The Most EVIL Ideology You've NEVER Heard Of!: Difference between revisions

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* Karl Popper rejects democracy which is the will of the people, he instead advocated for "Open Societies" controlled by rigid Institutions which are governed by their own principles  
* Karl Popper rejects democracy which is the will of the people, he instead advocated for "Open Societies" controlled by rigid Institutions which are governed by their own principles  
* This Open Society design is in contrast to populism, majoritarianism, Jeffersonian Democracy, etc.  
* This Open Society design is in contrast to populism, majoritarianism, Jeffersonian Democracy, etc.  
* As it relates to epistemology, Popper introduces the idea of falsifiability


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 03:24, 11 April 2023

The Most EVIL Ideology You've NEVER Heard Of! is an Infrared live stream from Mon, Apr 10.[1]

Notes / outline

  • Discussion about Dalai Lama cringe behavior and how Feudal Tibet is America's future if we don't change course
  • It's unsatisfactory to say that the New Left is the reason the American Synthetic Left is so fucked up
  • Haz argues that Karl Popper is the actual father of the current Synthetic Left and "liberalism in the Information Age"
  • Bourgeois epistemology (theory of truth) and bourgeois politics both begin with blank slates; democracies are empty "forms" filled with the "content" by elections, truth and knowledge is "empty" until proven through scientific method
  • Karl Popper writes Open Societies and its Enemies, which argues against democracy and claims that "the people" are totalitarian etc.
  • This is really about Information Theory
  • Karl Popper rejects democracy which is the will of the people, he instead advocated for "Open Societies" controlled by rigid Institutions which are governed by their own principles
  • This Open Society design is in contrast to populism, majoritarianism, Jeffersonian Democracy, etc.
  • As it relates to epistemology, Popper introduces the idea of falsifiability

References