221bcumberb:

221bcumberb:

duskybatfishgirl:

In tomorrow’s (horrid tabloid but anyway) paper! Man is an actual hero 🙂

“Sherlock star Benedict Cumberbatch fought off a gang of four muggers as they beat up a defenceless Deliveroo cyclist. The actor, 41, leapt from an Uber car and waded in after spotting the attack near Detective Sherlock Holmes’ fictional home in London’s Baker Street. The gang fled. Uber driver Manuel Dias said: The cyclist was lucky, Benedict’s a superhero.”

Ok, there’s more:

The star leapt to the rescue as the yobs punched the defenceless cyclist and smashed him over the head with a bottle.

Witnesses told how Benedict, 41, jumped from an Uber car in which he was riding with wife Sophie Hunter and sprinted into the fray, yelling: “Leave him alone.”

He dragged the four muggers off their bloodied victim. They then tried to punch Benedict, but he fen­ded them off before they fled.

Driver Manuel Dias, 53, said: “I was taking Benedict and his wife to a club — but I didn’t know it was him at first.

“I went to turn down into Marylebone High Street and we saw four guys were pushing around a Deliveroo cyclist.

“My passenger jumped out, ran over and pulled the men away. They turned towards him and things looked like getting worse, so I joined in.

“He stood there instructing them in the street, shouting, ‘Leave him alone’.

“It was only then I recognised Benedict. Then it all got a bit surreal. Here was Sherlock Holmes fighting off four attackers just round the corner from Baker Street.

“I had hold of one lad and Benedict another. He seemed to know exactly what he was doing. He was very brave. He did most of it, to be honest.

“They tried to hit him but he defended himself and pushed them away. He wasn’t injured. Then I think they also re­cognised it was Be­ne­dict and ran away.

Sherlock star Cumberbatch insisted he was not a hero, claiming he ‘had to’ help the victim.

“Benedict was courageous, brave and selfless. If he hadn’t stepped in the cyclist could have been seriously injured.

“He asked the rider how he was and when he said, ‘I’m OK’ Benedict just hugged him.”

Source

~Nietzsche & The Doctor~

tendergingergirl:

A look into correlations between The Doctor Who series and the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche.

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Nietzsche was a philosopher. He dealt in morality, (The Spectre of Lanyon Moor) and one of his concepts involved a metaphorical abyss, that stared back at you. (PROSE: Uranus)

(The Spectre of Lanyon Moor was the first Big Finish Productions Doctor Who audio story to feature Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart and the first ‘official’ meeting of the Sixth Doctor and the Brigadier with the actors playing their characters. Uranus was the seventh short story in the Short Trips anthology Short Trips: The Solar System. It was written by Craig Hinton. It featured the Seventh Doctor and Mel)

Evelyn Smythe thought that Aleister Crowley was, at the very best, a cut-price Nietzsche. (The Spectre of Lanyon Moor)

Prentis Duke hated the grey void of hyperspace, as if you looked too hard into it, “it became Nietzche’s abyss, grinning back at you.” (PROSE: Uranus)

In The Dying Days, the Eighth Doctor paraphrases Nietszche’s Beyond Good and Evil: “I’ve gazed into the abyss already, Xznaal, and the abyss gazed into me. It fled from what it saw. Monsters who fight with me should take care.”

This is, of course, an inversion of the original quote:

“He who fights with monsters should look to it that he himself does not become a monster. And if you gaze long into an abyss, the abyss also gazes into you.” -Friedrich Nietzsche  Tardis.Wikia

An Introduction to the book More Doctor Who and Philosophy:

“I vaguely remember hearing about Doctor Who when I was growing up in Italy in the 70s, but I never actually watched it. When the BBC restarted the series in 2005 I decided it was time to see what all the fuss was about. I’ve been hooked ever since; and I occasionally use Doctor Who episodes in my introductory classes in philosophy because it’s a natural (ie, intelligent and entertaining) entry point for discussions about personal identity (qua regeneration), the metaphysics of time travel, and, of course, ethics, ethics, ethics. I was therefore delighted to see this recent addition to the ‘Popular Culture and Philosophy’ series. There is much to enjoy in this collection. Besides the obvious topics mentioned above, we are also treated to Doctor-informed discussions of aesthetics (why, exactly, are the Daleks beautiful?), human nature (‘Human beings, you’re amazing. Apart from that, you’re completely mad!’), the relevance of monadology to the Whoniverse, and even a discussion of the Jesus-like (shouldn’t it really be the Socrates-like?) character of the Doctor.

Perhaps my favorite part of the book is Episode 3: It’s a different morality. Get used to it, or go home!” Philosophy Now

From More Doctor Who and Philosophy:

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From Doctor Who and Philosophy: Bigger On The Inside

“Deleuze’s Nietzsche, described in incredible detail in his second-published book, Nietzsche and Philosophy, is most faithful to the German’s original intent, and also lets one build a deeper understanding of the Doctor himself in his highest nobility, as he refuses to be dragged into despair, he who can stare into the abyss at the end of everything and overflow with laughter and celebration.”

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Steven Moffat may have been influenced by Nietzsche in The Battle of Zaruthstra. “One of the themes of Eternal Recurrence…the idea of history repeating itself. Yet Steven Moffat presents the most alarming vision of all history happening at the same time at the end of the series!” Steven Moffat’s Doctor Who 2011: The Critical Fan’s Guide to Matt Smith’s Second Series.

There is a also a paper titled Nietzsche and Doctor Who-the serial form and the three teachings of Zarathustra by David Dreamer, exploring the correlation on the series and the 3 teachings presented in Thus Spake. It is available at film-philosophy.com.

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“I shall thus be one of those who beautify things. Amor fati: let that henceforth be my love! I do not want to wage war with the ugly. I do not want to accuse, I do not want even to accuse the accusers. Looking aside, let that be my sole negation! And all in all, to sum up: I wish to be at any time hereafter only a yea-sayer!”  ~N~

Part of the series exploring parallels between Dr Who, BBC Sherlock and Nietzsche. napoleon-nietzsche-tfp & holmes-the-noble-savage

@shylockgnomes @sarahthecoat @ebaeschnbliah @gosherlocked @going-to-my-mind–palace @drool-is-love @brilliantorinsane @kajaono @phqyd-roar @simpleanddestructivechemistry @tjlcisthenewsexy

plaidadder:

sanguinarysanguinity:

educatedinyellow:

oldshrewsburyian:

holmesguy:

artemisastarte:

holmesguy:

artemisastarte:

sidgwicks:

A Sherlock Holmes Commentary, D. Martin Dakin, 1972.

I also struggle with this. There are very few things that could cause it, but two spring to mind in particular. One is that Holmes was so distressed by Watson’s marriage that he had to cut ties – he simply couldn’t bear the torment of having to watch his friend be married. The other is a deeply significant task similar to that detailed in ‘His Last Bow’.

Yeah, I tend to go back and forth on thinking of ways to justify it vs. deciding that it’s not completely true. Sometimes I imagine that Holmes managed for at most a few months, but ended up writing after all, and in EMPT Watson is just fabricating or exaggerating when he quotes Holmes as saying that he wanted to write but didn’t. When Holmes says he wanted Watson to write a convincing account of his death, I think that could be true, but I think initially Holmes was running away from his feelings and he’s just telling himself that getting Watson to write a convincing account was his plan, when really it’s just a convenient consequence. Sometimes I imagine that none of it happened and they both were in on it and Holmes faked his death for entirely different reasons. But then the idea of an epic top secret mission which he really couldn’t reveal to Watson is pretty tempting to believe, too.

My fic has the Hiatus happening for a mix of reasons, but I confess it is so hard to write it. I have actually reversed Holmes’ statement ‘I feared lest your affectionate regard for me should tempt you to be indiscreet’ to Holmes saying ‘I feared lest my affectionate regard for you should tempt me to be indiscreet’ which puts a whole new slant on the matter.

Honestly I am so curious to see where your fic takes this!

This is an enigma that needs to be solved… I think the idea of Holmes simply not communicating with Watson is an impossibility requiring us to ferret out improbable truths. Naomi Novik’s short story, “Commonplaces,” follows @artemisastarte‘s hypothesis about Watson’s marriage being a source of deep distress to – and something of a crisis for – Holmes. And I myself have yielded to the temptation of hypothesizing indirect contact during the Hiatus.

For myself, I can’t see Holmes leaving Watson to grieve for three years as justifiable, either for the protection of his own feelings or because he thought Watson couldn’t safely be trusted with the truth. I’ve tried several times to make it more palatable to myself, I’ve written around it, I’ve read around it, and there are many beautiful ways of approaching the problem. But in my heart of hearts, I just can’t stomach it and prefer to imagine that the account Watson gives of the hiatus and his years of ignorance in “The Empty House” is not a true one. Heaven knows it’s full of plot holes anyway. It’s not a piece of the canon worth keeping, IMO, if it requires Holmes to treat Watson as though he can’t be trusted, or to place his own emotional safety above the most basic respect he owes to Watson’s feelings and friendship.

But I should add that I tend to opt out of this canon storyline as much because of my personal aversion to angst as anything else, and I know that many beautiful and wonderful stories do use this plot to delve deeply into both characters. I’m sorry, I wouldn’t want my own feelings about it to come off as dismissive of the other great approaches to the story that are out there in the fandom. I applaud everyone who writes about this, however they decide to handle it!

This is one of the things that I treasure about Nicholas Meyer’s The Seven Per-Cent Solution: it has Holmes go away with Watson’s full knowledge in order to get well again after he kicks cocaine. Everyone who cares about Holmes knows why he’s gone and that he intends to come back. Watson isn’t stuck mourning him, nor is Mrs Hudson stuck keeping a masoleum for the man for three years. And while he hasn’t left  a detailed itinerary behind him, he’s not in deep hiding, either, which means it’s conceivably possible for his loved ones to get in touch with him, if they need to. (Gratuitous plug for my own fic, because I can.) It’s still terribly sad and worrisome – it’s not a parting anyone asked for, and there’s plenty of reason to fear for his safety while he’s gone – but it is stomachable as the ordinary kind of grief that happens between people who love and respect each other.

Which I suppose is the long way round of saying that I, too, prefer reading FINA and EMPT as being at least partially untrue. Because as @educatedinyellow says, the degree of distrust and/or disrespect shown to Watson is EMPT as written is… untenable.

I like the way Granada Holmes handled it; but still, yes, it’s hard to think about poor Watson kept in the dark for so long for such insufficient reasons. On the other hand, if you think about this in real-life terms: the *actual* gap in time between the publication of “Final Problem” and the publication of “Empty House” is about ten years. Up until the Return series, Holmes’s cases generally took place pretty close to the year in which they were published. If he were really being consistent with his previous MO, Doyle should have brought Holmes back to life 10 years after he disappeared. Just IMAGINE. From that point of view, setting “Empty House” only 3 years after “Final Problem” seems like an act of mercy–as if Doyle was thinking, OK, what’s the minimum number of years of separation I can get away with and still make Holmes’s ‘death’ have an impact? In retconning his own story, if you look at it that way, Doyle was subtracting 7 possible years of loss and grief. So if you look at it that way, everyone who then reworks the Hiatus in their heads to be shorter or less painful for Watson is just following in Doyle’s footsteps. 

But if you have scruples about playing fast and loose with canon, there are many reasons Holmes might have done this which are left unstated in EH:

1) From a brutally utilitarian point of view, contacting Watson and letting him know what’s going on would probably have been extremely dangerous for Holmes. If you want to kill Sherlock Holmes, and you’ve decided you’re in this for the long haul, what are you going to do? Play whack-a-mole all over the globe while he stays one step ahead of you? No; you find Watson and put him under surveillance because one of these days, when Holmes thinks it’s safe, he’s going to drop him a line and then eventually come back. We tend to forget when we think about all this that a) Holmes went into that confrontation with Moriarty fully expecting to die, b) the plan to pretend to be dead comes to him in a flash while Moriarty is falling, c) he comes under attack from Moran and his goons almost immediately and d) he escapes with nothing but the clothes he’s standing in. He had no time to arrange this with Watson in advance, and no easy way of contacting Watson while he was still in the vicinity. So a certain amount of time would have to pass before he would even have been able to contact Watson.

2) Try to imagine Holmes sitting down to write to Watson, say, six months into this escapade, at a point when he’s reasonably safe and has fabricated another identity for himself and thinks he might be able to risk a letter, perhaps delivered in some ingeniously secret way by Mycroft. Exactly how does one write that letter? “My dear Watson, You will no doubt be surprised to hear from your old friend, who is not actually dead, even though he did watch you coming to that conclusion and allowed you to believe it for six months in order to save his own skin…” The worst of the damage is already done. Grief is at its most intense in the months right after the loss. He can’t save Watson from that. And what guarantee does Holmes have that Watson will even believe the letter is genuine? If you got a letter right now from a dead loved one, would your first thought be, “THEY’RE ALIVE! THANK GOD!” or would it be, “What sick son of a bitch is tormenting me with false hope?” When Holmes finally DOES come back, Watson has to grab him to satisfy himself that Holmes isn’t a ghost. (Yes, possibly also for other reasons, moving on.) Without Watson there in front of him, I can easily see how it would be much, much, much easier for Holmes just to go on, day after day, deciding not to write that letter than to face up to what he’s done. 

3) Let’s say Holmes writes to Watson to let him know what’s going on, but doesn’t give Watson his location because a meeting would be too dangerous and asks Watson for his word of honor that he won’t try to find him. Watson gives it because he wants Holmes to be safe. So Watson’s next move is what? To try to take out the people who are threatening Holmes. And the result is what? Dead Watson. 

So if you take all that into consideration…you don’t have to see Holmes as an inhuman machine to see why this situation is allowed to drag on for a few years, especially considering the fact that some of that time was spent exploring unknown regions. (Which in itself may have been an attempt at covert communication. Holmes says “You may have read” of Sigerson’s explorations, as if he’s expecting it…did he want Watson to read about them? Did he put clues in them? Did Watson just not read of Sigerson’s exploits, or miss the clues?) It’s also easy to see how Holmes would have mentioned precisely none of this to Watson, because knowing any of this wouldn’t make it any better. “I was afraid of dying,” “I was afraid to be honest with you about what I had done to you,” and “I was afraid to put myself through the grief and loss I put you through” are all things that don’t reflect particularly well on Holmes and wouldn’t bring Watson a lot of comfort. Watson, by this point, has been through the entire cycle of grief and the damage is done. I can see Holmes deciding, as he heads up to Watson’s study, that he’s not going to stoop to self-justification. Or maybe he does tell Watson all these reasons, and Watson decides they can’t go in the narrative because they show Holmes as being too human and too vulnerable.

the-7-percent-solution:

How the FUCK are so many days/times SOLD OUT IN NOVEMBER?? I’m going to london in December and a lot of the time slots are filled on the days I could go. What. Is this. They have no social media following for this.

I got the feeling that the site wasn’t 100% running for reservations yet. I was clicking around and it was saying there was no tickets available, and this was right after the email got sent out

teaandforeshadowing:

going-to-my-mind–palace:

teaandforeshadowing:

honest to god, why are they making a podcast about us. like, just let it go… move on with your life….. stop wasting your life saying the same thing about us over and over.

Wait seriously are your tags correct?? I feel like we just shifted into a parallel void.

i have no idea, my only experience with them was thru like.. 3rd hand vagueposting years ago, but this podcast gives me the same kinda vibes tbh

I’ve listened to the podcast and I have to say most definitely she had something to do with it. I had a smidge more contact with said person. The stuff that was said was straight out of that ridiculous meta post that related TJLCers to trump supporters. And just about everything that they said in “metas” before they deleted (which were just bashing all of fandom, mostly tjlcers tho). Highly likely that the podcast person reached out to you know who for comments and sources.

I’m in a mood

To the person who made that podcast; I’m bringing my smart ass to the ❤️ of London. With my pipe, deerstalker, magnifying glass, my terrible hot topic bbc Sherlock tee and my ENTIRE collection of BBC Sherlock pop vinyls to BE SHERLOCK HOLMES, the absolute legend

🚬😑 also I will be wearing a sweater with this printed on the front

And 🖕🏻 this in the back