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Deinocrates
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This is all on top of the problem that at many schools departments of classics, philosophy, political science, and history have been so thoroughly barbarized and feminized that at many schools young men of any heart sense from the outset that taking courses in these subjects, to say nothing of majoring or pursuing graduate degrees and careers in these fields, won't be worth their time
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@PrinceVogel There are only eight here but it's so evocative of muses appearing to a shepherd-poet it seems worth mentioning en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dream…
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@scottyenor Great piece: "Each genuinely classical faculty member is a kind of miracle, surviving as a generalist in an age of extreme specialization and scientism" is spot on

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@chiefofautism @apralky He looks so happy here. Before he learned about technological stagnation or the terrible esoteric truth of the scapegoat
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this guy write manifestos about "power-maxxing" and collected 27k followers who all want the same thing he does - influence
his theory: elites outsource thinking so become "epistemic slave" and get real power
he figured out one thing: writing ABOUT influence attracts people who WANT influence. but that's the trap - actual decision makers don't read power-maxxing manifestos, they're too busy having power
his handle handle (schmitt/land reference) + mao quotes + cynical analysis = signaling he's "in" on post-rat/acc discourse
he built an mlm scheme for influence. selling the dream of power to people who want it but don't have it. might be profitable
he writes that all "riffs" (ideologies) are masks for wanting power. his own riff is "i'm the guy who understands how power works." it's meta but still just content for wannabes
compare to dwarkesh patel who he mentions: dwarkesh makes content FOR decision makers (interviews with tech leaders). this guy makes content ABOUT becoming a decision maker - for people who aren't
cope network
the 27k aren't elites who will outsource their thinking to him. they're other kids who read manifestos about influence while actual influential people are... doing things that matter
peak silicon valley brain rot

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I wonder if Rosen or anyone else talked about the fact that Strauss did teach Nietzsche (and more than once) at Chicago, even while he didn't teach Heidegger. Similarly he does, however quietly, name Nietzsche in his books but never Heidegger, as far as I can remember. For a teacher who is concerned about about forming his students or readers properly, I can understand avoiding both Nietzsche and Heidegger, but I don't see why he'd avoid Heidegger absolutely but not avoid Nietzsche. @ls_foundation do you have any thoughts on this?
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@Bossbabyonesie I agree in principle but I also think the Greeks had a sense of natural and rational proportions and did approach “the truth” more closely than any other style. I hope that we can surpass them but surpassing them will be based on studying them
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@Bossbabyonesie We're building neoneoclassical glowingblue Atlantis and there's nothing you can do about it bucko
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@DavidDecosimo Could you clarify or explain in more detail exactly what happened? It's difficult for a reader to evaluate what happened here or why. It sounds like you may be talking about specific disagreements among those who agree in the broad project of "civic schools"
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@deinocratesarch Actually im going to amend that. We have at BYU a student of harvey mansfield and (christian) straussian. So probably more strauss than your average university.
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"The founding fathers of modern philosophy . . . went so far as to assert that, just as the knowledge of each individual progresses in the course of his life, the knowledge of the whole human race necessarily advances from day to day, i.e., from generation to generation. In asserting this, they underrated the difference between inherited knowledge, i.e., the knowledge which one acquires in schools and universities, and independently acquired knowledge, i.e., knowledge acquired by a mature scholar. Thus it came to pass that inherited knowledge was given the same cognitive status as independently acquired knowledge. (Witness the phrase: the results of modern research.) Whereas, actually, inherited knowledge is hardly distinguishable from prejudice: inherited knowledge is, in the typical case, a collection of true prejudices. . . . In some cases, it so happens that what, to begin with, is supposed to be inherited knowledge or true prejudice proves to be an inherited error."
Leo Strauss "Historicism" (1941 lecture)

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@Vermeullarmine You should. I'm a political theorist in training and this recent footnote on Schmitt changed how I approach and understand him (and other writers)

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I need to write a sustained essay on the many, many cases in which philosophers and political theorists have misunderstood figures like Bodin, Montesquieu, and Schmitt by reading them as though they were writing philosophy and political theory, whereas in fact they were jurists writing as jurists.
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