Best right-wing intellectual or philosopher? Ancient or modern?
Best right-wing intellectual or philosopher? Ancient or modern?
Caesar was not right wing. He genocide entire cultures and people to pay back Jewish bankers.
Does Stefan Molyneux make the cut as at least good for a modern right-wing intellectual?
Guenon, Junger, Burke, de Maistre
Good ones. Would you add Evola perhaps?
Yeah definitely, I always found Guenon better tho and when the two exchanged letters for a debate/discussion, evola got completely rekt over a bunch of topics
Did Heidegger ever have any correspondence with those two?
I have no idea, would be interesting to find out
>evola
>all traditions are dead let's run out the clock waiting for kali yuga to end and apocalypse to come
>it's all inevitable time is cyclical bruh don't fight it just be a soul aristocrat
>guenon
>becomes a muslim
Politics wise...
Cicero or Aristotle.
>Does Stefan Molyneux make the cut as at least good for a modern right-wing intellectual?
Kill yourself, internet kiddo
>Evola perhaps?
esoteric cunt
Kill yourself, internet kiddo
>Junger,
lol
How is it not Hitler?
william luther pearce
george lincoln rockwell
oswald mosley
pierce
uh, do you have any evidence for this? sounds like bullshit
Nassim Taleb.
The Big man himself,
Adolf Hitler! - Mein Kampf is a decent read.
Greentexting is literally reductio ad absurdum in 90% of cases.
I like traditionalism as a philosophy a lot but for politics it can merely serve as a loose guide as we experience problems and possibilities which are difficult to interpret from a traditionalist point of view.
Except both evola and guenon say that you can not revive a dead tradition no matter how much you larp.
Caesar was a communist
>redistribution of lands to the poor's ,giving poor's money.
Maurras, Carl Schmitt
Not sure how it holds up to translation but Chateaubriand is pretty much fundamental to the idea of political conservatism and how it came to be in the late 18th and early 19th centuries as a reaction to the revolution and shifts in governance in France.
His autobiography is a great read even outside of that as it's also a first-hand record of all the political troubles of this strange era and the massive cultural changes, since he was involved in politics, arts and the aristocracy of his time.
Fuck did he really become a Muslim? After all of his hindu shit?
Heraclitus, Boethius, Carlyle, Heidegger, Schopenhauer, Evola, Bowden.
>Aristotle
>Right wing
there are no "best", all of them help a man to construct the whole of one's world-view
Yeah man, he thought it was the only living tradition at all compatible with western way of life. Though I gotta say it's maybe better than what Evola did, which was nothing.
Jonathan Bowden
Kerry Bolton
Julius Evola
Joseph De Maistre
Guillaume Faye
>Caesar
>Right-wing
Pick one
Nietzche, too bad he has a bad reputation from a terrible fanbase
Ayn Rand
dude holy shit read a little Caesar went to conquer Gaul to pay back the insane debts he was racking up in Rome he was lucky not to be killed in rome long before he became famous.
>decent
>the most long winded and self indulgent blogpost of a novel you will ever read
Marcus Aurelius
Nietzche
Ayn Rand
Sargon of Akkad
not to mention
>calling any revolutionnary buying into hegelian historicism right-wing
Jesus Christ, obviously.
Jesus was on the hard left of his contemporaries
I'm not sure if the right/left dichotomy works in the ancient era. That being said, Cicero was staunchly in favour of stability, even if it meant offing a few traitors without a trial, so he is a good candidate, insofar as he can be described as right-wing.
Onesimo Redondo/Jose antonio primo de rivera