Kubrick’s 2001 and Nietzsche’s Ubermensch
Lecture no. 24 from the course: Sci-Phi: Science Fiction as Philosophy
Taught by Professor David K. Johnson | 38 min
Analyze one of the most famous—and possibly weirdest—sci-fi films of all time: 2001: A Space Odyssey. Consider the imagery and ideas of Kubrick’s vision and determine whether, as some suggest, it reflects the concept of Friedrich Nietzsche’s Übermensch. Close with a brief glimpse of the science fiction worlds still waiting for you to explore them.
24 Lectures
1
Inception and the Interpretation of Art
0
of 34 min
2
The Matrix and the Value of Knowledge
0
of 33 min
3
The Matrix Sequels and Human Free Will
0
of 34 min
4
The Adjustment Bureau, the Force, and Fate
0
of 32 min
5
Contact: Science versus Religion
0
of 34 min
6
Arrival: Aliens and Radical Translation
0
of 34 min
7
Interstellar: Is Time Travel Possible?
0
of 34 min
8
Doctor Who and Time Travel Paradoxes
0
of 35 min
9
Star Trek: TNG and Alternate Worlds
0
of 33 min
10
Dark City, Dollhouse, and Personal Identity
0
of 36 min
11
Westworld and A.I. Artificial Intelligence
0
of 36 min
12
Transcendence and the Dangers of AI
0
of 35 min
13
The Thirteenth Floor: Are We Simulated?
0
of 33 min
14
The Orville, Orwell, and the “Black Mirror”
0
of 34 min
15
Star Wars: Good versus Evil
0
of 33 min
16
Firefly, Blake’s 7, and Political Rebellion
0
of 34 min
17
Starship Troopers, Doctor Who, and Just War
0
of 35 min
18
The Prime Directive and Postcolonialism
0
of 33 min
19
Capitalism in Metropolis, Elysium, and Panem
0
of 34 min
20
Snowpiercer and Climate Change
0
of 36 min
21
Soylent Green: Overpopulation and Euthanasia
0
of 34 min
22
Gattaca and the Ethics of Reproduction
0
of 32 min
23
The Handmaid’s Tale: Feminism and Religion
0
of 36 min
24
Kubrick’s 2001 and Nietzsche’s Ubermensch
0
of 38 min