Message from @Kaiser
Discord ID: 569362234715930624
all i read on him was the stanford page
Hedonism externalises your power
so im a bit ignorant on it
stirner was against the imposition of fixed ideas onto the individual
morality, law, blah blah blah
but not only fixed ideas that externalise your power to these false causes but indulging in hedonism does the same thing within the material world
is he against the concept of hedonism or the attachment it creates like an addict's dependency on their drugs?
i guess the latter?
the latter i believe
at an extent, you cant have the latter without the former
i see
you could assert power over the material world without alienating yourself
you have to watch yourself
i see
just like you could utilise fixed ideas like culture and society and private property without being limited or restricted by them
so why would it be against anarchism would be my next question? Most of his literature is usually from the anarchist library
hm?
its not
wait what
no stirner was an anarchist
oh nvm read it wrong
you meant anarchist + hedonism not anarchist alone
my bad
hedonism isnt egoist
yeah
@Deleted User lmaoo
why are all the voice channels locked off?
White names is shut
Shit
American "libertarians" need to stop supporting Republicans
Ok Tyrone @Deleted User
@Deleted User This guy is full of constant lies.
Did it look like I was advertising, you sponge?
I was making a mockery of your faux-individualist cult.
Individualists ultimately deny their own individuality by failing to contextualise themselves as part of a greater community.
Being English is part of my identity.
Go wank off to Atlas Shrugged, bum boy.
"Laconophiles nevertheless remained among the philosophers. Some of the young men who followed Socrates had been Laconophiles. Socrates himself is portrayed as praising the laws of Sparta and Crete.[6] Critias, a companion of Socrates, helped bring about the oligarchic rule of the Thirty Tyrants, who were supported by Sparta. Xenophon, another disciple of Socrates, fought for the Spartans against Athens. Plato also, in his writings, seems to prefer a Spartan-type regime over a democratic one."