The Westminster Confession of Funk
Key Takeaways * Modern leftist ideology stems from 1960s NYC-based philosophical nihilism, not hippie movement * This nihilism, exemplified by Andy Warhol's Factory and Velvet Underground, rejects human nature and reality as constructs * Current left-right divide: secular anti-humanism (left) vs. secular humanism (right) * Understanding this philosophical background crucial for addressing root ideological differences Topics Historical Misdiagnosis of Modern Left * Often mistakenly seen as extension of hippie movement * Key differences: * Hippies: anti-war, pro-free speech * Modern left: pro-violence, anti-free speech * Deeper roots in secular anti-humanism movement from 1960s NYC The Factory and Velvet Underground as Nihilism Vectors * Andy Warhol's Factory: hub for nihilistic philosophy * Velvet Underground: * Deliberately tuned 40Hz off-standard * Embraced "ugly on purpose" aesthetic * Famous song "Walk on the Wild Side" about LGBT nightlife * Documentary "The Velvet Underground" (Apple TV+) showcases this movement Philosophical Nihilism in America * Metaphysical nihilism: reality only exists in our minds * Rejects notion of human nature, gender as construct * Anti-human stance: no inherent human value, all is power * Parallels to French existentialism (e.g., Camus) Current Ideological Landscape * Left: Secular anti-humanism * No human nature → no proper use of body/society * Right: Secular humanism * Allows space for Christianity * Potential "road back" to Christian thinking for some Impact on Modern Discourse * "Gender is a construct" only sensical if humans lack nature * Root disagreement: Do humans have inherent nature/meaning? * Understanding this crucial for productive dialogue Get full access to Jason Farley's Substack at jasonfarley.substack.com/subscribe [https://jasonfarley.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
127 episodios
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