Category: Civilization, History, and Anthropology

  • ZOROASTER ABRAHAM JESUS MARX FREUD CANTOR AND AQUINAS ROUSSEAU KANT HEIDEGGER FO

    ZOROASTER ABRAHAM JESUS MARX FREUD CANTOR

    AND

    AQUINAS ROUSSEAU KANT HEIDEGGER FOUCAULT DERRIDA RORTY

    -VS-

    ARISTOTLE BACON DESCARTES NEWTON PIERCE POPPER-KUHN

    AND

    MACHIAVELLI LOCKE SMITH HUME DARWIN HAYEK

    Why does philosophy have to be such a 50/50 proposition between intellectual biohazards, and intellectual steroids?

    It’s freaking exasperating that it takes one most of one’s life to master intellectual history marginally well enough to know what is poison and hallucinogen, and what is vitamin and antidote.

    (Now, I get to have some debate no doubt on who I included and didn’t and why, just like we’re talking about why I don’t like java and I like PHP more than Python. lol.)


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-06 10:02:00 UTC

  • ADVANCED CHILDREARING “The secret as to why England and not France or Germany sp

    ADVANCED CHILDREARING

    “The secret as to why England and not France or Germany spawned the Industrial Revolution first goes back to England’s advanced childrearing in its smaller medieval households, not to any ecological advantage.” – Lloyd deMause

    Referring to: David S. Landes, The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some Are So Rich and Some So Poor. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1998, pp. 213-230.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-06 04:59:00 UTC

  • CULTURE OR GENES: IT’S A MUTUALLY DEPENDENT PROCESS (from elsewhere) I study coo

    CULTURE OR GENES: IT’S A MUTUALLY DEPENDENT PROCESS

    (from elsewhere)

    I study cooperative institutions they way hbd_chick studies familial institutions. And as such I’m sure that my bias in determining causality is toward cultural rather than genetic factors.

    I’ve always been suspicious of suggestions of genetic transmission of those biases that can be transmitted by habits, norms, traditions, myths, institutions, and those that are the product of organizations: family or extended family. Maternal or Paternal. Hunter-gatherer, agrarian, industrial, post-industrial as well as Ritual, temple, church, voluntary civic order.

    But the universalist bias in indo-europeans seems to transcend those external forces. We can tell now that we have an interesting combination of :

    1) Lower testosterone and therefore lower impulsivity.

    2) Lower Impulsivity and therefore longer (lower) time preference.

    3) Higher verbal intelligence and therefore hIgher median intelligence.

    4) Higher energy levels and higher rates of burning calories, so more action oriented.

    This means that our activity is more evenly distributed than more impulsive gene pools.

    And our vision of man, as represented in our art, is as beautiful. And our metaphysical objective is to transform nature to our will.

    The east asians have much lower testosterone and impulsivity than we do, but lower verbal intelligence intelligence. I can’t find data on their energy levels, but it appears that they are more even-tempered laborers than ‘whites’. Although their vision of ‘man’, as represented in their art is as evil in contrast to nature, which we must submit to.

    These factors are not cultural transmissions. They are genetic transmissions. Just how much of that genetic transmission is caused by cultural necessity, and how much it produced that cultural necessity is very hard to determine.

    But regardless of FIRST cause, there is certainly a relationship between the two, such that genetic and cultural factors are self reinforcing over time.

    As far as I can tell, Gimbutas was right, and the structure of military tactics is the cause of western, northern european, (white) cultural differences. And those differences have been gradually encoded in our genes over the centuries as biases.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-05 05:14:00 UTC

  • ENGLISH EXCEPTIONALISM: THE NUCLEAR FAMILY, COMMON LAW, CIVIL ASSOCIATIONS, PROT

    ENGLISH EXCEPTIONALISM: THE NUCLEAR FAMILY, COMMON LAW, CIVIL ASSOCIATIONS, PROTESTANTISM, WIDESPREAD LAND OWNERSHIP.

    Emmanuel Todd is getting mainstream attention.

    “That English, later Anglosphere, exceptionalism, is very real. That the rise of our language and culture to their current unprecedented dominance – what one commentator terms “Anglobalisation” – is based on a series of properties that are either unique to the English-speaking peoples, or shared only with a handful of kindred cultures in northwestern Europe. Among these properties are the common law, representative government, Protestantism, dispersed landownership, civil associations separate from the state and – of particular interest to these authors – the unusual nature of the family.

    “They show that the Anglosphere dispenses with the extended family structures which, in most places, have legal as well as cultural force. In many societies, the peasant family has traditionally been treated as a kind of collective landowner, within which there are reciprocal responsibilities. Children, even in adulthood, have been expected to work on the family plot, receiving board and lodging. Marriages are typically arranged, and daughters-in-law come under the authority of the head of their new household. Even when the law recognizes individual autonomy, custom is often slow to follow.

    “The Anglosphere scarcely resembles the Eurasian landmass in its family structures. Our notion of the family is limited and nuclear. Most English-speakers in most centuries wanted to set up home on their own, independently, with just their spouse and children – although economic circumstances did not always allow that aspiration to be fulfilled.

    “The notion that the limited family underpins Anglosphere exceptionalism – which draws heavily on the work of the French anthropologist and demographer Emmanuel Todd – is intriguing. I see the cultural difference all around me in the European Parliament. In most Continental states, your social life is largely taken up with your extended family: you have an endless stream of weddings and christenings to go to, sometimes of very distant cousins. Britons and Americans, by contrast, expect to leave their parental home in their teens, either to go to university or to work. We make friends away from home, and they become the core of our social life. Indeed, the word “friend” carries more force in English than in many European languages, in which it is bestowed quickly and generously, but often means little more than what we mean by a Facebook friend. When a Spaniard says of someone “es muy amigo mío”, he simply means that he gets on with the chap.”


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-04 16:15:00 UTC

  • “Для каждого человека на этой земле Смерть приходит рано или поздно. И как может

    “Для каждого человека на этой земле

    Смерть приходит рано или поздно.

    И как может человек умереть лучше

    Чем сталкивается многие враги

    Для прах отцов своих,

    И храмы своих богов “.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-04 07:03:00 UTC

  • THE BIGGEST MISTAKE IN WESTERN HISTORY? STATE CONQUEST OF THE TEMPLAR-BANKERS Im

    THE BIGGEST MISTAKE IN WESTERN HISTORY? STATE CONQUEST OF THE TEMPLAR-BANKERS

    Imagine Protestantism, if the church evolved along with the Templars into an independent bank, with its own security (insurance) rather than being conquered, suppressed and disbanded by the state?

    This is the missing feature of western society. We had the church and independent banks. But without the church, and with state-run banks, there is no way to control the protestant moral code by institutional means.

    WE (I) NEED TO CHANGE THIS.

    THE MORMONS HAVE THE DOCTRINE WRONG BUT THE MODEL RIGHT


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-04 05:55:00 UTC

  • COMPARING WESTERN WITH SINIC CULTURE Confucianism is a high-opporunity-cost soci

    COMPARING WESTERN WITH SINIC CULTURE

    Confucianism is a high-opporunity-cost social order. It is very conservative. It requires respect for hierarchy and authority (opportunity costs). It requires consensus (opportunity costs but with risk reduction). It is an almost entirely shareholder-property society with low rates of creativity, low risk, slow moving social and economic model. But if it is BIG enough that people cannot sense external competition from OTHER social orders then internal status symbols can be preserved by way of nationalism or culturalism and the social order can work. (it doesn’t: the south is a competitor with the north of china, which is their whole cultural problem – that’s what Mao did. He destroyed the country economically to keep the south from outpacing the north.) This is not necessarily ‘bad’ in confucian society.

    It may bear understanding that Confucius failed to solve the political problem (it is somewhat evident that he understands this) and directed everyone to hierarchy and family. So the confucian model is not republican at it’s base. It is not tribal. It is hierarchical, and familial. The entire nation operates as a family. This is not a bad strategy unless you are competing with a group of high-risk, highly-innovative, fast moving westerners, for whom individual heroism, innovation and achievement are viewed as ‘keeping the group strong’. Competition and individualism are a ‘group good’ in the west. They are not in the asian societies. we are free to copy the innovators, and in doing so, everyone has the opportunity to be ‘better’. The west is an innovation and adaptation society.

    Freedom as we understand it, is not possible, and probably not necessary under Confucianism.

    Economically speaking, a nation that does NOT participate in heavy research and development will eventually fall behind, and governments can concentrate more wealth than the private sector on Research and Development. (What would the impact be of 200 new nuclear power plants in the USA? We have people feeling good about not wasting energy but manufacturing is the greatest energy consumer, and we need more manufacturing. Economizing is a spiritual act, not a material one.) China is making productive investments. We are making redistributive expenses, and spending trillions defending oil and trade routes, and our primary export – the dollar.

    And we will not get anywhere thinking that some very small minority of a Confucian population, or our odd obsession with the religion of Universal Democratic Secular Humanism will have any long term effect on the Sinic culture. The rest of the world is clearly condemning it. There isn’t even any evidence yet that our UDSH values will persist in the west without the Militial and Commercial balance to it, that is the foundation of western civilization.

    The calculative institutions of capitalism, which provide incentives in the form of pricing, sensory information in the form of objects defined as property, expressed and manipulated quantitatively, and the technologies of intertemporal collaboration and coordination in the form of money, interest, banking, fiat money and the technologies of dispute resolution in the form of contract and law, have little or nothing to do with the technologies of redistribution, and the methods of capital concentration, as well as the ‘forgone opportunity costs’ which citizens pay for participation in society and market’. Political freedom is not economic freedom. Political freedom exists either to defend ones self against a predatory state, or to use the violence of the state to put extra-market pressure on competing groups with competing interests.

    The reason for the western matrix of freedoms is to promote innovation, competition and wealth, so that the nobility, the upper middle class, and therefore prosperity will be maintained, and management elites, will rotate keeping the society competitive. At least, that’s the implied theory: meritocratic rotation of the elites – a thematic value system inherited from western heroic competitive militarism. ie: it’s a knowledge production engine.

    China values stability and security, not change and innovation. It is a culture where conflict is a sin. Where the individual is subordinate to the state. Where virtue is not heroic excellence, but duty. (At least, until the middle class is large enough.)

    Conservatives are in large part, whether knowingly or not, subscribers to ‘natural law’ theory, which states that human behavior is what it is, always has been and always will be. They do not subscribe to the philosophy that all men would work happily for the common good, nor, if given the opportunity, that they would do some common good in political power, or even know what such a good would be, simply because of the number of trade offs and secondary causes. Nor, that we are capable of implementing any designed change in our social orders without horrific consequences.

    And under that view, they would say that you are making a moral equivalency where there is none.

    Moral statements are economic actions, and either economic payments or theft. Ethical statements are economic actions, and either economic payments or theft. Manners are economic demonstrations, contributions, and payments. But these payments are made against a vast, habitual, rather than written set of legal, cultural and class body of accounts – and vastly different concepts of property definition, and they exist largely to ‘pay for the social order’ by reducing opportunity for friction and conflict.

    In the west, we have a very different payment system. We are all trying to be noblemen or priests. In the east, they are all trying to be Confucian – to hold their place. More like the German model prior to ww1. Our anglo model, is very rare. And it may simply be the artifact of a thousand years of wealth generated by expansion under the reformation.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-02 06:16:00 UTC

  • WHY WE NEED THE “DARK ENLIGHTENMENT” Why was anglo objective, universalist empir

    WHY WE NEED THE “DARK ENLIGHTENMENT”

    Why was anglo objective, universalist empiricism intuitive and acceptable to the British, while a duty-bound subjective hierarchy intuitive and acceptable to the germans? Why are order and duty more important to germans than to the english? Is Raico right that it’s just geographic?

    I can understand why the counter-enlightenment (the continentals) fought against the anglo social construct, although I cannot really grasp why they didn’t simply try to solve the problem empirically rather than mystically. The germans at least, were correct. Anglo civilization degenerated rapidly, while german society at least for now, survives. Anglo civilization I suspect, without some event, will survive only in the protestant religions. We are, without our insular island, fragile.

    Isn’t providing a RATIONAL and EMPIRICAL institutional solution to uniting germanic order and duty with anglo individual empiricism something that can reunite the two strains? I don’t think so. They are fine. We’re in trouble. I don’t see how to unite us.

    Are we forced for some reason, into a choice between anti-rationalist socialism, and scientific and rational, individualist, universalist, self-destruction?

    Or, is it possible to solve our cultural problem by creating institutions that acknowledge that the universalist property of the enlightenment was a failure? That equality and universalism are incompatible, just as freedom and democracy are incompatible?

    Science and Reason, Naturalism and Correspondence need not be abandoned. But it appears that we must abandon the belief in universalism and equality, in exchange for nationalism and relative equality within a meritocratic hierarchy?

    But given the lack of our individual power under capitalism, and the presence of mass political and economic power under all forms of representative government, can we create a hierarchy of meritocracy rather than pure political power? I don’t see how that can be accomplished without violence.

    Our political history is masculine – the paternal family with private property. But women, in the work force and in politics, try to restore the feminine – the socialist model of common property. So that they need not form micro tribes of one man and one woman but instead, can force the support for their children onto the rest.

    It must be visible that the system will not work before an alternative is an acceptable compromise. Monogamous marriage was a compromise. One that must return for a society to be economically viable, I think. I do not see it possible any other way, for the high costs of single parent families to compete with the lower cost of double income families. Nor do i see double income families continuing to support those who breed without double incomes. This is just a recipe for a caste system.

    In the end, the family structure provides the morality that sustains the society and fulfills the demands of production. So I cannot see how

    The reason that we need the “Dark Enlightenment” is because we need to use MORE science, not less. We need to use science to demonstate that the german social model is correct, but that anglo ratio-empiricism is correct. We need the common law. But germanic morality, community and duty.

    Because we anglos have no community at all any longer.

    And without community we are dead.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-28 06:36:00 UTC

  • EVOLUTIONARY RAPIDITY UNDER PATERNALISM AND PRIVATE PROPERTY Because evolution h

    EVOLUTIONARY RAPIDITY UNDER PATERNALISM AND PRIVATE PROPERTY

    Because evolution has apparently accelerated under agrarianism and property rights, I am slowly beginning to think that I can make the case that evolution is faster under paternalism and property rights than under maternalism and communism. So not only is maternalism dysgenic, but it prevents adaptation? Not only are paternalism and property rights eugenic, but accelerates adaptation despite the fact that we are no longer under environmental selection pressures?

    That’s a pretty interesting moral argument against matrilinealism: that it’s not only dysgenic, but maladaptive. Which would certainly explain its absence.

    I keep finding correlations between property and genetics. I don’t mean to find them. They just happen to be there.

    This correlates with the book I read this weekend: Butler Schaffer’s Boundaries of Order. I really don’t like the soft structure of his argument by analogy – which I object to almost always – but it is apparently the case that property is necessary for evolutionary competition.

    FYI: Michael J. McKay


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-26 04:46:00 UTC

  • “To every man upon this earth Death cometh soon or late. And how can man die bet

    “To every man upon this earth

    Death cometh soon or late.

    And how can man die better

    Than facing fearful odds,

    For the ashes of his fathers,

    And the temples of his Gods.”

    HEROISM


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-25 10:22:00 UTC