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	<title>Comments on: Laughter: An Essay on the Meaning of the Comic (Dover Books on Western Philosophy)</title>
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		<title>By: Anonymous</title>
		<link>http://joys.net/6782/laughter-an-essay-on-the-meaning-of-the-comic-dover-books-on-western-philosophy-2/#comment-19928</link>
		<dc:creator>Anonymous</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Nov 2013 13:28:32 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[&lt;strong&gt;Still profound after all these years&lt;/strong&gt; Why is a pun amusing?  In brief, it treats something human as if it were something mechanical.  Language is a way of conveying meanings from one human to another, and the most inflexible, most mechanical, most artifiial POSSIBLE way of looking at words is to classify them by their sound alone.  That&#039;s precisely what a pun does.]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Still profound after all these years</strong> Why is a pun amusing?  In brief, it treats something human as if it were something mechanical.  Language is a way of conveying meanings from one human to another, and the most inflexible, most mechanical, most artifiial POSSIBLE way of looking at words is to classify them by their sound alone.  That&#8217;s precisely what a pun does.</p>
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		<title>By: Anonymous</title>
		<link>http://joys.net/6782/laughter-an-essay-on-the-meaning-of-the-comic-dover-books-on-western-philosophy-2/#comment-19927</link>
		<dc:creator>Anonymous</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Nov 2013 13:25:02 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[&lt;strong&gt;A bit dated.  Somewhat incomplete.  Astoundingly insightful&lt;/strong&gt; Before reading this essay, you should be forewarned that it was written by the same great opponent of Cartesian dualism that resisted the reduction of psychological phenomena to physical states.  In other words, this is an early 20th century French philosophical essay.  To go further, it&#039;s a bit dry.  Still, it is hard to argue with many of the axioms that Bergson espouses in this essay.  For the most part, the laughter caused by much of modern comedy can be explained using one of his primary axioms or their many corollaries.  Bergson&#039;s biggest miss here, however, is that although he adequately explains why a comic may cause an individual to laugh at either the comic himself or a third party, he doesn&#039;t sufficiently explain, or even realize, that much of what the comic intends is for his audience to laugh at themselves.  Even so, you  can still ascribe Bergson&#039;s incisive deductions to include the comic audience and still come to the heart of why people laugh.  In any event, to my knowledge the subject has never been tackled so logically.  Certainly, no (funny) comedian will ever attempt to publicly disclose the nature of laughter, but don&#039;t suppose that there aren&#039;t many famous comedians out there today who are familiar with this essay.  It is obvious that many comedians and writers are familiar with this essay and that they have put these axioms directly to the test to great comic effect on many occasions.  A word of advice to anyone who has difficulty wading through the chapters of Bergson&#039;s dry, recondite language: Read it in your head with the voice of baby Stewie from the Family Guy in mind.  This technique amused me through the first half of the book, and by that time the language didn&#039;t bother me so much anymore.]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>A bit dated.  Somewhat incomplete.  Astoundingly insightful</strong> Before reading this essay, you should be forewarned that it was written by the same great opponent of Cartesian dualism that resisted the reduction of psychological phenomena to physical states.  In other words, this is an early 20th century French philosophical essay.  To go further, it&#8217;s a bit dry.  Still, it is hard to argue with many of the axioms that Bergson espouses in this essay.  For the most part, the laughter caused by much of modern comedy can be explained using one of his primary axioms or their many corollaries.  Bergson&#8217;s biggest miss here, however, is that although he adequately explains why a comic may cause an individual to laugh at either the comic himself or a third party, he doesn&#8217;t sufficiently explain, or even realize, that much of what the comic intends is for his audience to laugh at themselves.  Even so, you  can still ascribe Bergson&#8217;s incisive deductions to include the comic audience and still come to the heart of why people laugh.  In any event, to my knowledge the subject has never been tackled so logically.  Certainly, no (funny) comedian will ever attempt to publicly disclose the nature of laughter, but don&#8217;t suppose that there aren&#8217;t many famous comedians out there today who are familiar with this essay.  It is obvious that many comedians and writers are familiar with this essay and that they have put these axioms directly to the test to great comic effect on many occasions.  A word of advice to anyone who has difficulty wading through the chapters of Bergson&#8217;s dry, recondite language: Read it in your head with the voice of baby Stewie from the Family Guy in mind.  This technique amused me through the first half of the book, and by that time the language didn&#8217;t bother me so much anymore.</p>
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		<title>By: Kristian J. Johnson "KJ"</title>
		<link>http://joys.net/6782/laughter-an-essay-on-the-meaning-of-the-comic-dover-books-on-western-philosophy-2/#comment-19926</link>
		<dc:creator>Kristian J. Johnson "KJ"</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Nov 2013 13:08:46 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[&lt;strong&gt;Enormously provocative&lt;/strong&gt; Yes, it is true: Nietzsche&#039;s The Birth of Tragedy is funnier than this analysis of laughter. But they are equally provocative. Bergson&#039;s thesis may not suit all of us, but it must challenge even those of us involved in the comedic professions to re-examine why people laugh. I think his observation of what makes something funny as opposed to tragic - the elimination of emotion - is pretty spot on. How else could we laugh at someone falling down the stairs? The moment we think of the actual pain or humiliation, the comedy dies at least a little. While the book does not directly attack the magic of those beings, clowns and tricksters, who simulataneaously inspire laughter and sadness and/or fear, the principles of the book lead to what sorts of rules these people follow. If you can extraploate from the thought laid out here, many, many questions will be answered and perhaps even more raised. Which makes this an indispensible book for anyone in the performing arts. Highly, highly recommended.]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Enormously provocative</strong> Yes, it is true: Nietzsche&#8217;s The Birth of Tragedy is funnier than this analysis of laughter. But they are equally provocative. Bergson&#8217;s thesis may not suit all of us, but it must challenge even those of us involved in the comedic professions to re-examine why people laugh. I think his observation of what makes something funny as opposed to tragic &#8211; the elimination of emotion &#8211; is pretty spot on. How else could we laugh at someone falling down the stairs? The moment we think of the actual pain or humiliation, the comedy dies at least a little. While the book does not directly attack the magic of those beings, clowns and tricksters, who simulataneaously inspire laughter and sadness and/or fear, the principles of the book lead to what sorts of rules these people follow. If you can extraploate from the thought laid out here, many, many questions will be answered and perhaps even more raised. Which makes this an indispensible book for anyone in the performing arts. Highly, highly recommended.</p>
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