sense of taking responsibility for who you are, the ability to make something of yourself and feeling good about life. Existentialism is often discussed as if it's a philosophy of despair. But I think the truth is just the opposite. Sartre once interviewed said he never really felt a day of despair in his life. But one thing that comes out from reading these guys is not a sense of anguish about life so much as a real kind of exuberance of feeling on top of it. It's like your life is yours to create. I've read the postmodernists with some interest, even admiration. But when I read them, I always have this awful nagging feeling that something absolutely essential is getting left out. The more that you talk about a person as a social construction or as a confluence of forces or as fragmented or marginalized, what you do is you open up a whole new world of excuses. And when Sartre talks about responsibility, he's not talking about something abstract. He's not talking about the kind of self or soul that theologians would argue about. It's something very concrete. It's you and me talking. Making decisions. Doing things and taking the consequences. It might be true that there are six billion people in the world and counting. Nevertheless, what you do makes a difference. It makes a difference, first of all, in material terms. Makes a difference to other people and it sets an example. In short, I think the message here is that we should never simply write ourselves off and see ourselves as the victim of various forces. It's always our decision who we are.

***

(A blonde woman is talking in a house - Kim Krizan, screenwriter)

Waking Life: Chapter 4 - Life LessonsCreation seems to come out of imperfection. It seems to come out of a striving and a frustration. And this is where I think language came from. I mean, it came from our desire to transcend our isolation and have some sort of connection with one another. And it had to be easy when it was just simple survival. Like, you know, "water." We came up with a sound for that. Or "Saber-toothed tiger right behind you." We came up with a sound for that. But when it gets really interesting, I think, is when we use that same system of symbols to communicate all the abstract and intangible things that we're experiencing. What is, like, frustration? Or what is anger or love? When I say "love," the sound comes out of my mouth and it hits the other person's ear, travels through this Byzantine conduit in their brain, you know, through their memories of love or lack of love, and they register what I'm saying and they say yes, they understand. But how do I know they understand? Because words are inert. They're just symbols. They're dead, you know? And so much of our experience is intangible. So much of what we perceive cannot be expressed. It's unspeakable. And yet, you know, when we communicate with one another, and we feel that we've connected, and we think that we're understood, I think we have a feeling of almost spiritual communion. And that feeling might be transient, but I think it's what we live for.

***

(A very intense man is talking in front of a fish tank, gesturing wildly - Eamonn Healy, Chemistry professor at University of Texas at Austin)

If we're looking at the highlights of human development, you have to look at the evolution of the organism and then at the development of its interaction with the environment. Evolution of the organism will begin with the evolution of life perceived through the hominid coming to the evolution of mankind. Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon man. Now, interestingly, what you're looking at here are three strings: biological, anthropological -- development of the cities -- and cultural, which is human expression.

Now, what you've seen here is the evolution of populations, not so much the evolution of individuals. And in addition, if you look at the time scales that are involved here -- two billion years for life, six million years for the hominid, 100,000 years for mankind as we know it -- you're beginning to see the telescoping nature of the evolutionary paradigm. And then when you get to agricultural, when you get to scientific revolution and industrial revolution, you're looking at 10,000 years, 400 years, 150 years. Uou're seeing a further telescoping of this evolutionary time. What that means is that as we go through the new evolution, it's gonna telescope to the point we should be able to see it manifest itself within our lifetime, within this generation.

The new evolution stems from information, and it stems from two types of information: digital and analog. The digital is artificial intelligence. The analog results from molecular biology, the cloning of the organism. And you knit the two together with neurobiology. Before on the old evolutionary paradigm, one would die and the other would grow and dominate. But under the new paradigm, they would exist as a mutually supportive, noncompetitive grouping. Okay, independent from the external.

And what is interesting here is that evolution now becomes an individually centered process, emanating from the needs and desires of the individual, and not an external process, a passive process where the individual is just at the whim of the collective. So, you produce a neo-human, okay, with a new individuality and a new consciousness. But that's only the beginning of the evolutionary cycle because as the next cycle proceeds, the input is now this new intelligence. As intelligence piles on intelligence, as ability piles on ability, the speed changes. Until what? Until we reach a crescendo in a way could be imagined as an enormous instantaneous fulfillment of human? human and neo-human potential. It could be something totally different. It could be the amplification of the individual, the multiplication of individual existences. Parallel existences now with the individual no longer restricted by time and space.

And the manifestations of this neo-human-type evolution, manifestations could be dramatically counter-intuitive. That's the interesting part. The old evolution is cold. It's sterile. It's efficient, okay? And its manifestations of those social adaptations. We're talking about parasitism, dominance, morality, okay? Uh, war, predation, these would be subject to de-emphasis. These will be subject to de-evolution. The new evolutionary paradigm will give us the human traits of truth, of loyalty, of justice, of freedom. These will be the manifestations of the new evolution. And that is what we would hope to see from this. That would be nice.

***


Read the previous chapter.

Read the next chapter.

Waking Life Script with Revisions

Learn how to display this transcript on your blog or site. It's easy!

For the sake of version control and in the interest of not having multiple versions floating about the Internet, please link to the pages on this site or use the code detailed above instead of copying the script elsewhere. Using short blurbs of a sentence or two is perfectly fine. Thank you :)

Permanent link: http://strivinglife.com/waking-life-transcript-with-revisions/03/

Tags:

Categories: dvd / movie, philosophy

Comments

9/4/2006 4:54:00 PM #

James Skemp

(Previously written and revised on 5/13/2003, 9/18/2003, 11/10/2003, and 12/11/2003.)

Regarding Kim Krizan's monologue on language:

Great discussion on the problem of language, of communication. If we know what a word means by experience, and if no person has the same experiences as any other person, then how can we really know what one means when one says something? The problem is an interesting one, and one that cannot be easily solved.

For example, one of the questions that I tried to answer is what is a friend. I was confronted with a few problems because everyone has a different idea of what a friend is. I may think that someone is not my friend, when they think that I am theirs. I may be fine with them saying that I am there friend, but I may not say that they are my friend. Clearly, this is not seen as a contradiction, as any number of examples would show, but rather an issue which confronts us because of the words that we use and the way that we have defined those words.

James Skemp United States

6/18/2008 12:11:36 AM #

kasra

super bad example! friend ship is a RELATIONSHIP and not a name andeventhough they may or may not tagg you as a friend, you can also independently put your tags on them too. (think of tag as a rope with direction (aka vector) )
"Love" is a right example while the "LOVE" as a relationship or a tie is not a good example anymore.

this movie is not just that u see it once or 10 times and u can say that u have understood what was being TOLD, leave the fact the in everyones mind a different picture is being painted for as long as u r within a range that logic follows ur (*)dream(*) here

another good example: (*)dream (*) .. what i mean here by word DREAM is not what u or anyone else has in mind. and that how DREAM is a good example of this type again ...

write to me

kasra Canada

6/18/2008 6:58:55 AM #

James Skemp

Kasra, I'm not sure I follow your logic.

Isn't love always a relationship of some sort? Can't we love someone who doesn't love us (just as we can think we're friends with someone who doesn't feel the same)?

[quote]"what i mean here by word DREAM is not what u or anyone else has in mind"[/quote]

So what do you mean by 'dream'? A hope or desire? An experience while sleeping? If your use of the word 'dream' "is not what u or anyone else has in mind," then we'd be unable to know what you're talking about, unless you further explain, since your usage would be outside of the common/standard usage.

James Skemp United States

6/25/2008 10:16:43 AM #

Ethan Carter

Eamonn Healy's monologue happens to be my favorite out of the entire film, because it goes along with alot of the things that I have been studying independently.

Through this bit of knowledge, I had deciphered a clear cut explanation of morality, the difference between good and evil.  Good, is the progress and furtherance of human achievement and enlightenment; things leading up to Singularity.  Mass forms of communication, for example, would be 'Good' such as the internet.  'Evil' would be things that are detrimental to progress, such as on a small scale, murder (the snuffing out of a human being and it's consciousness), or on a larger scale, corporate greed (for example, the Net Neutrality dispute.  Corporations such as AT&T want to make it so users of the internet could only access a small handful of websites for a certain monthly payment, more websites, equals more dollars.  The freedom of expression and knowledge would -no longer exist-.  Many do not know or understand the sheer importance of the internet and it's uses, both real and potential)

Ethan Carter United States

10/22/2008 9:08:47 PM #

Aaron Dantley

I understand that you feel as though morality is the process in which one becomes more fully individual, or becomes aware of oneself through means of education. However enlightening this point may be, it seems to overlook the fact that much good comes from the whole, or community, and that individuality also tends to hinder some of the precious qualities that come out of group behavior- traits such as humbleness or identifying with others. The path to becoming truly good, to me, seems more of a combination of a path towards selfness and a path towards ones place in the community, or in a larger sense, the universe. I believe good to be the identification of ones spot in the universe, individually and holistically. This seems more so almost a peace with oneself and the world around him, sort of the bond which hinted at the notion Dr. Healy discussed, one of justice, not just to oneself or the opinions one holds singularly, but to understand the balance of justice between oneself and ones surrounding community, sort of a universal equilibrium.

Aaron Dantley United States

11/6/2008 12:03:20 PM #

Mike Smuckler

"There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so" - Hamlet

I believe that there are no such things as intrinsic good or evil. A perfect case in point; I consider George W Bush to be "evil". I hated him. But he was the one instrument that enabled Barak Obama to get elected. There is no way Barak could have been elected at this time without the huge disapproval ratings Bush now enjoys.

It is from our limited individual points of view from which "good" and "evil" spring. There is no one event or phenomenon upon which you could find universal, unanimous agreement that it is "good" or "evil".

The consciousness-at-large makes no such judgements. As it says in Genesis, God created the heavens and the earth, and saw that it was good.

Mike Smuckler United States

1/3/2009 11:03:02 AM #

Kelsey Hippen

I've been thinking a lot about these three scenes since I saw the movie for the first time in July.  Mostly, I'm struggling to find motivation for continuing to study critical theory when it seems so powerful in its ability to turn the world upside down through my very own eyes.  I find most theories I've (briefly) studied--those of Nietzsche, Lacan, Deleuze--to be theories of despair, like Richard Solomon noted was true for many people.  Seeing very "real" people speak about the way in which they've chosen to understand these theories in the context of their own lives has given me new fuel to create my own paradigm--one that works for me and maintains a sense of beauty in the world despite the Truth it exposes.

Kelsey Hippen United States

10/12/2009 9:46:52 AM #

lizzy

as a post to an older thread, about the dreams; the whole point of this segment, or scene if you will, is to explain her theory of language and the way others interpret what one is saying. whether its an emotion or not. when she said how they made up symbols for water or saber tooth right behind you, wouldnt those reflect the urge of thirst???? or the emotion of fear or the fight or flight instincts of a saber toothed tiger right behind you?
this is my favorite scene from the movie as well and i think that her meaning is both very clear and very hidden.
the question still remains how do you know if one really understands you when you say a certain word?? your experiences with that word could be a different one from theirs thus giving the word a different meaning to everyone.
the scene is called language by the way.

lizzy United States

10/17/2009 10:44:02 PM #

Alex

I like what Kim Krizan said about language and our understanding of it. What really rang a bell with me though was the end of her monologue about that connection when we feel we're understood. Ive felt for a while now that theres this sort of connection Ive been searching for. It goes beyond just, I say fear and I feel certain things associated with that, and the next person feels the same things. It goes into reactions to things and knowing how the other person will react, or sitting silently with somone and know what theyre thinking about, or how theyre feeling. Its about having knowledge about another human, something which to us, is so complicated and unknown. Knowing gives us this connection and this zone of comfort. And once youve felt that connection, theres nothing else like it. Nothing else compares.

Alex Canada

12/22/2009 1:05:00 AM #

Cosmosprivateer

I wonder after watching the movie and reading the scripts is it possible we will someday rework our entire thinking process? I never looked at words that way. I now realize when someone described something to me I didn't feel the same way they would because the words don't mean the same thing to me.

I think Eamonn Healy is spot on. We are changing faster and faster and it is quite possible that some may not be able to get past this shift. They may need our help.

Cosmosprivateer United States

5/5/2010 1:05:57 PM #

RealityMaster

Eamonn Healy's talk explains very well why we're feeling "time" speed up. Evolution is progressing faster and faster, changes are happening all around us at a pace we cannot keep track of any longer, which in turn makes us associate it with time (since time is the only thing we know to be linked with progressing). I do believe as well that soon enough we'll have no choice but to speed up our own individual "enlightenment", and that we're heading towards more love and compassion, leaving fear and negativity behind as only memory.

RealityMaster Canada

Add comment


(Will show your Gravatar icon)

  Country flag

biuquote
Loading