Understanding Modern Civilization

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  • čas přidán 23. 01. 2024
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    Bibliography:
    Tragedy and Hope by Carroll Quiggley
    The Master and His Emissary by Ian McGhilChrist
    Seeing Like a State by James C Scott
    A Secular Age by Charles Taylor
    The Unabomber's Manifesto by Ted Zazynsky
    The Ascent of Humanity by Charles Eisenstein
    The Happiness Hypothesis by Jon Haidt
    The Righteous Mind by Jon Haidt
    The Growth Delusion by David Pilling
    The Third World Century by Charles Stewart Goodwin
    The Leviathan and its Enemies by Samuel Francis
    Regime Change by Patrick Deneen
    After Liberalism by Paul Gottfried
    The Culture of Narcissim by Lasch
    Stolen Focus by Johann Hari
    Lost Connections by Johann Hari
    Amusing Ourselves to Death by Neil Postman
    Evil by Baumeister
    The True Believer by Eric Hoffer
    Behave by Sapolsky
    The Decline of the West by Oswald Spengler
    Sex and Power in History by Amaury de Riencourt
    The Eye of Shiva by Amaury de Riencourt
    The Coddling of the American Mind by Jon Haidt
    The Culture Map by Erin Meyer
    Man and His Symbols by Carl Jung
    Dominion by Tom Holland
    Sapiens Yuval Noah Harari
    War in Human Nature by Azar Gat
    The Lonely Crowd by David Riesman
    Spiteful Mutants by Edward Dutton
    Atrocities by Matthew White
    The Dictators by Richard Overy
    Bloodlands by Timothy Snyder
    The Rise of the West by McNeil
    Europe by Norman Davies
    The Invention of Yesterday by Tamim Ansary
    The History of Manners by Norbert Elias
    Ultrasociety by Peter Turchin
    Millennium by Ian Mortimer
    The Evolution of Civilizations by Carroll Quiggley
    The Pursuit of Power by William McNeill
    The Knowledge Machine by Michael Strevens
    Reason, Faith and the Struggle for the West by Sam Gregg
    Maps of Meaning by Jordan Peterson
    A Conflict of Visions by Thomas Sowell
    Sexual Personae by Camille Paglia
    Envy by Helmut Schoeck
    Cynical Theories by James Lindsay
    Intellectuals and Society by Thomas Sowell
    Foragers, Farmers and Fossil Fuels by Ian Morris
    Th History of Philosophy by Will Durant
    The Philosophy of History by Hegel
    Stillness is the Key by Ryan Holliday
    Examined Lives by James Miller
    Enlightenment Now by Steven Pinker
    The Rebel All by Joseph Heath
    The Lessons of History by Will Durant
    Seven Theories of Human Nature by Stevenson
    Trump and a Post Truth World by Ken Wilbur
    Technics and Civilization by Lewis Mumford
    A World after Liberalism by Matthew Rose
    Fire in the Minds of Men by Billington
    The Secret History of the World by Mark Booth
    The Myth of Disenchantment by Strom
    Coming to Our Senses by Morris Berman
    A History of the Jews by Paul Johnson

Komentáře • 2,7K

  • @WhatifAltHist
    @WhatifAltHist  Před 6 měsíci +128

    Go to www.galaxylamps.co/whatif and use code WHATIF to get your Galaxy Projector 2.0 with 15% off!

    • @Adr1231
      @Adr1231 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Evil Frenchie

    • @SayNoToDemocide1
      @SayNoToDemocide1 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Hey WIAH. In the past you mentioned planning on making a video about anxiety (the emotions that push civilization).
      I've made a couple of videos about anxiety that serve as addendums to statements you've made. My videos are "Why Isn't Self-Defense a Human Right? Why Does the Media Support Gun control? - AmericaBad" and "An Addendum to WhatIfAltHist's A Study of Decadence: Why do people become Tankies?".
      The former is about how the urban west is driven by anxiety, while the latter is the decadent political class, the collapse of trust in society and the rise of political polarisation and totalitarianism.

    • @Atabanza
      @Atabanza Před 6 měsíci +3

      -Even when sin does assist in the construction of every society, modern society is the beloved child of the capital sins.

    • @YearZeroNotion
      @YearZeroNotion Před 6 měsíci +1

      Im good

    • @skibidi.G
      @skibidi.G Před 6 měsíci +1

      When will you become a Orthodox 👌☦️🤙 broh ? Hm ?

  • @vilimylly
    @vilimylly Před 6 měsíci +862

    "The duality of of the autistic masculine and the hysteric feminine." You hit the nail on the head with that one! I've never heard anyone describe modern civilisation so accuratley.

    • @bastait
      @bastait Před 6 měsíci

      what if all this didnt descrive shit well he is quoting gnosticism...
      congratulations 6you can be a vapid tool just like this statist clown is with one simple 3 hour video on gnosticism and western esotericism.

    • @nathanwalker6360
      @nathanwalker6360 Před 6 měsíci +20

      😂 fucking amazing wording 😂

    • @SQUIDBEARSTUDIO
      @SQUIDBEARSTUDIO Před 6 měsíci +21

      That’s why Christ’s And Nietzsche’s Wisdom Of Becoming Like Children Not Infantile, But Youthful was and is so important now then ever!

    • @bastait
      @bastait Před 6 měsíci +23

      @@SQUIDBEARSTUDIO whatifalthist supports arguments that nieztsche would of openly mocked he completely buys into herd mentality.

    • @SQUIDBEARSTUDIO
      @SQUIDBEARSTUDIO Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@bastait Your right i made a bad comment then.

  • @Melammu0
    @Melammu0 Před 6 měsíci +1513

    A man who snuffs out his emotion becomes a robot. A man who does not develop his mind becomes an animal. Balance must be achieved.

    • @billyherrington5112
      @billyherrington5112 Před 6 měsíci +1

      When you are autistic you are half robot half animal 😂

    • @GhostSamaritan
      @GhostSamaritan Před 6 měsíci +27

      This is the argument colonial slave owners used to justify the view that Africans and nomads are lesser than human, when the latter two actually chose to prioritize cynic-hedonic cultures over techno-progressive ones.

    • @falsehq1831
      @falsehq1831 Před 6 měsíci +7

      I'd wager that if they'd truly snuffed out their emotions they'd go catatonic.

    • @aliensinmyass7867
      @aliensinmyass7867 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Wow so FUCKING PROFOUND WOW

    • @aliyanimran3094
      @aliyanimran3094 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@GhostSamaritan Would suggest you comment it than in the replies.

  • @phaeton01
    @phaeton01 Před 6 měsíci +152

    Duuude, the modern HR department being this paradigms version of the clergy is soooo true

  • @IrateGamerW
    @IrateGamerW Před 6 měsíci +243

    When visiting my family in Switzerland, I spent most of my time with them at their place, which was all beautiful, heavy wood architecture hundreds of years old, with all the buildings nearby made of that same style. Yet, when we went into the center of the town to the grocery store, we were shocked to find a square, bare, concrete block with no windows. Easy to forget the shifts we have made with globalization and the like.

    • @uristmcary
      @uristmcary Před 4 měsíci +9

      or the clock, everything in society runs on a clock, but every location that sells normally avoids displaying the time.

    • @bigthoughts2644
      @bigthoughts2644 Před 4 měsíci +6

      They say the beauty of your civilization's architecture determines the general thoughts of that society on their place in the world.

    • @Bernadettk
      @Bernadettk Před 21 dnem +1

      Switzerland is an offshore land. Such a big shame.

  • @gadsdenimperitor2994
    @gadsdenimperitor2994 Před 6 měsíci +391

    You should do an April fools video that covers the history and influence of Mongolian heavy metal

  • @georgios_5342
    @georgios_5342 Před 6 měsíci +472

    28:29 as a Greek, I have to say that's very accurate. Western historiography makes it feel like we went extinct after Plato and Aristotle and all 👀

    • @NoName-xc6cg
      @NoName-xc6cg Před 6 měsíci +9

      I'd say our culture clearly became modern after 1922

    • @georgios_5342
      @georgios_5342 Před 6 měsíci +25

      @@NoName-xc6cg Our foreign policy was definitely neutered. However the biggest social change came about after 1974 in my opinion

    • @martinledermann1862
      @martinledermann1862 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@georgios_5342why 1974?

    • @user-uf2df6zf5w
      @user-uf2df6zf5w Před 6 měsíci +34

      Because that is when you guys created a lot of cultural output that has relevancy to this day.
      Minoan and mycenean Greece are fascinating, they have however almost 0 connection to today.
      Later Greece was conquered by the Romans and they get the credit for everything in that period (despite Greeks being still very prominent within the empire).
      The byzantines created a whole new cultural sphere, but orthodox culture is almost universally seen as inferior to classical.
      And since the late middle ages the wider region Greece is in was somewhat irrelevant except for the Ottoman politics and that one event in Bosnia in 1914.
      Today Greece is a peripheral state of Europe.

    • @georgios_5342
      @georgios_5342 Před 6 měsíci +16

      @@user-uf2df6zf5w ouch, that hurt. We have feelings too you know 🤕

  • @JB-gj8pu
    @JB-gj8pu Před 5 měsíci +14

    I visited an art museum recently where the art portrayed Western art by century from 16th to 20th. You could see the slow transition of artists who found inspiration in nature and the real world, to artists who were more interested in their own delusions and ideology.
    The 19th century was the last in which any meaningful art was produced. The 20th century exhibit wasn't art, but a deconstruction by those who thought they knew better.

  • @harshjain3122
    @harshjain3122 Před 6 měsíci +28

    Yup. I have to watch this twice or thrice to understand and soak in fully. And I am an engineer who watches 24/48hr long videos for certain projects in a stretch. Yet, the amount of ideas and the things I want to write down are way too many.
    Never in my life have I been more...in a state of trance than this video. So many 'oh damn, this makes sense', it really really...explains so many things that I always pondered about.
    Amazing work. Never stop. God bless.

    • @jakeharkunc5792
      @jakeharkunc5792 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I’m about to do my 2nd watch until 2 am and I’m glad to do it. I want to send this to everyone I know it’s so real.

  • @trentonfairley5451
    @trentonfairley5451 Před 6 měsíci +240

    The “We can be cursed togetherrr” part killed me 😂

    • @Telonious_Terp
      @Telonious_Terp Před 6 měsíci

      Timestamp?

    • @trentonfairley5451
      @trentonfairley5451 Před 6 měsíci +18

      @@Telonious_Terp the last 5 seconds of the video

    • @BonaldDrump
      @BonaldDrump Před 6 měsíci +10

      I lost my fucking marbles when I heard that🤣

    • @danielfinn9460
      @danielfinn9460 Před 6 měsíci +17

      Yeah, the self-awareness in his tone was great.
      Like, "Everything is gonna' suck for *everyone* ...which means that we'll be together. Aww... isn't that, like, nice or whatever?"
      A droll end to a video that made an earnest attempt to be realistic and honest.
      I'll say this for him: he's not slave to optimism.

    • @michaelweston409
      @michaelweston409 Před 5 měsíci

      Was sittin with a beer in my hand, watched the full video start to finish & lost my shit when he snuck that little tid bit at the very end 😂😂😂

  • @killyourtvnotme
    @killyourtvnotme Před 6 měsíci +64

    i had an art teacher who said we’re doing all we can to eliminate our humanity. i thought it odd at the time. now i get it
    i substitute teach in LA, they’re spending millions to modernize schools. i have a visceral reaction when i walk from the 1920s buildings to the new ones
    what was an open, airy building that had windows you could open is now a hermetically sealed box with tinted windows, multiple identical floors, and sterile classrooms
    something feels empty in modern buildings, no matter how sleek they make them

    • @gryn1s
      @gryn1s Před 2 měsíci +1

      Its not that modern architecture is necceseraly bad, what you see is a result of general decline in competence, esp in California, which is way past its golden age. Also, property taxes, which are huge in US, makes architecture the last place to put your leftover money.

  • @Mornathel
    @Mornathel Před 6 měsíci +88

    My family is from California but I grew up in the heart of Cajun country in the region called Acadiana. In terms of California, my family is very aware of its cultural and heritage being very German and Celtic. My mother’s maiden name is Zentmyer, and that side of the family is very proud of its German roots. We still practice the more Germanic inheritance system where the oldest son gets most of if not all the inheritance and family heirlooms. That’s why it was such a massive and huge deal when my great grandfather gave me his first naval saber instead of my grandfather. Due to the fact that my grandfather had no sons, and the firstborn son of my great uncle being very “modern,” I, as the traditional and heritage aware great grandson have gotten heirlooms I otherwise shouldn’t have. On my father’s side, my grandfather plans on giving all the important family heirlooms to my dad and mom as the firstborn and most appreciative of the family history. My great Grandfathers service weapons will go to my dad with the M1 Garand and captured Arisaka rifle already being passed down. The rifle has a chrysanthemum etching still on it which is a big deal.
    Watching this video helped crystallize why I’ve seen in my family. In both sides the first born are still traditional and and we are aware of our heritage and family history to the point we almost venerate it. While my cousins aunts and uncles are all very contemporary and modernist, not being as aware or even caring about our history or traditions.

    • @LarryWater
      @LarryWater Před 5 měsíci +3

      You're very lucky. My family was nothing but Catholic rice farmers who had no history.

    • @Mornathel
      @Mornathel Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@LarryWater I’m reminded of that very often. I knew all my great grandparents and still have a couple alive. All my grandparents are alive and we have pretty good recollection of where our family came from.

    • @brentbushnell2715
      @brentbushnell2715 Před 5 měsíci +3

      My family immigrated from England in 1638-39. My great, great grandfather was an Illinois Calvary sergeant in the civil war and his service pistol has passed grandfather to grandson twice down to me. Since I became a father at 45, I will need some good fortune for the tradition to continue; but my son is becoming a good candidate as well.

    • @alvinlin8140
      @alvinlin8140 Před 4 měsíci

      If your mother was so proud to be Germanic, then why did she marry a Celt

    • @Mornathel
      @Mornathel Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@alvinlin8140 because we’re Americans first and foremost. We may borderline venerate family history but we’ve been in America for a long time.

  • @kevincronk7981
    @kevincronk7981 Před 6 měsíci +55

    I get what you mean about world cities. I grew up right outside of DC and have always been completely used to everyone else being immigrants from literally everywhere but the US (name a country, 80% chance I've known people from there at some point). I'm a Freshman in college now and the students at my college are mostly from rural areas of the state and it's a huge culture shock, despite how technically we're both from Virginia. I have more in common with the immigrants from other parts of the world than with the people from the same state as me. However, the fact that it's people from all over the world, not people from NYC, London, and Dubai, makes me doubt that it's so much that these cities are just islands of a different culture as opposed to places where this different culture, which does exist everywhere, is concentrated.

    • @jameswilkerson4412
      @jameswilkerson4412 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Let me guess: you’re at Virginia Tech?

    • @kevincronk7981
      @kevincronk7981 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@jameswilkerson4412 yes

    • @ingold1470
      @ingold1470 Před 5 měsíci +2

      It might be a selection pressure, people move from the hinterland to a world city and the ones who acculturate easily are the ones who continue to globe trot long enough to meet you.

    • @NemisCassander
      @NemisCassander Před 3 měsíci +1

      Chesterton's chapter on Kipling in his book Heretics actually discusses this phenomenon in great detail.

    • @josiahmodaff6406
      @josiahmodaff6406 Před 2 měsíci

      Could you explain "places where this different culture, which does exist everywhere, is concentrated."

  • @marcodossantosoliveira9345
    @marcodossantosoliveira9345 Před 6 měsíci +169

    Bloody hell!!! I have watched this guy for years and he has mentioned Angola for the first time with a really clear description 👌🏾

  • @brandon3231
    @brandon3231 Před 6 měsíci +207

    This video validates a lot of what I've been thinking and feeling for the past decade or so: we're losing a lot of things we need, like family, religion, art, beauty, and nation. All we really have are material comforts and various things to distract us.
    But I'm ultimately thankful. Thanks to the videos on this channel, we've been given a chance to change course, if not society, then at least our own lives. And even though it feels like we've been cursed, things are not so different. Life has always been challenging, and can feel hopeless. Our ancestors managed to find a way, and I believe we can too.

    • @Mcfunface
      @Mcfunface Před 6 měsíci +19

      Yes, some will rise from the ashes, but make no mistake, our "opposition" has no delusions that he will win in the end, he just wishes to inflict as much destruction and pain upon humanity as possible.

    • @johnwolf2829
      @johnwolf2829 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Well, they say you have to lose something to understand its value..... and it's not like most people even seem to care very much anymore.
      They WILL, when it is too late.

    • @justjoshua5759
      @justjoshua5759 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@Mcfunfacediversity. Modernity and progressive viewpoints aren’t an evil enemy. Just a side you refuse to understand without innate negative bias.
      The modern world has faults but we are in large part comparison with the past. Moving into the right direction

    • @bennyv4444
      @bennyv4444 Před 6 měsíci +14

      Wars have never been more destructive, society has never been more stratified, there have never been more slaves than there are today. The myths of progress they taught me in school are a thin veneer over an ugly and barbaric era.

    • @doplr8711
      @doplr8711 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@bennyv4444 🤓🤓

  • @WestPictures
    @WestPictures Před 6 měsíci +51

    I love this channel because Rudyard is so earnest. It is great to hear someone passionate about these topics who isn't overly cynical or trying to seem hip. I like the conversational style

    • @IaMaPh1991
      @IaMaPh1991 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I would say his lack of cynicism/pessimism/nihilism, to such a degree that it comes off as if he is actively eschewing it, is one of his bigger failings to me, despite my enjoyment and acknowledgement of his content.
      It comes off as if he knows in his heart that there is some degree of validity to those philosophical frameworks, at least as a response to certain situational conditions depending on the individual, but won't allow any affirmation for such things because even acknowledging a hint of it is the crack in the armor that eventually undoes the entirety of one's more positively inclined worldview no matter how strongly grounded they adhere to it, and thus he vehemently avoids it at all cost and denounces it at every opportunity, implied or otherwise.
      In the end, that is ultimately his right to do so, even if I fundamentally disagree with almost every aspect of his approach and overall framework to how he tackles these topics.

  • @jacobabarrera
    @jacobabarrera Před 6 měsíci +61

    I fell into a similar Gnostic trap with Jung. I became infatuated with his work, leaving Christianity as I knew it. I found it so fascinating, especially the way that he would speak about things. It wasn’t until a year after Jungian analysis that I encountered the true, Gnostic element of his work: the introduction of Satan into the Godhead (turning the trinity into the “quaternary”), which he saw as a necessary step in the evolution of our understanding of Christianity.
    He has a similar theme in “Answer to Job”, where he speculates that God will incarnate his “evil” side as the Anti-Christ in this new age.
    I immediately realized I had gone amiss, and was a practicing Gnostic. I’m still dealing with the repercussions to this day. I had always known God was absolutely good, and hearing this shattered my world.
    I’ve since returned to Christianity, although I find it a massive struggle after being imbued with Jungian psychology for so many years. Of course, there is some truth in Jung (projection, shadow, etc.), but the “path of individuation” is never ending and essentially a new-age, Neo-Pagan Gnosticism.
    Jung interestingly had visions of himself being the “crucified Christ”, and his “soul”, personified as Philemon, urged him to be the prophet of a new religion. I did not know this either, and all his work has become dubious at best.
    I think Freud was right when he criticized Jung’s archetypal psychology as a “return to animism”, which Jung most likely would have enjoyed.
    Christianity is so special because salvation comes first and foremost, and that we need to step away from evil, not “integrate it”. Once you accept Christ, you watch Him change who you are as a person through the Holy Spirit. He is the “spring of salvation”, a spring that heals from the inside out once a sip is taken in.
    Christ is He who stretches out the ouroboros and crushes its head.
    Perhaps the ouroboros is better understand as a symbol of our perpetual folly, engagement with sin, and it’s repetitive nature throughout civilization, until Christ returns as King and ends the story once and for all, only to begin a new one full of beauty and grace, devoid of sin. The ouroboros is a serpent, after all.
    Wisdom is better than all knowledge. The Gnostics mistake the former for the latter.

    • @Gerwulf97
      @Gerwulf97 Před 6 měsíci +11

      Thank you for this comment, I had no idea. My exposure to Jung is mostly from Jordan Peterson, but I don't watch him much anymore, just like Rudyard actually, because there is an offness that comes from their fundamental beliefs not being true. Acknowledging God or the usefulness of Christianity is not enough, and it shows how hungry and desperate we are for voices that aren't atheistic materialist postmodernists, but that doesn't mean alternative voices will in the end lead us to better places if they don't believe in Jesus Christ.

    • @jacobabarrera
      @jacobabarrera Před 5 měsíci +8

      ​@@Gerwulf97 Glad the comment helped! And I will say that Rudyard has said many times he himself is Christian and religious, unlike Jung or Peterson. He doesn't only say it's useful, but that he is actually a Christian, which is something worth considering.
      I find Rudyard's perspectives very illuminating and helpful to understand the world, especially considering he is Gen Z like myself, and he is talking about very real and serious things I think older generations do not get.
      And, regarding Peterson, the Bible tells us to judge an individual based off of their fruits. While Peterson doesn't explicitly call himself a Christian (unlike his daughter and wife, who are both practicing Catholics), the fruit of his work has led many to become true Christians, and those who listen who don't become Christian definitely come away with more respect and admiration of the truth of a Judeo-Christian worldview - something pretty much all mainstream academics neglect.
      Jung, on the other hand, has undoubtedly contributed something meaningful to the discussion, but he took a few drastic missteps that I think cause misery. The concept of projection, introversion and extroversion, the shadow, and others are his brainchildren (although projection has been known through religious terms since Christ - analogous to the verses "do not comment on the speck in another mans eye when there is a plank in your own" as well as "judge others lest you judge yourselves").
      Jung's problem was his hubris, the root of all sin. He had a messiah complex, evident in his fantasies. He had one vision that comes to mind, where a figure he called Philemon told him that he was the prophet of a new religion. He denied he was, but I think unconsciously he wanted it.
      His downfall was that he claimed he was an empirical scientist, which was certainly true in the beginning of his career, but as he got older, it seemed his hubris got the best of him, and with his two "greatest works", according to him, 'Aeon" and 'Answer to Job', he completed the process of forming his 'new religion', an Abrahamic, Neo-Pagan religion in which the 'Self" is to be realized intrinsically in a narcissistic manner as opposed to extrinsically in the figure of Christ, leading one to call upon metaphysical, living 'archetypes' as opposed to recognizing archetypes as symbolic representations of one's emotions, to put it simply.
      Everything in the Bible that refers to worshipping false idols is important because when we worship false idols we are not worshipping other gods and goddesses, but ourselves and our emotions, which consist of archetypal motifs (remember that Lucifer wanted to be like God and worshipped himself). In order to 'deal with the realm of the archetypes', which isn't really a realm but our emotions in a sense, we need Christ, or else we drown and worship false idols, or worse. This is a similar realization that C.S. Lewis came to after a deep conversation with J.R.R. Tolkien.
      This is why fairytales are incredibly complex and useful, because we can recognize their 'unrealness' as being fake or fairy like, i.e. there is no such thing as a 'big bad wolf', but also recognize their realness in the psychological sense and how they can help one deal with coming of age, how to overcome one's "dragons", and other emotional motifs, while still worshipping the True God of Christ, as most fairytales are archetypal stories nestled in a Judeo-Christian worldview.
      In effect, it's practical to look at most mythological narratives as fairytales, which can be useful when determining psychological truths. Christianity cannot be viewed as merely mythological (although there is obviously metaphor, such as the creation myth, and Christ Himself speaks in parables), as it is perhaps the only religion which can be traced to a single individual who actually lived, breathed, died on the cross, and ressurected (the later being evident by the ardent and almost insane dedication of early Christians and their persistence on spreading the gospel and their willingness for martyrdom, which would only be possible if somebody saw someone who ressurected). In effect, it is the "archetype made flesh", as put by Bishop Barron (a play on the "word was made flesh").

    • @Sage1Million
      @Sage1Million Před 5 měsíci +5

      It seems to me that your decision to reject gnosticsm and Jungian psychology was made out of an emotional response not wisdom. You read something that you’ve been raised to disbelieve and so you disbelieve.

    • @jacobabarrera
      @jacobabarrera Před 5 měsíci +10

      @@Sage1Million No, this is untrue and something I’ve considered. Gnosticism is inherently flawed and the antithesis of the profundity of the Christian message. I have not rejected Jungian psychology, I have taken my insights and will continue to do so. The issue with Jung is that the very Bible that he uses in order to postulate the evil within God clearly states that “God is Good, and God is light - there is no darkness in Him”. Jung intentionally ignores this, much to the dismay of Victor White, one of Jung’s closest friends (Jung referred to White as his “White Raven”). White wrote a very good rebuttal of Answer to Job which I found useful, and maybe you will as well.
      Gnosticism has many problems. The first is that it flips Christ’s message on its head. Gnostics believe that in order to be saved they must find “inner knowledge” and transcend a world of evil. Christ’s original message is that nobody can be saved through their own works, but through Christ alone and his sacrifice. We are all damned, and there’s nothing you can do about it. This is why Christ had to come down and be resurrected, because there is quite literally nothing we can do.
      Christ is the spring of salvation, the Holy Grail. It’s seemingly simple and not nearly as flamboyant or extravagant as the golden chalice. It’s only once someone takes a sip, as in recognize Christ, are they able to be saved. Once taken, Christ works through an individual and changes them throughout. Salvation comes first.
      Gnostics and Jungian psychology believe in individuation, a process of achieving psychic wholeness by integrating shadow elements and the archetypes, with the Anima being the most difficult archetype for men to integrate which usually comes later in life. There is no denying archetypal elements, but whether they are living metaphysical archetypes or rather the personification of archetypal emotions is another story, but I digress.
      Individuation does not really exist. It’s Sisyphus’ boulder. One can never fully achieve psychic wholeness if it even exists. And individual simply grows and changes and has life experiences. Certainly there are unconscious elements festering beneath, but whether we are a cork on an ocean is something that hasn’t been proven.
      Additionally, gnostics believe that the snake in the Garden was good, and that the bite from the apple was necessary and not an evil step. This is also incorrect for many reasons, but nevertheless it always comes down to the devil’s worst and most sinful attribute: pride.
      The desire to be God is the main flaw with Gnosticism and Jungian psychology. “The Self” is worshipped instead of God, with “The Self” being the central archetype and often seen as God, or perhaps a King. Consequently, Jungian psychology holds that each individual is a manifestation of “The Self”, aka “God”, and that we are each individual incarnations of God. This is a great and tragic blunder that doesn’t make much sense.
      The Pride of Satan is also clearly seen in Jung’s work. Again, Lucifer wanted to be God, which is why he fell from heaven and continues to cause chaos (metaphorically or literally - I’m unsure). I find it odd how Jung comes to the decision to break apart the trinity by force and insert Satan into the Godhead… that literally sounds like a ploy of the devil, as does the eventual incarnation of evil God in the form of the anti-Christ.
      Answer to Job is Biblical fanfiction, and Aion has its own issues. Jung’s work on Alchemy is much more favorable to me, as it is impossible to ignore the alchemical nature of symbols in dreams (as my sister, who knows nothing about gnosticism, had an ouroborus in her dream), but nevertheless none of it is necessary for salvation.
      Jung, in effect, is still incredibly useful, and his insights continue to shape my perspective as they have in the past. However, it’s best to take his psychological considerations more than his meta-physical postulations.
      And surely emotions were evolved in my decision to turn back to Christianity, but more so because I felt as if I had been duped and I cast Christ aside and thought I could do it all alone. My entire life I have always known (not believed) that God is good, even throughout my complete adoration for Jungianism and the esoteric. I was not raised to believe that God was good because I’ve always had God and could see His hand in my life and I have never felt as if He had abandonded me. I know many who were raised to believe that God was good and they do not believe so now - most actually.
      But lastly, I also considered this. Jung loved to be romantic about his view of life, and how he “lived in his own deepest hell” and famously “no tree can reach heaven unless his roots reach down to hell”. I always thought that so clever and wise, but now I find it, honestly, foolish. Is that anyway to live your life, in hell? I looked to those who had the most genuine joy in life and a passion for life itself: C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien and others.
      When it comes down to it, I want to be joyful in my life. At the end of the day, you judge a tree by its fruits, and I began seeing that the fruits of Jungianism and Gnosticism were rotten.
      And to you, the one who considers himself a sage: perhaps reconsider gnosticism and Jungian psychology. Being a Christian doesn’t mean being straight edge or not analyzing dreams and such: quite the contrary indeed. But it means surrendering and letting go of this incessant desire to integrate and to become whole. You cannot do it. It cannot be done.
      Last critique of Jungian psychology and modern day gnosticism is that it practically ignores Theology, which is, in part, psychological but also metaphysical. Theology is the birthplace of every other branch of scientific thought and has been evolving for thousands of years - from Augustine to Aquinas and beyond. Jung often said the “theologians don’t understand him” (specifically after White’s rebuttal), but I think that he neglected to understand the theologians, and that they have been working on the conception of the trinity.
      Am I of the disposition to accept all positions of the Church? No, quite the contrary, and I find demoninations to be of too much importance in my estimation. However, it is important that a follower of Christ has community. Another thing that is selfish and narcissistic about Jungianism and Gnosticism is its overbearing individualism, suffering alone, and that only the individual can find salvation after a long and arduous process. Most Jungians I meet are quite selfish, which is probably why I felt inclined towards it.
      Christ, the eternal Tao, is the one who slays and flattens the Ouroboros; He is the alpha and the omega - the author of light. In Christ there is no darkness.

    • @zacharysilver911
      @zacharysilver911 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@jacobabarreraThank you for defending Peterson. I think too many people want to throw the baby out with the bath water when it comes to him

  • @SWORDofGOD
    @SWORDofGOD Před 6 měsíci +67

    Another point I'd like to make, is that the hard Sciences are becoming less and less hard. And being more and more driven by whatever political, ideological & economic pressures are being pushed on it.

    • @seraphinduvolzairo5938
      @seraphinduvolzairo5938 Před 6 měsíci +13

      They always were. Look at what they did to Galileo. When nuclear physics started progressing, what did people in power financed to harness these discoveries? The atomic bomb, as it was the most politically "useful" at the time. Even the muslim golden age petered out because the scientists and discovery got increasingly paranoid of having their activities branded as incompatible with islam.

    • @AmericanAdvancement
      @AmericanAdvancement Před 6 měsíci

      ⁠@@seraphinduvolzairo5938Societies that ignore or politicize the hard sciences will always be outcompeted by those who value them for what they are, tools for the advancement of society. The Muslim caliphates or the city states of Italy would be ruling the world right now if they properly utilized those tools, but they didn’t. The only reason why the atom bomb was built was because it was feared that the Germans were racing down their own nuclear program and would win the war, but we got there first due to our valuing the field of science that would lead to it instead of viewing it as “Jew science” that was to be disregarded.

    • @joshmiller9783
      @joshmiller9783 Před 2 měsíci +3

      ​@@seraphinduvolzairo5938 yea i dont think people really understand science dindamentally is just learning about something to manipulate said thing to your desire.

  • @Tgruss
    @Tgruss Před 6 měsíci +124

    I have been hearing these ideas piecemeal from different people for the past two years. This is the first time I’ve heard them all coherently tied together into a single line of thought. It is as if the highlights of my own intellectual interests have culminated into a single video. You need to expand out this script into a book to get it out to the main stream.

  • @rms1034
    @rms1034 Před 6 měsíci +20

    architecture is highly dependent on the building-science technology and techniques of how its components come together. Cost also plays a huge factor to the features and forms that a building features. Its technology driving the aesthetics. Modern materials of steel, glass, concrete, aluminum, waterproof membranes, modern HVAC systems, Lighting systems, electrical systems, plumbing systems - have yielded the modern industrialially constructed "international modern style of contemporary architecture" it simply is the cheapest and most efficient way to create useable, climate controled, interior space for the purposes of work, live, production etc. Anything outisde this minimalist modern mold is essentially relegated as "ornimentation" and usually requires specialized craftsman in order to add frilly decoration or ornamentation (which was much more prevelant in previous centuries) - ornamentation was more common because of 3 factors: 1. the building owners were relatively rich and they demanded it. 2. the constructors such as veryday construction workers of previous eras were highly under payed and thus having lots of craftsman to create decorative ornamentation was somewhat affordable. 3. there was a much greater importance in a buildings 'stately presence' than today. in modern day, buildings are more often regarded simply as machines which facilitate a specific mechanical function (the human inhabitants being part of this machine) the machine was either a machine for living, or a machine for creating money, or delivering a service, or production or manufacturing of goods etc etc.

  • @craiggillett5985
    @craiggillett5985 Před 6 měsíci +30

    Wow. I have to watch this again. You’re right. It’s blown my mind. I’m an agent of post modernity by trade, I’m socially engineering a companies culture, mind set, view of the world, to make the machine move faster, consistently, and maximise profit. I’m destroying the previous company society and culture by reengineering the entire structure, breaking long established traditions and ways of being, eliminating exceptions, and disguising it all under the cloud of progress. I’m driving concepts of individualism, Development of the self, picking winners and losers using questionable scientific and behavioural science data amassed since world war 2, creating management decisions based on autistic data. And what’s really made me sit up and pay attention is that I’m really, really good at it. I’m the penultimate outcome of the elites post war GenZ. No values, no religion, fully believe in and practice the deindustrialisation model you presented, I see everyone as equal, don’t recognise difference in culture, religion etc, because my entire world view is a socially engineered construct (like the matrix) and underneath it all there’s nothing. No family, no history, no religion nothingness. So I find myself asking, am I happy, and more importantly do I even know what happiness is. Shit this is deep….. I wonder what the Kardashians are up to these days 😉

    • @mobilityproject3485
      @mobilityproject3485 Před 6 měsíci +1

      A certain enormous number of weeks ago today, someone gave you the opportunity to not get what you necessarily earn or deserve, to change your ways and hopefully repair the damage you did. It was hard. You'll have to figure out for yourself, are you ready to try?

    • @craiggillett5985
      @craiggillett5985 Před 5 měsíci

      @@mobilityproject3485 so interesting. I went to work for impoverished first peoples tribes for nearly 3 years. Quit the corporates, worked ‘not for profit’ making a difference. I tried, but ended up going into another sector, again. Does that count?

    • @gobot90
      @gobot90 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@mobilityproject3485HAHAHAHHAHSHAHAHA

    • @mobilityproject3485
      @mobilityproject3485 Před 5 měsíci

      @@gobot90 you want to die in 20 years?? That's where we're headed today!

    • @fried_onions_
      @fried_onions_ Před 5 měsíci +2

      what a comment

  • @mobilityproject3485
    @mobilityproject3485 Před 6 měsíci +67

    Consumerists be like: We will make a new utopia around young people consuming and screwing with strangers. Then young people will never want to fight again.
    Reality be like: Large scale child abuse/neglect leads to inefficiency and stagnation. Overconsumption times inefficiency equals ecological collapse.

    • @mobilityproject3485
      @mobilityproject3485 Před 6 měsíci +8

      Oh and if you piss off / murder / never create the next young people, the ideology falls apart too. Forgot that.

    • @star_duck
      @star_duck Před 5 měsíci

      The ponzi ideology

  • @Trokovski
    @Trokovski Před 6 měsíci +319

    5:27 Part 1 What is modern civilization?
    15:40 Part 2 The origins of modernity
    39:28 Part 3 The logic of modernity
    50:34 Part 4 The secret religion
    1:06:31 Part 5 The end of modernity

    • @1237barca
      @1237barca Před 6 měsíci +5

      I have a completely different understanding. I think the historical narrative is incorrect. The great buildings as from prior higher civilizations which have been repurposed by the institutions that have gained power for their own purposes.

    • @bastait
      @bastait Před 6 měsíci +1

      whatfiallthis will never call statism a religion cause its his personal favorite.

    • @madamadam5951
      @madamadam5951 Před 5 měsíci +1

      he loses all credibility when going on about left and right brain mumbo jumbo

    • @TSDamiano
      @TSDamiano Před 5 měsíci

      Thank you

  • @kylepederson145
    @kylepederson145 Před 6 měsíci +13

    “Our era is run by religious fanatics who worship the god of progress” is such a good sentence to describe it

    • @michaelweston409
      @michaelweston409 Před 5 měsíci +3

      🎯

    • @mrsentencename7334
      @mrsentencename7334 Před 4 měsíci

      ‘Progressive action’ and ‘struggle’ were common phrases from the national socialists, fascists and Marxists. The idea of the world being in perpetual change. A constant revolution if you will. Just something I’ve noticed.

    • @mrsentencename7334
      @mrsentencename7334 Před 4 měsíci

      ‘Action’ and ‘struggle’ were common themes amongst the fascists, national socialists and Marxists. The idea of the world being in perpetual change. A constant revolution if you will. Just something I’ve noticed.

  • @fernanmenendez5636
    @fernanmenendez5636 Před 6 měsíci +12

    The comment about globalized societies having more in common with each other than with their fellow countrymen is spot on. I live in Buenos Aires, a large city that's very exposed to globalization and some people here have more in common culturally, aside from the language, with a Londoner, a Parisian or a New Yorker than with someone from a province of the Argentine interior, or hell, even someone from the suburbs of our city.

    • @szymonbaranowski8184
      @szymonbaranowski8184 Před 6 měsíci

      that's why we don't need cities anymore, global citizens should move out to own globalist country and leave locals alone

  • @chrismeyers4836
    @chrismeyers4836 Před 6 měsíci +754

    It’s kind of crazy how much your videos have changed my worldview. Before, I was just you run of the mill republican, I’d vote red for anyone, but (it’s kind of hard to explain) your videos changed my views of reality in some fundamental way, and I stopped believing in the illusions I was surrounded by. I think it was your neutrality, up to that point I had been so used to everything being biased towards one group or another.
    Then again, watching your videos may just make me feel smart about myself lol.

    • @hansvogel4335
      @hansvogel4335 Před 6 měsíci +61

      Now u are a woke happy trans!

    • @Donner906
      @Donner906 Před 6 měsíci +37

      @@hansvogel4335 No that is me.

    • @Donner906
      @Donner906 Před 6 měsíci +59

      He is not neutral. He is on the right and says so.

    • @YourSocialistAutomaton
      @YourSocialistAutomaton Před 6 měsíci +16

      He makes you feel smart? Damn you must have had issues in school to say the least.

    • @emanueljames7801
      @emanueljames7801 Před 6 měsíci

      @@YourSocialistAutomatondon’t be a dick for no reason

  • @mdl2427
    @mdl2427 Před 6 měsíci +600

    As a British person, I consider myself as a western and I don't condemn my ancestors. I think we did the best we could as humans, I am ashamed of our modern state though.

    • @pdcdesign9632
      @pdcdesign9632 Před 6 měsíci +52

      It's all your fault why the world is so screwed up now.

    • @underfire987
      @underfire987 Před 6 měsíci

      Proud of my ancestors hate the lesser men and godless degenerates today.

    • @1mol831
      @1mol831 Před 6 měsíci +8

      @@pdcdesign9632don’t tell them what’s going on.

    • @TheTwitch1000
      @TheTwitch1000 Před 6 měsíci +85

      @@pdcdesign9632bruh the hell are those emojis

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@TheTwitch1000CZcams emojis you can access via the CZcams desktop site. Awful, aren't they?

  • @Merlinfoop
    @Merlinfoop Před 6 měsíci +11

    “We can be cursed toGETHerrrrr” is the sassiest I’ve ever heard Rudyard in any of his videos ever.

  • @anthonysabatino4317
    @anthonysabatino4317 Před 6 měsíci +5

    The Gnostics didn't believe human beings are gods, but rather fragments of God, and that sin is derived from seeing oneself as God. The Demiurge is not necessarily a satanic figure, but rather a confused emanation who believes himself to be God when he is only a fragment, and evil in the world is because the Demiurge is incapable of perfect creation, yet keeps trying because he is unaware of his true origins.

    • @theneworder333
      @theneworder333 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Truth, alas author of this video keeps talking about something he donest have enough spiritual experience to talk about with confidence

    • @AM180x
      @AM180x Před 5 měsíci +2

      yea the gnostic ideal is to strive towards self spirituality and asceticism so that your soul escapes the demiurge upon death. this is opposed to the abrahamic belief systems.

  • @urulai
    @urulai Před 6 měsíci +66

    "Chaos is a ladder." a useful line from Little Finger I will never forget. There will be those who want to use the chaos to climb higher, or just get onto the ladder in the first place. I think the best approach is to learn from the ancients and build a society (and it doesn't need to be the whole world, it can be your home, your down, your city, what ever scale you can effect directly or indirectly, but meaningfully) where we live not just for ourselves but for those who will come after us. You don't have to view this as "deathist" after all, if you are still around in ten or twenty years and you did your best to make you world a better place not in some abstract progressive way but in a practical sense you can point to the physical things you did to help those who will be around then.

  • @yukaroj
    @yukaroj Před 6 měsíci +83

    This is an exceptional video. I feel like I now understand why I feel so empty sometimes, and the direction that society is moving toward. I never thought that not only technological progress was not the way to go but rather the idea of progress is a somewhat foreign concept throughout human history

    • @milko540
      @milko540 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Christ is always waiting.

    • @yukaroj
      @yukaroj Před 6 měsíci

      @@milko540 huh?

  • @Eleku
    @Eleku Před 6 měsíci +7

    As far as I know, there was a lot of war enthusiasm before WWI, people expected it to be as glorious as the stories of previous wars. After the war, pacifists and modernists argued that the reason it was so horrible was modern technology paired with this pre-modern mindset. The solution would be to get rid of the mindset, because getting rid of the technology would be impossible and not desirable.

  • @adhdmonster1369
    @adhdmonster1369 Před 6 měsíci +19

    "If you're the only person who is right, and everyone else is completely wrong -- you're crazy."
    Not going to lie, that's my new favorite quote of all time.
    You should honestly put that on a t-shirt.

    • @sanniepstein4835
      @sanniepstein4835 Před 5 měsíci +4

      It can turn out that you simply haven't met all those who agree with you.
      My experience in hyperconforming woke Ontario.

    • @WordBearer48
      @WordBearer48 Před 2 měsíci +1

      This quote is just a baseless assertion. There is no reason why the majority can't be wrong and the few can be right.

    • @adhdmonster1369
      @adhdmonster1369 Před 2 měsíci

      @@WordBearer48 Are you the only one that is right?

  • @enoughothis
    @enoughothis Před 6 měsíci +195

    Reject skyscraper, return to gothic cathedral.

    • @Mcfunface
      @Mcfunface Před 6 měsíci +29

      Fight alone - weak
      Pray together - strong 💪

    • @Romazs_1488
      @Romazs_1488 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Amen

    • @KaiHung-wv3ul
      @KaiHung-wv3ul Před 6 měsíci +24

      I'm not christian, but cathedrals sure look awesome.

    • @mmyr8ado.360
      @mmyr8ado.360 Před 6 měsíci +16

      Everyone's a critic until the cathderal starts walking.

    • @collinb.8542
      @collinb.8542 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Honestly one of the better reasons to become Catholic.

  • @Mr.Ambrose_Dyer_Armitage_Esq.
    @Mr.Ambrose_Dyer_Armitage_Esq. Před 6 měsíci +195

    A _Whatifalthist_ AND a _Pilgrims Pass_ video on the SAME DAY!? Life is looking up!

    • @billynomates920
      @billynomates920 Před 6 měsíci +14

      pilgrims pass? thanks.

    • @obiwankenobi6871
      @obiwankenobi6871 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Yo you too??? Lets GOOOOO

    • @luigikinesis5276
      @luigikinesis5276 Před 6 měsíci +10

      Pilgrim gang!

    • @darkerminia
      @darkerminia Před 6 měsíci +16

      Pilgrim's Pass is amazing. They absolutely have to do a podcast together at some point, it would be amazing.

    • @nsh1980gmail
      @nsh1980gmail Před 6 měsíci

      @@billynomates920guess we have a new thing to check out

  • @KingOskar4
    @KingOskar4 Před 6 měsíci +9

    Thank you❤ Whatifalthist, so much😊❤ your earlier videos helped me to understand the world as someone with Asperger's Syndrome at least a little bit.
    People on Reddit say you're skewed😅 and I don't listen to them.
    I believe in you as my Teacher❤

  • @IHateEveryone
    @IHateEveryone Před 6 měsíci +15

    One time i told my friend of 4 years after my girlfriend and i broke up “yeah im not a fan of hookup culture. I kinda want a more traditional life with a few kids” and she responded with a disgusted face and said “wow thats a yikes”. First of all, my idea of a “traditional life” at the time was simply having more than one kid, which is fucked up, and second of all, that idea was so traditional that my friend of multiple years was willing to react that negatively to me wanting that life. As if i was insane and fringe for wanting kids at all. An old boss of mine also showed up to work one day and announced to all of us employees that she was writing a book about how only 1 in 10 people should be having kids, because for 90% of people its too much of a sacrifice, and even though her son was in the other room, because he also worked there, she said that had she known how hard motherhood was, she’d never have done it. This is modernity and it sucks.

    • @fryguy994
      @fryguy994 Před 6 měsíci +8

      The anti-human message is strong and well.

    • @jameswilkerson4412
      @jameswilkerson4412 Před 6 měsíci

      I mean, seen the price of daycare? Or, would you count on having a relative close to help with childcare?

  • @thewizardstower2649
    @thewizardstower2649 Před 6 měsíci +125

    Kid, you are awesome! I'm in my early 40s, as are my friends, and we all love your videos. These are highly illuminating, and it gives me hope there are young guys like you out there! Keep these videos coming. Outstanding!

    • @KyleDavis-ob4gx
      @KyleDavis-ob4gx Před 5 měsíci +11

      I'm 35 and could not agree more it gives me hope that they ARE paying attention .thank god... gen alpha is going to need leaders like you ahead of them if they are to even stand a chance.

    • @kevinhowe543
      @kevinhowe543 Před 5 měsíci +6

      35 and I've been sharing all of his videos with my younger cousins who are old enough/developed enough to understand. I also technically force my 2 year old to listen to them in my car while driving home XD

    • @josiahmodaff6406
      @josiahmodaff6406 Před 3 měsíci +3

      I'm currently a teenager, and he's been a big source of inspiration for me. In particular, this video has been a huge help recently since I've given this topic more thought.

  • @ErikQuintanillaMusic66
    @ErikQuintanillaMusic66 Před 6 měsíci +50

    Hey man, i hadn't realized that you lived in Texas. Not sure how long you've been here but welcome friend. I have really appreciated your videos for a while now. Great research and topics all around. Glad to finally have something that's genuinely intellectual. Good content is hard to find, keep up the good work.

  • @qualityofbeing
    @qualityofbeing Před 6 měsíci +3

    At 1:13:29
    I believe what you're referring to in physics is either "observations", wave function collapse, or virtual particle creation in quantum mechanics. I had written up a response to what observations mean in physics before realizing it could've been something else you're thinking about. Here's that explanation though. I can provide additional summaries for the other concepts if requested.
    When a physicist says a particle changed from being observed, they are not saying it is because some conscious entity is watching it. An observation in quantum mechanics is an interaction between particles - little bundles of energy. When you bump one particle into another, you gain some information about the target particle at the time of the interaction between the particles (this is the observation in a lab setting), but thereafter the particle likely will have had some properties changed (like its angular momentum) because it interacted with something in its environment. Despite what it's called, an "observer" of any kind is not necessary for it to take place.
    Observation really is an awful name for it - it's very misleading.
    But that's minor.
    This is a very well made video, and it touched on a surprising amount of what I've been thinking about recently, despite coming from a very different perspective. I'm one of the atheists in the audience, and also one of those lib-lefties, for use of the same scaling. We desperately need the wisdom of history. This is really good stuff - I can't wait to watch more!

  • @4848613
    @4848613 Před 5 měsíci +3

    As a father of three small children and spending nearly all my time trying to make ends meet (I listen to you while doing the dishes), it's so easy to become self-absorbed into this microcosm that is our family. All this you've said reminds me that we might get hit hard by things way beyond our control and understanding. But yes, what amazingly interesting times we live in!

  • @canadianpirateanders9951
    @canadianpirateanders9951 Před 6 měsíci +188

    As a 30 year old I am humbled to have learned so much from someone much younger than me. I personally feel like the world has changed noticeably since about 2010. Kind of a frog in boiling water feel. We all know things are changing for the worse. We all know something bad is on the horizon. Yet we all just keep on doing are normal thing like nothing has changed. This channel does a great job of slapping the reality into the warming frogs that is the modern youth.

    • @elvisfifo
      @elvisfifo Před 6 měsíci +14

      I'm 30 too and I agree. It was crazy when I found out Rudyard was 8 years younger than me

    • @dungeonmonkey2495
      @dungeonmonkey2495 Před 6 měsíci +18

      Occupy happened in 2010 as a reaction to the last big crash. Scared the shit out of the ruling class. they've been trying to make sure nothing like that ever happens again ever since despite another even bigger crash coming on the horizon

    • @glennm7086
      @glennm7086 Před 6 měsíci +15

      I’m a 63-yr old conservative and this is wicked smart. I seek out diverse viewpoints and it’s really encouraging to hear a young person who can think independently

    • @gobot90
      @gobot90 Před 6 měsíci +10

      @@glennm7086Conservative hears another conservative say conservative shit, deems it “independent” thought lol

    • @sonicleaves
      @sonicleaves Před 6 měsíci +7

      I'm a 43 year old mom and housewife and I love this channel!

  • @HuWhiteDeath
    @HuWhiteDeath Před 6 měsíci +30

    I'm at work RN, and saw that this had been uploaded. I have great anticipation now to watch this video when I get home.
    Saying this about another channel is impossible. Really goes to show how great your content is.

  • @BillySoundFarm
    @BillySoundFarm Před 6 měsíci +3

    you changed my behavior yesterday... Fridays is the day I have the house to myself, going to work at home etc... decided to go work at the mall instead in case I had an opportunity to talk to people and decrease loneliness in Mays Landing, NJ. Bumped into that group of special needs people that are at the mall a lot, who asked me to play guitar for them, and we took over the food court with a little folk concert. Just wanted you to know all your talking can have a benefit to society, keep it up! Do the talky-talk.

  • @philon3kjavik817
    @philon3kjavik817 Před 6 měsíci +26

    I say this was one your better videos. That last part was understated, in my opinion. We are barreling towards a cliff at break-neck speeds, with basically no time to hit the breaks or change direction. An MIT model from 1972 predicts global civilization collapse around 2040, due to a range of factors (terrifyingly, war and climate change weren't even part of the original model). The model has been accurate since then, and multiple re-evaluations confirm it. Predicting the future is like playing dice, but seeing as how global civilization struggles to deviate from the status quo, the dice are heavily weighted in favor in an agonizing death of modern society. Call me a fool and a run-of-the-mill doomsday preacher, but I fully expect a global dark age to come within this century that will be second to none.

    • @mobilityproject3485
      @mobilityproject3485 Před 6 měsíci +1

      That's what we deserve. Thanks to the work of our lord Jesus on the cross, we don't necessarily have i get what we deserve, and as far as I know we miraculously have pretty much everything we need to live for the next century sitting on hard drives or file cabinets. We have to recognize our wickedness and change our ways for it to matter though.

    • @Guy-Mann
      @Guy-Mann Před 6 měsíci +9

      You say dark age. I hear golden age.
      Fuck the modern world. If I suffer in its downfall, then let me suffer. I'd go through a hundred years in a hundred hells to see the zeitgeist of this age annihilated forever.

    • @mobilityproject3485
      @mobilityproject3485 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Guy-Mann Do you hate all of the industrial world, or just the past few decades (maybe after 1965 or so)

    • @Guy-Mann
      @Guy-Mann Před 5 měsíci

      @mobilityproject3485 The whole shebang. The reason our public schools are failing and tormenting our youth lies in their foundational 1800s design of training good factory workers. The reason our countries are heaving and sputtering under the weight of half the world's population in immigrants is because "enlightenment" ideals justified universal suffrage starting as early as before the 1770s and the takeover of our societies by feminine logic of reducing harm at all costs. The reason such an unimaginably vast portion of the human race are so utterly depressed is that industrial commodity culture and the idea of owing someone else the very time ticking away from your life itself are completely unnatural and out of sync with the way we have evolved to interact with the world.
      We are like fish living in water with too high a saline content that is slowly and excruciatingly doing away with us. Everyone is in pain, but most have no idea why and many outright deny it because they can't conceptualize the problem.

    • @gobot90
      @gobot90 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I feel like using data from 1972 is maybe not all that helpful

  • @ThomasOfTheWarband
    @ThomasOfTheWarband Před 6 měsíci +68

    If there was ever a time to create good artwork, writing, and culture, the time is now. It can be as simple as drawing a picture of Tifa Lockhart from FF7 (to exemplify beauty), or an armored crusader on horseback (to exemplify religion, and masculinity).
    I recently watched a John Doyle video where he described how, if you were to create a mural in Portland, Oregon, a depiction of a content mother and her infant child would be defaced faster than an image of Ronald Reagen with an Uzi and American flag. I found his assessment spot on.

    • @Microphunktv-jb3kj
      @Microphunktv-jb3kj Před 5 měsíci

      or female nicolas cage on a dinosaur?
      what you are describing isnt beauty... modern art is garbage , forcefed by marxist subversionists

    • @soffren
      @soffren Před 5 měsíci +5

      I would be willing to wager a few bucks that if both of those murals were put up, AND the mother was a woman of color, that they would not be vandalized in that order.

    • @Quickbobhero
      @Quickbobhero Před 5 měsíci +5

      Society is hypersexualized as is, you can portray beauty without someone wearing as blatantly sexual an outfit as Tifa or most modern pop culture women. The fact in general that female beauty in the modern world is so linked to wearing skimpy outfits is a sign that both religion and respect for sexual purity is gone. Ironically, the modern world is a world in which women are only valued for sex. Jeanne d'Arc or even Aerith if you wanted to keep it pop culture would've been much better examples.

    • @ingold1470
      @ingold1470 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Trick question, the Reagan picture would stay up indefinitely because all the hipsters would assume that it is ironic.

    • @ThomasOfTheWarband
      @ThomasOfTheWarband Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@Quickbobhero That is a good point, I almost feel the need to use one of those new AI programs to cloth Tifa.

  • @liamgibson6949
    @liamgibson6949 Před 6 měsíci +45

    that ending was both horrifying and hilarious! I always end up taking your videos very seriously, regardless of whether i agree with your standpoint or not. this one i found myself agreeing with more than any others before. and its true that while we are all cursed together, we can still be there for each other when the time matters.

    • @giovannituber2827
      @giovannituber2827 Před 6 měsíci +2

      And THAT is what will hold or break nations appart in days to come.

  • @carlos_the_conquistadorR1b

    Its embarrassing how many Americans don’t know the fact that Spanish is a European language, deriving from Latin just like Italian, French, Romanian, Portuguese

  • @Ivan-vn1pd
    @Ivan-vn1pd Před 6 měsíci +5

    "our elite supports Chaos"
    *Loads Bolter with Religious intent"
    +The Emperor Protects+

  • @amitbechor7575
    @amitbechor7575 Před 6 měsíci +241

    Person: "Hi".
    Every American who has ever been to France: "I've been to France".

    • @Newbmann
      @Newbmann Před 6 měsíci +24

      Peak americana.

    • @LukeLongboneOfficial
      @LukeLongboneOfficial Před 6 měsíci

      Thankfully Americans are no longer willing to fight and die to save France. 🍻

    • @DanielAbreu-tz9bl
      @DanielAbreu-tz9bl Před 6 měsíci +8

      I HEARD THAT IN CLASS JUST TODAY LMAOOOOO

    • @theamazingagnostic2819
      @theamazingagnostic2819 Před 6 měsíci +7

      This entire video just went right over your head

    • @dan_mer
      @dan_mer Před 6 měsíci

      The first thing I saw in France was an African taking a shit in the street, a group of Muslims trying to close a factory that makes natural soap from pork fat and a prostitute servicing a client while he is trying to find a blood vessel. France is the post-modernist dystopia.

  • @okamiv5
    @okamiv5 Před 6 měsíci +24

    "May you live in interesting times" is how ive started saying goodbye to people i dont like

    • @GPUGambon
      @GPUGambon Před 6 měsíci +3

      Same, the old Chinese curse is back!

    • @sedm8290
      @sedm8290 Před 6 měsíci +2

      You know, I'm gonna start doing that as well

  • @deadpooleo18
    @deadpooleo18 Před 6 měsíci +3

    I really appreciate your content, as it has pushed me to actually think about the underlying fabric of society, how we got to where we are, and to respect all of history rather than the "important bits." It has also made me much more eloquent in any political, or sociatal discussions. Many props, I think this is your best video to date.

  • @gelatobenne4342
    @gelatobenne4342 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Replace Gnosticism with Judaism (yes, even secular Judaism) and you have a great point.

    • @GeorgerGeorger-wh7zf
      @GeorgerGeorger-wh7zf Před 6 měsíci +2

      It gets so esoteric, that both can be correct or neither can be correct, or some variation of both.
      It could be as simple as the Chews built the West.
      It could be as complicated as a series of nomadic pagan cults all fused their doctrines together and created some fusionist Semitic pagan ruling class that could be more intentional or more chaotic than we give them credit for.
      At the end of the day, we're somewhat beholden to whoever controls the search engine results and the "keepers" of Wikipedia.

  • @awesomedawsonmg1940
    @awesomedawsonmg1940 Před 6 měsíci +39

    That description of European & American suburbs makes me appreciate London suburbs, a ⅓ of all houses in the UK's capital were built with a 1930s architectural style with coloured bricks & differnet perportions. Each house is different from the next in someway from the shade of bricks to the size of windows, no house is the same. I wish we could bring this to more places
    Love the video, it has given me a lot to think about like every video you upload

    • @sirrathersplendid4825
      @sirrathersplendid4825 Před 5 měsíci +5

      I was brought up in one of those 1920s/30s London suburban houses. Though not identical each house is in fact built to one of only a handful of patterns, but distributed so they don’t appear next door to each other. Throw in a slightly different design of bay window or facia tile colour and you have what looks like randomness.

    • @WorldWide2017
      @WorldWide2017 Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@sirrathersplendid4825 Whatever the case, that's far better than American houses. They build them in the exact same style not only in the same neighborhood, but all across the country. Same for the chain restaurants and stores we go to most frequently. Honestly sometimes it's easy to forget where exactly you are because everything looks so similar.
      Thankfully America has a very varied geography and climate, at least you can tell what part of the country you are in by the color of the grass or the landscape around you (kind of anyway). Thankfully I grew up in Chicago which has some of the best best architecture in the country, so I didn't have to live in a cookie-cutter suburban subdivision.

    • @sirrathersplendid4825
      @sirrathersplendid4825 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@WorldWide2017 - Those 1920s/30s UK designs were much better than today’s. Most of the stuff built since the 1960s is pretty blocky, sterile and uninspiring - probably no better than in the USA.

  • @storms_lair2123
    @storms_lair2123 Před 6 měsíci +135

    I recently went to a village in Alaska it was remote there was very little technology with access to internet and it was freezing but what i found there was is religion family and community with not so much need to constantly work coming from a more modern part of America I thought I was gonna be miserable and bored in reality I was happy and miss that place now.

    • @jacobzindel987
      @jacobzindel987 Před 5 měsíci

      Naw man. Villages have high-speed internet now. 😂

    • @TheHamburgler123
      @TheHamburgler123 Před 5 měsíci +6

      @@jacobzindel987 Not in Alaska, bro.

    • @JasperElvenSky
      @JasperElvenSky Před 5 měsíci

      Punctuation is a good thing. Learn to use it.

    • @pauvilreutov2975
      @pauvilreutov2975 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I grew up in the small villages in Alaska. No internet, no tv, no computer. The best memories from my childhood are going to church with friends in the morning, then playing in the woods with them after.

    • @storms_lair2123
      @storms_lair2123 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@pauvilreutov2975 you old Russian orthodox?

  • @joaquinmorales2955
    @joaquinmorales2955 Před 4 měsíci +5

    This is the best example of the failling education system in gringolandia

  • @rafbenlev
    @rafbenlev Před 6 měsíci +1

    Great job! One of your best videos yet. Really appreciate that you share the bibliography

  • @timothykuring3016
    @timothykuring3016 Před 6 měsíci +28

    I studied under an Archaeologist who wrote a series of books, like Greek Stones Speak, Roman Stones Speak, etc.
    It was all the study of building styles so that you could recognize the civilization and the era of buildings.
    I was fascinated with Architecture since I was a child, and I had a lot of questions about those things long before I took the course.
    The Mudflood series of videos reminds me of that comparative study of architecture, and it raised a lot of those old questions I had when I was a kid.
    I almost want to take up the study of archaeological architecture again.
    I bet there are a lot more details to be discovered in these buildings across the world, that you don't get from photos. What about the measures and proportions found in disparate buildings? What do they have in common, and how do they differ?
    It reminds me too of something I read once about the Parthenon, that it was built on top of what were supposedly Byzantine era foundations.

    • @timothykuring3016
      @timothykuring3016 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Paul Mckentrick. I looked him up on Wikipedia.
      I didn't know he taught George H. W. Bush.
      He called us students "nabobs".
      I liked my oldest professors the best.

    • @nazalostizsrbije
      @nazalostizsrbije Před 4 měsíci

      Mudflood as in conspiracy?

  • @amitbechor7575
    @amitbechor7575 Před 6 měsíci +152

    "I've been to France"
    sir this is a Wendy's

    • @kamakiller1145
      @kamakiller1145 Před 6 měsíci +29

      France is no longer France. It's africa

    • @ozumsauce2605
      @ozumsauce2605 Před 6 měsíci +8

      No one:
      Absolutely no one:
      People who have been to France:
      "Oh yeah dude there was this one time I went to France"

    • @RomanOf2002
      @RomanOf2002 Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@ozumsauce2605Only after traveling to France will you understand

    • @curtisbrayfield7707
      @curtisbrayfield7707 Před 6 měsíci +1

      See, I brag about being to Malta, because everyone's been to France, and I've been to Italy and Spain, too, but no one I know even know what or where Malta is. Heck, most cruise ships can't get in there, and only one U.S. warship (not a carrier) is allowed per deployment. So even out of our carrier group, there were only about 200 of us that got to go.

    • @johnwolf2829
      @johnwolf2829 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Sounds weird to me. I have been there, but have not mentioned it to anyone in about 20 years. It was good, too, I didn't have to get a whiff of Paris once.
      Most people want to hear about the Orient, or the Muddle East for some damn reason. Europe is pretty common these days.

  • @justachannel8600
    @justachannel8600 Před 6 měsíci +6

    Uhh ... I really like the idea that the goal of modern society is to look good on a spreadsheet.

  • @kowalityjesus
    @kowalityjesus Před 6 měsíci +10

    I'm really excited for you to get older Rudyard. You're brave enough to accept that there are uncomfortable (bordering on criminal) explanations for reality that lurk menacingly when Occam's Razor takes its swipe. And probably ballsy enough to say it out loud.

  • @osier769
    @osier769 Před 6 měsíci +63

    The older I get - not that I'm old, the realisation that letting the modern elite of society, academia and such, who are the most removed from society, take full rein is a mistake. We're continually eroding cultural anchor points in which to fall back on, and currently steered by those who, are arguably, social misfits with no true sense of identity, culture and/or firm attachment to the greater populace, hence their desire of divisive identity politics. People with a foreign cultural background who attach themselves to these modern elites are essentially grifters hoping to be spared, but are speeding up their demise, they'll be leveraged, disposed of and reviled.

    • @seandavies5130
      @seandavies5130 Před 6 měsíci

      I don't know how many academics you've met, but I would say for the most part this is wild extrapolation

    • @jameswilkerson4412
      @jameswilkerson4412 Před 6 měsíci

      You realize promoting ‘traditional’ culture and assumptions is its own identity politics, right? It’s idpol all the way down.

  • @LtHavoc62
    @LtHavoc62 Před 6 měsíci +207

    Ever since I first heard about postmodern gnosticism and its relationship with queer/intersectional/etc... theories, all the motivations of the people spouting it and the actions they take have made perfect sense to me. Ironically, it's like having my own gnostic revelation of the underlying mechanics of the world today. Because of that, I sometimes worry that I'm suffering a delusion similar to the modern gnostics as some kind of meta-gnostic.

    • @mst5g826
      @mst5g826 Před 6 měsíci +27

      Isn't it odd that in every religion there are people who have to substantiate their beliefs with material proof? It's ironic that today it is the Gnostics, because there is a way of looking at the story of the fruit of knowledge of good and evil in seeing that eating of this fruit makes us discontent and obsess over the imperfections of our current situations. Therefore leading to being cast out of Eden. You'd think a Gnostic would be content in his gnosis that he will leave the wicked world after death without worrying about being cast back down in reincarnation. Why cling to earthly power if you don't believe that it could ever be good?

    • @LtHavoc62
      @LtHavoc62 Před 6 měsíci

      @@mst5g826 I think the anxiety felt by the gnostics that causes them to double down and cling to earthly power is explained by the two groups that seem to compose them. Either they are the few actual elites that must hold power as more people attempt to poke holes in their social order or they are failed elites who must twist their minds into knots justifying that they are better than the plebs because they know the special words and thoughts of critical theory. Still, both those groups, but especially the latter, can best be summarized as the crying midwit wojak trying to claim 2+2=5

    • @Liam-iv7wk
      @Liam-iv7wk Před 6 měsíci +9

      Honestly there's a lot of things I find fascinating and interesting about gnostic doctrines/teachings for which I believe there's definitely some solid points to learn from, but the idea of completely abandoning the world and that one shouldn't seek to help improve it or others' situation is just asinine to me.

    • @alex29443
      @alex29443 Před 6 měsíci

      You're not crazy, the elites are crazy. They will blow over in the first puff of wind.

    • @die_lokki287
      @die_lokki287 Před 6 měsíci +9

      The fact that you worry about this clearly makes you less delusional

  • @Flamable1
    @Flamable1 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Can't overstate how much I appreciate this video. Great work! I'll be watching it again and taking notes like im back in collage. So many great insights

  • @mythcritic
    @mythcritic Před 6 měsíci +2

    You are doing great work, this level of profundity is rare on youtube/social media, keep it up!

  • @user-zr1dr7nz8e
    @user-zr1dr7nz8e Před 6 měsíci +18

    Modernity has another curious characteristic that I think has massive psychological implications and we haven't figured out how to deal with yet, and that is the disappearance of the frontier. Expansion and exploration into the unknown (or being expanded upon) is such a hugely important part of our history, and that is essentially over forever now that we have Google maps. Contributing to the vanishing of uncertainty and perhaps the vanishing of wonder are all our various sciences, from weather science and plate tectonics to risk assessment and germ theory, many of our traditional intellectual frontiers are vanishing as we get ever better at knowing what tomorrow will bring. But I'm afraid this might be like exploring a very big room, and it's a cool room with lots of cool stuff, but at some point we more or less simultaneously realize that we've seen everything there is to see, we're trapped in here, and there's a bunch of other people coming to the same realization in the room too. Oh shit, now what?

    • @assortmentofpillsbutneverb3756
      @assortmentofpillsbutneverb3756 Před 6 měsíci +4

      I'd add that frontier gave more room for bs and sophistry. Its like when you start a project and still have many hours in your budget vs when you're working off the clock to land the project to a functional state before close.

    • @giovannituber2827
      @giovannituber2827 Před 6 měsíci +4

      That's why space exploration is one of our only hopes left. Great comment man.

    • @johnny2bad67
      @johnny2bad67 Před 2 měsíci

      A bit like when the Romans finally defeated Carthage in around 150 BC. They ran out of global powers to fight with, turned inwards and had 100 years of instability while the republic collapsed. Then Caesar came along.

  • @DavidDHorstman
    @DavidDHorstman Před 6 měsíci +48

    24:25 "Getting to Denmark" is impossible. Denmark is Denmark because it's never changed.
    The ethnic group which lives there is the continuation of a small civilization that just barely survived the Bronze Age Collapse. It is a civilization that has been in continuous existence (and never ruled by a foreign power) since before the invention of writing. This is why its people are so content.
    Meanwhile, Modern society has moved in the opposite direction, with America, the child of the European civilization that was conquered the *most* times (England), leading the charge towards "anti-Denmark".
    It may be the case that the two paths converge on the other end, but getting there will not look anything like imitating the society which is essentially our reflection.

    • @517342
      @517342 Před 6 měsíci +3

      And ironically it was the Danes who conquered England at one point too.

    • @Eleku
      @Eleku Před 6 měsíci

      Denmark was not always such a great place to live. Quality of life greatly improved thanks to modernity.
      But yeah modernity bad muhuhu evil vegan liberals and feminism

    • @DavidDHorstman
      @DavidDHorstman Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@517342 And now America has conquered England too.
      I think anti-Denmark may actually be Athens - a city on a hill whose citizens pursued high-minded ideals and lived in luxury, while all menial labor was performed by slaves.
      Ironically, the technologies and ideological systems we've developed are more than capable of yielding the benefits of slave labor, if we'd stop acting like we're their slaves.

  • @myronvenero9371
    @myronvenero9371 Před 3 měsíci +1

    “Uni-bomber was right” line threw me out of chair. 😂😂😂

  • @Anonymous-sb9rr
    @Anonymous-sb9rr Před 4 měsíci +1

    I didn't use to think that equality was was valuable, but I got convinced by reason. Equality improves the sense of wellbeing, reduces crime, improves cooperation and lets society make more use of people's talents.

  • @samuelfinn
    @samuelfinn Před 6 měsíci +75

    This guy actually got me watching an hour long video 😭

    • @KM-uk2rt
      @KM-uk2rt Před 6 měsíci +16

      Power of speaking from the heart yo

  • @Peak_Aussieman
    @Peak_Aussieman Před 6 měsíci +25

    Modern Civilisation is a harsh mistress. A harsh mistress indeed.

  • @ninamartin1084
    @ninamartin1084 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Another Total Banger from my man Rudy. Serious applause from over here, an international 60+ female Catholic. Well done!

  • @fizziz_1035
    @fizziz_1035 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Pretty disturbing ending considering you usually end on a hopeful note.
    But this was absolutely outstanding work, I think it's amazing the way you're able to use your powers of empathy and analysis to explain what we all experience, but cannot realise about ourselves or articulate.
    Us being "fish in a pond" as you say

  • @richnubbz4910
    @richnubbz4910 Před 6 měsíci +21

    I love the Content .. keep it up .. from Scranton originally lol joined the military and traveled the world !!! love how you have realized the lack of perspective that many Americans' have!

    • @conservativecatholic9030
      @conservativecatholic9030 Před 6 měsíci +2

      I think that if you can travel, it’s important to have that experience at least once or twice a. I’m lucky my parents took me to Italy when I was 16. I’ve done a number of trips since. But on that first one… I learned a lot about the world as well as about where I am from.

  • @RandomYT05_01
    @RandomYT05_01 Před 6 měsíci +40

    About that intro, America did kinda conquer the world. WW2 was America's w*r of conquest, and NATO and the EU and all our other international organizations were our Empire's major institutions. The only reason why it didn't look like an Empire on a map is because we allowed all our conquests to believe they were independent, even though we've really been pulling the strings this entire time. We even went as far as rigging elections and staging interventions in lands that tried to leave our Empire. And our tax law applies to the entire globe and the other nations can't do a damn thing about it. While we may not look like an Empire, we most certainly are one.

    • @tann_man
      @tann_man Před 6 měsíci +16

      The great Satan some would say.
      USD as the world reserve currency is all you need to know

    • @zechariahsmith1764
      @zechariahsmith1764 Před 6 měsíci

      Wouldn't WWII have been Germany's w*r of conquest?

    • @LLlap
      @LLlap Před 6 měsíci

      Didn't russians actualy conquer half the world into their empire as a result of WW2?

    • @stone7281
      @stone7281 Před 6 měsíci +6

      Conquer is a military term, and implies America used kinetic force to occupy and rule most of the world against their will. You could kinda make an argument we do that with foreign bases, but that's not a true occupation of an unwilling nation. Afghanistan was an occupation of an unwilling nation. US military bases in Germany are not an occupation force.
      America is definitely an empire, but to call America a conqueror severely downplays how terrible an actual conquest is. If you want to know how horrible an actual conquest is, look at the many wars between the Americans and natives, or Japan's expansion in ww2, or Russia's 'special military operation.'
      Strong-arming favorable trade deals from a position of military and financial superiority, immoral as it may be, is not conquest. Sending agents to carefully manipulate a government to do what is best for you, even if that is regime change, is not conquest. Marching across a border, killing people, overthrowing a government, and administering the territory yourself is conquest.

    • @merafirewing6591
      @merafirewing6591 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@stone7281 and what's happening within the United States is now more alarming than it ever was before.

  • @morgand820
    @morgand820 Před 6 měsíci +4

    59:59 I'd quibble that most early Gnostic texts (i'm only familiar with the ones recovered from the Nag Hammadi library) they are negative towards the material world's pleasures, which includes seeking earthly power and status. Asceticism was preferred because it was difficult to achieve gnosis and escape the Demiurge's prison while still partaking in physical pursuits.

  • @mbrt777
    @mbrt777 Před 6 měsíci +2

    ive listened to almost every episode youve created, but this one might as well be the most important and impressive one so far. certain parts of it were very surprising and correspond well with reality and were as such immensely pleasant to ponder, not to mention that your conclusions are, as always, comprehensive!!! amazing job!!!

  • @Grymbaldknight
    @Grymbaldknight Před 6 měsíci +98

    I think this is why Warhammer 40,000 is becoming increasingly popular. Its depiction of the nature of humanity - and how it deals with fundamental existential beliefs and pressures - is one of the most realistic I've ever seen in fiction.

    • @franklinshaki9
      @franklinshaki9 Před 6 měsíci +8

      Of course it’s becoming popular because we’re experiencing it right now my brother.

    • @Flesh_Wizard
      @Flesh_Wizard Před 6 měsíci +17

      ​@@franklinshaki9when's the Emperor going to show himself?

    • @ancientdarkness3102
      @ancientdarkness3102 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Completely agree.
      Nice pic btw

    • @normanclatcher
      @normanclatcher Před 6 měsíci +5

      "From the moment I understood the weakness of the flesh, it disgusted me..."

    • @asuka_the_void_witch
      @asuka_the_void_witch Před 6 měsíci +2

      40k is a satire of cristofascism
      nothing that a centrist would ever be able to understand

  • @Ussurin
    @Ussurin Před 6 měsíci +10

    The faustian tale and how often it's referenced in the West is quite interesting to me as a Pole. Cause we do have our own version. We regretfully acknowledge it's probably inspired by the German version, but it's definitly must be changed a lot, cause we neither were affected as much by this tale, nor the message is anything similar. In our tale Twardowski deals with the devil mostly for gain of the kingdom (while benefitting himself) and manages to outsmart the demon as the he was to give up his soul when they would meet in Rome. Devil tried outsmarting the noble, who made sure to never arrive in the city of Rome, by meeting him in a tavern named Rome, but while he was carried away Twardowski pointed out that the deal they made was impossible to fulfill on technicality, so the devil threw him out and noble landed on the Moon where he is said to live to this day (immortality was part of the package). It's not read as a story about how to not try to get above your standing, but rather a story about how to deal with others to always end up on top, mostly by legalize.
    The underlying cultural message may be what makes the Germanics see deals as something horrible, bonds on their person, something to get out of, while Poles see dealings as promises made on paper, the agreed upon rules, where if you are not happy with them post-factum, it is only your mistake, not some great sin of the other side.

  • @Alexander_KB
    @Alexander_KB Před 2 měsíci +1

    "The west was willing to sacrifice it's own identity for power"
    That, IMO, is the most important thing said in this whole video. This is why we've fallen so far and why many are still in denial about it, b/c we're addicted to power and the comforts of the modern world. This is the compass of my goal to get off drugs, medications, and bad habits, b/c if there was ever a crisis, imagine being a smoker who needs like 5 medications to get by, and then you suddenly can't get any of it. What nobody in the medical field talks about is that non-narcotic meds have withdrawals just like the mind-altering ones do. If you need a medication not to be psychotic or w/e then don't stop taking your meds, I'm not saying that at all. I'm simply saying that for ME, who doesn't have psychosis, I would rather feel the full brunt of life and gain the peace of mind of not having to worry about being forced off my meds and habits in exchange for that feeling.
    P.S: The West decided to become wholly left-brained, and I believe that, in the process, it lost it's understanding of the right-brain functions, blinding it to half of reality, which is leading to a psychological crisis in the West. And the reason nothing is solving the crisis and why it is only getting worse, is due to this inability to understand the right-brain. I believe those in power understand that psychedelics empower the right-brain, and is probably the reason they started the whole drug war, as a response to the 60s and the use of LSD, and the fear that it would cause society to collapse. This is why many psychedelics are more illegal than heroin. This is why Ibogaine remains schedule 1, in spite of it being the best solution to the opioid crisis.
    The elite operates like an onion, with multiple layers concealing its true intentions. This is why heroin is illegal as an opiate replacement therapy. It was thought of as a tactic by Nixon as he was trying to crush the black radicals in the late 60s early 70s, but I think it's just a cover, a magician's trick saying "Look at my right hand while my true intentions are concealed within the left."

  • @cro-magnoncarol4017
    @cro-magnoncarol4017 Před 6 měsíci +2

    "These globalists are satanic!"
    - Alex Jones
    Man, at this point I think the world owes Alex Jones a MASSIVE apology....

  • @kevinhixson1586
    @kevinhixson1586 Před 6 měsíci +30

    I'd love to see more recognition to the bronze age. A lot of historical philosophy tends to ignore the bronze age (mostly not being aware there was a bronze age). What if we were to consider the rise and fall of the bronze age and the inevitable fate of the first cities of man in these philosophies (I think it was the umayyad caliphate who said Babylon was an "excellent source of bricks"). The only exception being China who basically start in the bronze age with the semi-mythical Xia dynasty and end in the CCP.

    • @bennyv4444
      @bennyv4444 Před 6 měsíci +6

      The Christian and Medieval traditions included the Bronze Age in their historical philosophy, though they called it the age of heroes.

    • @nmkasprkasprowicz4615
      @nmkasprkasprowicz4615 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@bennyv4444 yeah but we knew about jack shit about the societies outside of legend. By the time the Classical Era rolls around, all people know about the Bronze Age is "there were people there who did things." Most of the discourse around the "Heroic Age" was as the name suggests, legendary, for the better part of about 2 and a half thousand years. It's not until guys like Heinrich Schliemann, Howard Carter, and Arthur Evans Hughes start digging and recording their findings that we really get to know Bronze Age cultures and peoples. And that's also not an indicator of nelgect, since before the tech of the 19th century, all we had of them were their ruins and later (500 plus years later) written recordings of earlier oral tales that had changed from the original events. But yes, we should absolutely include Bronze Age Civilizations in our new historical philosophies. Though based on Whatifalthist's video on them, as well as my own research, I'd imagine them to follow basically the same pattern of Rise, Golden Age, Decadence, Fall, Destruction to most likely barbarians of some sort, rinse and repeat.

    • @bennyv4444
      @bennyv4444 Před 6 měsíci

      @@nmkasprkasprowicz4615
      We still know pretty much nothing about them, most of what is stated as fact about them is wild speculation.
      The part that the ancients knew was that there was a rise, a golden age, and a fall, and out of those ashes their civilization rose. That’s the most important part, and other than a few fun facts that we are quite confident about and one or two very informative tablets (along with many that are not informative at all), that’s all we know for sure too.

  • @grantmarsh327
    @grantmarsh327 Před 6 měsíci +68

    Lived in north Orange County my whole life, basically a giant suburb of Los Angeles proper. I never really thought about it but yeah that’s definitely true- Los Angeles ironically is a city built almost entirely by American Capitalism, with little influence of old Europe- despite first being settled by New Spanish ranchers. It gets a lot of criticism, but I think that’s the point- to have a place so far west as to take the current civilization to the extreme, almost to make its own unique culture.

    • @tann_man
      @tann_man Před 6 měsíci

      LA is a cesspool of nihilism and degeneracy. Your streets are filled with addicts and your elites are pedos. the urban monoculture is a disease.

    • @LucasFernandez-fk8se
      @LucasFernandez-fk8se Před 6 měsíci +6

      There is nothing structurally wrong with Los Angeles. Single family homes, 3 bay garages and wide roads are all virtues of American society. The problem with Los Angles is the cultural degradation of the area that started around the 60s with the hippies and the 70s with all the illegal immigrants and only worsened from there.

    • @kevinlawler3252
      @kevinlawler3252 Před 6 měsíci

      California was a red state solidly.. before Ronald Regan allowed immigrants from Mexico to vote there.. blue ever since. Based upon people who are not American citizens.

    • @connorbiel
      @connorbiel Před 6 měsíci +2

      true i live in the same place but there clearly a defining line between the culture of LA and the culture of OC even if north OC is geographically identical.

  • @chrisp4610
    @chrisp4610 Před 6 měsíci +4

    such a powerful video full of perspective - i am watching it again!

  • @jonnichols9426
    @jonnichols9426 Před 5 měsíci +2

    My God, what an incredibly accurate commentary. Truth is learned at the expense of humility. Depressing but entirely accurate. I pray for my children's future. Thank you for your prescience and razor focus on he repetitions of the past, regardless of the woeful implications.

  • @barrackobama2422
    @barrackobama2422 Před 6 měsíci +6

    I dont care if it's inaccurate when put in context. "The Unibomber was right" will now and forever be my favorite Whatifalthist quote.

  • @tiago6295
    @tiago6295 Před 6 měsíci +14

    Map at 27:52 incorrectly places west africans (and Adamawa-Ubangi) and as bantu, also places sahelian areas inhabited by west africans incorrectly as the sahara desert.

  • @THEBIGMEOW
    @THEBIGMEOW Před 6 měsíci +3

    Our problems started 400 years ago when humanity left spirituality and nature 😢

    • @SC-gw8np
      @SC-gw8np Před 6 měsíci +1

      You're right, humanity's downfall started with the Enlightenment.

  • @tomorrowneverdies567
    @tomorrowneverdies567 Před 6 měsíci +2

    The french revolution did not collapse. It was de facto abolished, when Napoleon crowned himself emperor of France.

  • @Jwnorton
    @Jwnorton Před 6 měsíci +5

    14:45 - the recent protests against the 'Far Right Extremists' in Germany (the AfD in particular) are quite telling for your statement. Most the of the AfD platform boils down to "Let Germans be Germans.' They acknowledge the 20th century wasn't the greatest for the Germans, but they do have plenty of culture, history, and identity. They are asking questions about their culture, their identity, and the actions their government are taking to attempt to dilute it.

    • @Eleku
      @Eleku Před 6 měsíci +1

      Strongly disagree. You can engage in all kinds of german culture without supporting the AfD. Go to a traditional festival. Read traditional literature. this is highly regarded in Germany. But most people have a very strong hate against the AfD and their mindset.

  • @BitMilkshake
    @BitMilkshake Před 6 měsíci +16

    The architectural uprising movements will bring back traditional proportions and beauty to our buildings

    • @gobot90
      @gobot90 Před 5 měsíci

      What are traditional proportions? The christian nationalist really can be racist about anything huh

  • @alecnorton5490
    @alecnorton5490 Před 6 měsíci +6

    I want to know what you think is the alternative to modernity.
    I'm not joking either. I really want to see you Make a video on what a better world would look like.

  • @mrmeow3924
    @mrmeow3924 Před 6 měsíci +2

    This is exactly the content I have been looking for a long time: A comprehensive look at modernity and how it came to be. Thank you! I truly enjoy the topics you look into. The only critique I have is that your videos are not 8 hours long 😅

  • @willfranck5000
    @willfranck5000 Před 6 měsíci +8

    God Bless you! I have always had a deep infatuation with the Tower of Babel and have felt for years that we have built it today. Everyone feels the incoming trials in their bones but we aren’t sure when the pen will drop. Try to take joy in that we will live through interesting times. It will be the most horrific beast to face, but we will endure it together!

  • @DiakronYT
    @DiakronYT Před 6 měsíci +7

    Man sometimes I watch these videos and remember that this channel has come a long way. Just wanted to drop a comment and say 'Hi' to everyone.

  • @adurpandya2742
    @adurpandya2742 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Other elements of Gnosticism: hating the world, hating the authority figure, conspiratorial thinking, basically this whole video.

  • @czesiokoreczek7740
    @czesiokoreczek7740 Před 6 měsíci +3

    I have created my own beliefs system that gives me advantages of religon without it's limitations. My beliefs system is based on biological reality of humanity, I am an atheist but I was born and raised as Catholic, with conservative and patriotic views. I became atheist many years ago and I was leftist for short time, but now I'm more conservative than ever even though I'm in open leftist University of Warsaw, studying hardly polticized field of study - law.
    I discoverd with myself that religion is natural human thing and it evolved for a reason, I agree humans who believe in god or gods are happy, less lonely and have good mental health, and most importantly heve bright direction and purpose in life. I think that I created myself a atheistic but religious view of life, in the centre of my beliefs system is my country, wich is the last, non-materialistic, human idea of some sort. I think that the nation and country definitions are too specific and they're not showing the real human nature in their meaning. Countries are as old as humans, but in diffrent form, they're not entities that need writing system, bureaucracy but they're just a land (a city or a village or a house even) that is controlled by a family, tribe, city or nation. I think it's all human nature, we shouldn't differentiate eachother from animals that much, I think we are animals, that for our best survival we had to evolve that form of our functioning.
    But I think also that we should remember this, and don't feel guilt for doing what is in our nature and also we should prioritize ourselves, humanity over everything else, we should dominate not only nature around us, but also eachother (rule of conquest). In my views, we should create our own gods, but these gods shouldn't be made up as something new, but something that existed in parallel to us, countries, nations. In my opinion these are our new gods, the only metaphysical structures that are real, because nobody will be questioning reality of existence of North Korea, when they will try to cross the border to South Korea. And my purpose in life is to show this view to more people and to create a new ruling and philosophical system based on two factors, naturality - the real human and natural worlds, and idk brutality maybe? - prioritizing humanity.
    As always sorry for my bad English, in my native language it probably sounds better. Sorry for syntax mistakes, I'm not good at writing. I love this channel it gives me a lot of ideas.

  • @avatarmikephantom153
    @avatarmikephantom153 Před 6 měsíci +55

    Hey whatifalthist, I’m writing an alternate history book. It’s a political thriller set between 1995-2012. Let me know if you’d be interested in it, it changes geopolitics quite a bit to have a WWIII scenario between the US and UK.

    • @YellowJack1020
      @YellowJack1020 Před 6 měsíci +2

      I support this
      @whatifalthist

    • @rthompson7182
      @rthompson7182 Před 6 měsíci +3

      I don’t know if he is interested, but I am. Tell me about it.

    • @thiswillagenicely9702
      @thiswillagenicely9702 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Bro send details we gotta know

    • @maxbateman3115
      @maxbateman3115 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Please send the details, this reminds me of resurrection day immediately.

    • @avatarmikephantom153
      @avatarmikephantom153 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@rthompson7182 so the book takes a secret meeting that took place in 1995 in NYC and changes history to have a drastically different outcome.
      At the Carlyle hotel, Princess Diana was in the city and met in private with JFK Jr. Nothing apparently happened, but my book uses this as a divergence point to where they develop a secret love for each other and eventually marry. After surviving a plane crash in 1999, the two of them decide to not waste any more of their lives and a focus on influencing the world to be better takes hold. He runs for senate against Hillary Clinton in the democratic primaries and wins. He’s the senator from NY when 9/11 occurs, and Diana is there a few blocks from ground zero as she watches the towers fall. The two become rescue workers in the rubble and heroes. John is the most popular politician in the country.
      He loses his popularity when he successfully prevents US troops from entering into Iraq, which now becomes a UK led war. This will have blowback as the 7/7 attacks in 2005 take out the Queen, and Charles becomes the sovereign with an increase in monarchical power.
      When the war’s truth comes out, John returns to popularity and runs for president in 2008 (replacing Obama) and succeeds as a Democrat with supermajorities in both houses. However, his first goal is unity, and thus he ensures republicans will be a part of the governance he envisions. Meanwhile Diana is the First Lady and this infuriates Charles.
      The rest of the book is basically a more competent democratic administration. Until the crisis in July of 2012 (basically John Jr’s version of the Cuban missile crisis). A parallel between himself and his father takes hold quite a bit. And the notation that he and Diana are like a royal couple are presented.

  • @joryiansmith
    @joryiansmith Před 6 měsíci +17

    God I love the guitar opening 🔥
    It just sets the stage so perfectly
    PS I have one of those Galaxy Lamps already. My 6 yr old loves it!

  • @Danila1
    @Danila1 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Commenting on 16:30 I would add a transhumanist view:
    Dialectic Realism (Jaques' Vision):
    Humans are different. Only a few can rise to think well about complex stuff and do complex stuff. Those should rule.
    Supermodern (Danila Medvedev's Vision):
    Some humans focused on using force or social mimicry to get in charge. We need a way to give more power to the smart ones. Also, humans can be augmented by tech to become even smarter and then we can rebuild humans with even more tech to make them posthuman.
    Jaques vision is based on Human Capability: A Study of Individual Potential and Its Application. My vision is my current synthesis.