Theme: Civilization

  • LEARNING ART HISTORY You read Gardner – I mean that’s enough. You learn world hi

    LEARNING ART HISTORY

    You read Gardner – I mean that’s enough. You learn world history; you get a vague grasp of technological history -most of art history is the evolution of representational technologies on the one hand and mythos (symbolism) on the other.

    Monumental art is expensive, and empires can afford the expensive, and it’s one of the few things that is extremely difficult to imitate without equal expense, so it has extraordinary signal value. Monuments are profoundly good investments in reality. There is no equivalent.

    When you understand its all just money, and that military empires create good art because they both can afford to and politically need to then it’s all rather obvious.

    From that knowledge base you can focus on the mastery of each of the crafts – all of which combine both technical knowledge with extraordinary repetition (training). And so I found working in fine art as tedious as playing chess: in order to be good enough you must spend ten years getting there and only after that have you any chance of making a difference.

    As such, either you find an innovation in representational technology young and use it (like mathematicians do) or you develop deep talents like all craftsmen do.

    The problem with literature at present (meaning) is that (((they))) have been working through marxism, POMO, feminism for over a century now to destroy all forms of excellence via critique – essentially soiling everything that is beautiful and excellent with the fecal matter of marxism/feminism/postmodernism.

    I know that I read encyclopedias and history young, studied art and see human history as the evolution of arts and technologies. It was after I added economics and economic history that I developed a wholistic understanding of man.

    Hence why I have a low opinion of the history of thought: it consists largely of the middle class writing opposition literature against the status quo by proposing ideals that are existentially impossible but agitating and cathartic none the less.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-05-19 10:57:00 UTC

  • Learning Art History

    You read Gardner – I mean that’s enough. You learn world history; you get a vague grasp of technological history -most of art history is the evolution of representational technologies on the one hand and mythos (symbolism) on the other. Monumental art is expensive, and empires can afford the expensive, and it’s one of the few things that is extremely difficult to imitate without equal expense, so it has extraordinary signal value. Monuments are profoundly good investments in reality. There is no equivalent. When you understand its all just money, and that military empires create good art because they both can afford to and politically need to then it’s all rather obvious. From that knowledge base you can focus on the mastery of each of the crafts – all of which combine both technical knowledge with extraordinary repetition (training). And so I found working in fine art as tedious as playing chess: in order to be good enough you must spend ten years getting there and only after that have you any chance of making a difference. As such, either you find an innovation in representational technology young and use it (like mathematicians do) or you develop deep talents like all craftsmen do. The problem with literature at present (meaning) is that (((they))) have been working through marxism, POMO, feminism for over a century now to destroy all forms of excellence via critique – essentially soiling everything that is beautiful and excellent with the fecal matter of marxism/feminism/postmodernism. I know that I read encyclopedias and history young, studied art and see human history as the evolution of arts and technologies. It was after I added economics and economic history that I developed a wholistic understanding of man. Hence why I have a low opinion of the history of thought: it consists largely of the middle class writing opposition literature against the status quo by proposing ideals that are existentially impossible but agitating and cathartic none the less. May 19, 2018 10:57am

  • Learning Art History

    You read Gardner – I mean that’s enough. You learn world history; you get a vague grasp of technological history -most of art history is the evolution of representational technologies on the one hand and mythos (symbolism) on the other. Monumental art is expensive, and empires can afford the expensive, and it’s one of the few things that is extremely difficult to imitate without equal expense, so it has extraordinary signal value. Monuments are profoundly good investments in reality. There is no equivalent. When you understand its all just money, and that military empires create good art because they both can afford to and politically need to then it’s all rather obvious. From that knowledge base you can focus on the mastery of each of the crafts – all of which combine both technical knowledge with extraordinary repetition (training). And so I found working in fine art as tedious as playing chess: in order to be good enough you must spend ten years getting there and only after that have you any chance of making a difference. As such, either you find an innovation in representational technology young and use it (like mathematicians do) or you develop deep talents like all craftsmen do. The problem with literature at present (meaning) is that (((they))) have been working through marxism, POMO, feminism for over a century now to destroy all forms of excellence via critique – essentially soiling everything that is beautiful and excellent with the fecal matter of marxism/feminism/postmodernism. I know that I read encyclopedias and history young, studied art and see human history as the evolution of arts and technologies. It was after I added economics and economic history that I developed a wholistic understanding of man. Hence why I have a low opinion of the history of thought: it consists largely of the middle class writing opposition literature against the status quo by proposing ideals that are existentially impossible but agitating and cathartic none the less. May 19, 2018 10:57am

  • The difference is that speech has been sacred in our civilization, and the oppos

    The difference is that speech has been sacred in our civilization, and the opposite in (((theirs))).


    Source date (UTC): 2018-05-18 12:16:42 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/997450905762041857

  • The difference is that speech has been sacred in our civilization, and the oppos

    The difference is that speech has been sacred in our civilization, and the opposite in (((theirs))).


    Source date (UTC): 2018-05-18 08:16:00 UTC

  • well, you know, the problem with taking what you want is numbers. the purpose of

    well, you know, the problem with taking what you want is numbers. the purpose of morality is that it increases your numbers. High trust moral civilizations produce awesome profits and therefore weapons.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-05-18 01:39:09 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/997290460346449920

    Reply addressees: @someperson426

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/997277729455198208


    IN REPLY TO:

    Original post on X

    Original tweet unavailable — we could not load the text of the post this reply is addressing on X. That usually means the tweet was deleted, the account is protected, or X does not expose it to the account used for archiving. The Original post link below may still open if you view it in X while signed in.

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/997277729455198208

  • By Bill Joslin Duschene posed that a shift to, in his words, autonomy (rather th

    By Bill Joslin

    Duschene posed that a shift to, in his words, autonomy (rather than individualism – but colloquially it’s the same reference) is what allowed west to rise – individuals are more productive without necessarily working harder under those conditions.

    The outcome was to raise all of humanity out of poverty, sickness and early death. In short Europe, by accidentally providing individual protections and access to markets, did what the Buddha couldn’t.

    We have to stop fighting the left according to their definitions because it ends up us doing damages to ourselves.

    Early forms of “diversity” specifically the abstraction of kinship sentiment into civic values, produced VARIATION in the polis (variations of those who held the same civic values) and law constrained variation from spinning off into diversity.

    Just as equality before the law produces equity, the left blows this into a moral ideal and has us arguing against equality before the law.

    They’ve taken the notion of tolerating arbitrary and irrelevant differences for civic life, which increases trust, franchise, and cooperation without destroying civic cohesion (a replacement for religion I might add) and blown this into an ideal and have us arguing against core mechanisms which have produced our rise.

    We got here because we incrementally increases agency in the polis by ensuring autonomy (legal.protections access to.

    markets) and we did so under the term “individualism” (which I might add is a pre-roman European value of which, without it, western “restlessness” would not have been preserved.)

    Let’s stop fighting the enemy’s battles for them.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-05-17 18:20:00 UTC

  • “Politics and religion are different and are extremely hard to mix together”—J

    —“Politics and religion are different and are extremely hard to mix together”—James Portocarrero

    Judaism and islam do it. The church was too weak to do it. Chinese never had the problem.

    WHY:

    homogeneity = reason. Heterogeneity = Religion.

    THAT’S THE REASON

    The problem is heterogeneity (diversity).

    Religion = Stagnation to create homogeneity that doesn’t exist.

    Law = Adaptation to change in homogeneity that does exist.

    REALLY. THAT’S IT.

    There is a reason for ‘demand’ for religion

    There is a reason for ‘demand’ for socialization.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-05-17 08:13:00 UTC

  • If we forcibly moved all of them to Palestine, then in about four centuries they

    If we forcibly moved all of them to Palestine, then in about four centuries they’ll be ethically protestant. Why? Landholding ethics, and high trust ethics needed to scale organizations. Either that or they’d be defeated. We forget they had a professional class but never a middle MANAGERIAL class.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-05-16 18:15:00 UTC

  • I vividly remember my father and the rest of the men in town lining main street

    I vividly remember my father and the rest of the men in town lining main street carrying shotguns – absolutely determined that “it won’t happen here”.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-05-15 15:17:46 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/996409309352415233

    Reply addressees: @sapinker @POLITICOMag

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/996406844707950593


    IN REPLY TO:

    @sapinker

    If you think the country is polarized now, remember that in ‘68-‘69 there were 700 domestic bombings. https://t.co/ceaIPQwkI1 via @politicomag

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/996406844707950593