149 episodes

A weekly podcast focused on the problem of modernity: Its rejection of the Tao. Related topics: What is the Tao? Why was it rejected? How does its rejection manifest itself in modernity and postmodernity?

The Daily Eudemon Eric Scheske

    • History
    • 4.0 • 4 Ratings

A weekly podcast focused on the problem of modernity: Its rejection of the Tao. Related topics: What is the Tao? Why was it rejected? How does its rejection manifest itself in modernity and postmodernity?

    Existence Strikes Back and The Hemisphere Hypothesis: A Summary

    Existence Strikes Back and The Hemisphere Hypothesis: A Summary

    Modernity is the left hemisphere gone wild. Gnosticism, with its dualistic approach and emphasis on knowledge that gives salvation and control, is a left-hemispheric political religion that thrived during the twentieth century and has today settled in as the dominant cultural disposition that drives public debate. Today’s powerful elites aren’t gnostics, but they ride their left hemispheres like cocaine-fueled jockeys on rabid horses. Because gnosticism and today’s powerful elites are dominated by the left hemisphere, they’re natural allies and they’re coming together in a final effort to do what modernity has been trying to do for centuries: eliminate altogether the Tao part of The Reality Spectrum. It can’t be done, short of eliminating humanity altogether, so the Tao continues to manifest itself in all sorts of ways.


    Show notes here

    • 18 min
    How to Brand Yourself

    How to Brand Yourself

    Pick four traits. The last one must be "victim."

    It's because we live in a gnostic culture that rails against the evil "structure." If there's a structure, there must be victims of the structure. 

    Show notes

    • 6 min
    The Gnostic Hates the Structure

    The Gnostic Hates the Structure

    Belief in a structure drives the gnostic. Without a structure to defeat, the gnostic has no purpose.
    Ancient Gnosticism Presupposed an Elaborate Cosmological Structure of Evil
    Ancient gnosticism used the ancient cosmic system: The earth was in the center, surrounded by the air and spheres: sun, moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and a ring of fixed stars that close it all off.

    That was more-or-less accepted astronomical science around the time of Christ. It was nothing novel.

    But the ancient gnostic took the cosmological system one step further: it taught that the cosmological system was a prison.

    Every ancient gnostic sect taught this idea. Most sects said the cosmos was the creation of an evil god, the “Demiurge,” who created the cosmos as a structure of deception. The Demiurge then outfitted the structure with demons and archons who acted as prison guards to make sure no one got out of this cosmological prison.

    Gnosticism offered liberation from the prison. The cosmological prison was the sine qua non of gnosticism: If existence wasn’t a prison, the gnostic’s product—knowledge, the map, the plan for escaping the prison—was worthless.

    Gnosticism without a structural evil to overcome is like football, baseball, or basketball without a ball.

    Show notes here

    • 13 min
    The Gnostic Believes His Paradise is a Historic Inevitability and His Movement Will Bring It About

    The Gnostic Believes His Paradise is a Historic Inevitability and His Movement Will Bring It About

    Parts IV and V of an Analysis of Eric Voegelin's Six Gnostic Traits

    Alienation is the Marxist bugbear. He sees alienation everywhere because it emanates from the economic substructure and works its way through the socio-political superstructure. Natural economic evolution would eliminate it, but the ruling classes are suppressing the evolution out of self-interest, so a revolution needs to bring about the evolution.

    Show notes here

    • 15 min
    The Gnostic is a Believer

    The Gnostic is a Believer

    Did you take a sociology class in high school or college?

    Did you know sociology’s founder, August Comte (1798-1857), was kind of a dick? The Encyclopedia Britannica says he was “ungrateful,” “self-centered,” and “egocentric.” If those aren’t bad enough, other biographers say he was a megalomaniac, cruel, and downright nuts.

    Comte, on the other hand, considered himself a relevant man, to put it modestly. He was born at the end of the Enlightenment and fully embraced its ideals,[1]which Isaiah Berlin summarized as:

    1.            Every genuine question can be answered. If it can’t be answered, it’s not a genuine question.

    2.            The answers to the questions can be discovered, learned, and taught.

    3.            All the answers are compatible with one another.

    Those ideals are captured perfectly by science. Science is the discipline of power: it answers questions and puts them into neat boxes. Physics is especially good at this.

    Comte concluded that the principles of physics could be applied to society: “social physics” is what he initially called it before calling it “sociology.”

    By applying scientific findings and mathematical truths to social interactions, the government and its intellectual advisers could greatly improve society.

    He was positive it would work. He was so positive, in fact, that he popularized the term “Positivism” to describe his and other contemporary academics’ extremely positive expectations of science

    Comte was hailed as an academic hero. The French erected statues and monuments in his honor and named streets after him. He had replaced the hidebound restrictions of tradition, king, and pope with the only thing that could be trusted: science, bolstered by math. No more religion, just facts.

    SHOW NOTES HERE

    • 10 min
    Why We Judge. And Why We Need to Stop

    Why We Judge. And Why We Need to Stop

    This is a podcast episode from "Outside the Modern Limits," a whimsical newsletter that comes out every Saturday that is geared toward helping people understand and thrive in modernity. You can subscribe and find the show notes here. 

    • 12 min

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