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This podcast presents a Nietzschean, esoteric, and Ingenierian critique of the Frankfurt School, arguing that its theories represent a fundamental inversion of reality. The central critique contends that while Critical Theory blames external social and economic systems for human suffering, true freedom originates from the primacy of consciousness and the cultivation of character. By framing individuals as passive products of their environment, the Frankfurt School is accused of promoting ressentiment and a psychology of perpetual victimhood that stifles human excellence. The source contrasts this "horizontal" focus on structural change with a "vertical" path of self-mastery and spiritual transformation. Ultimately, the work suggests that genuine societal renewal can only occur when individuals take moral responsibility for their own inner development rather than outsourcing liberation to social engineering.
By Roy D BlendellThis podcast presents a Nietzschean, esoteric, and Ingenierian critique of the Frankfurt School, arguing that its theories represent a fundamental inversion of reality. The central critique contends that while Critical Theory blames external social and economic systems for human suffering, true freedom originates from the primacy of consciousness and the cultivation of character. By framing individuals as passive products of their environment, the Frankfurt School is accused of promoting ressentiment and a psychology of perpetual victimhood that stifles human excellence. The source contrasts this "horizontal" focus on structural change with a "vertical" path of self-mastery and spiritual transformation. Ultimately, the work suggests that genuine societal renewal can only occur when individuals take moral responsibility for their own inner development rather than outsourcing liberation to social engineering.