I'm an idealist. I think this is all a dream. I'm guessing you're a materialist. — RogueAI
Guénon — Heracloitus
According to P. Chacornac, Guénon thought that Islam was one of the only real traditions accessible to Westerners, while retaining authentic possibilities in the initiative domain.
In 1930, Guénon left Paris for Cairo, where he met with Abdalhaqq-Léon Champrenaud, and Abdalhadi Alaqhili, formerly known as John-Gustaf Aguéli, to be initiated into a Sufi order of Islam. When he arrived, his outward behavior had changed and he had completely immersed himself in the popular Islamic milieu of the city.
Although the exposition of Hindu doctrines to European audiences had already been attempted in piecemeal fashion at that time by some orientalists, Guénon's Introduction to the Study of the Hindu Doctrines advanced its subject in a uniquely insightful manner,[12] by referring to the concepts of metaphysics and Tradition in their most general sense, which Guénon precisely defined.
Then again, socialism without open borders is, well, national socialism. — Tzeentch
That's why Europe is flooded with migrants who have basically no prospect of successfully integrating into European societies, which has lead to no end of trouble. The end result will be predictably tragic. — Tzeentch
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absurdism
Absurdism is the philosophical theory that the universe is irrational and meaningless.
The three responses discussed in the traditional absurdist literature are suicide, religious belief in a higher purpose, and rebellion against the absurd.
National socialism is actually the most fundamental doctrine of European so-called democracy. — Tarskian
The only saving grace of the erstwhile marxism was its internationalism. — Tarskian
Regardless of how they do it, failure is the inevitable attraction point of European civilization. — Tarskian
If only pure reason is allowed to provide the meaning of life, then there simply is no such meaning. — Tarskian
Voting for far-right politicians, i.e. the modern national-socialists, is the national European rebellion against the absurd, of a society that will ultimately commit suicide. — Tarskian
You mean we left some with their heads still on? A serious oversight, that.If you ever meet European nobility, you will quickly understand that they think exactly the same. — Tarskian
What made you think this? — Tom Storm
How did you arrive at this? — Tom Storm
You're saying that if we rely solely on pure reason to determine the meaning of life, we will conclude that life has no inherent meaning? I wonder if that's the case. I'm not big on pure reason and I came to the conclusion that life has no inherent meaning simply by how it feels and looks to me. — Tom Storm
Seems to me you could make this same argument and simply replace 'national-socialists' with 'socialism' or 'identity politics' etc. — Tom Storm
You mean we left some with their heads still on? A serious oversight, that. — Vera Mont
All things considered, it's better to have money than not, but do you think being rich will make you happy? Or is a necessary condition for happiness? — RogueAI
All things considered, it's better to have money than not, but do you think being rich will make you happy? Or is a necessary condition for happiness? — RogueAI
It is if you're entirely devoid of sensibility and scruples. You can 'believe in' honour simply by throwing a few pennies at a minstrel to sing about it. You can have all the peasant girls you want, because they don't have honour and you're immune from the law. — Vera Mont
all this Chad swagger — RogueAI
then fold when someone asks you about what is good in life? — RogueAI
Voting for far-right politicians, i.e. the modern national-socialists, is the national European rebellion against the absurd, of a society that will ultimately commit suicide. — Tarskian
Wrong. Everybody who lives in Europe knows why the far-right is rising. Funnily enough, it has nothing to do with the lack of religion, it has to do with the presence of (a certain) religion.
Keep European politics for people who have skin in the game. If someone is backpacking in Siberia or being a sexpat in Thailand they typically wouldn't have a lot of investment in what is going on across the glope. — Lionino
I really don't see the need to converse with someone like you. — Tarskian
I thought that you wanted me to help you find a new job?
I am quite good at networking but not that good. So, give me some more time to pull off the impossible.
By the way, does anybody want to hire him?
He's been looking for a new job for ages now but he keeps failing at the first interview. — Tarskian
Well, another reason is that making movies is actually very expensive. If you make a movie in Finnish, basically there's only +5 million people who understand Finnish. If it's a very good movie, some foreigners will see it, but not many. Think about it like Minnesotan's making movies for only Minnesotans to watch, with Minnesotans speaking a totally different language from other Americans. This is the reason why English dominates and why even the Hollywood studios themselves have centered on making "Blockbusters" and only make few "Art Films" that require a bit more to follow than just eat your popcorn.This experience of detesting contemporary American movies makes me ask the same question all the time: why in the hell people in other countries spend so much money and energies in order to see, advertise and idolize (contemporary) American cinema?
The only logical answer I come up with is "mass control". — Eros1982
Let's start from some facts: There are so goddam many of Americans compared to any other Western people. And not only that, but your are very wealthy consumers. Thus you are the biggest domestic market there is. And this means that many talented foreign directors and actors are very welcome to work in Hollywood, just as many scientists and successful entrepreneurs (like Elon Musk etc) come to the US, because the US has the resources.US culture industry has a big leverage on the rest of the world. — Eros1982
The US surely polices competition when it comes to it's strategic interests. And my father in his time joked about the American legal battle against NIH-products (NIH meaning "Not Invented Here"). Yet all of this is actually quite limited, when tariff barriers don't exist. Especially in Latin America there is this idea of this nearly omnipotent US guarding everything in it's interests, but it isn't so. Not all largest companies in the World are American in every sector. Just take for example forestry and paper companies. You would assume just by thinking where the large forests are and think about the sizes of the countries, it would be that American, Canadian and Russian companies would be the largest. Close, but that isn't the picture, in 2022 by revenue the list was as follows.In conclusion, I tend to believe that materialism and policing may have a greater saying in our modern western world than "the global culture" which I see it as being imposed on us (and easily replaceable). — Eros1982
Not quite sure what you mean here. Well, many countries don't look like the US. But what is surprising is just how similar to the US the whole of Latin America is. You have these interesting subtle differences between American countries and European countries.I can't imagine a scenario with economies and surveillance performing very poorly and with people in USA or France being in "peace" due to their "democratic/egalitarian/cosmopolitan" values and "compassion". Till, I can imagine that scenario as plausible for some smaller nations which have been lucky enough to not look like France or USA today (though I guess there must be only a handful of such nations in the western world). — Eros1982
Not quite sure what you mean here. Well, many countries don't look like the US. But what is surprising is just how similar to the US the whole of Latin America is. You have these interesting subtle differences between American countries and European countries. — ssu
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