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  1. Sep 6, 2024 · The Dark Enlightenment is an intellectual movement that emerged in the early 2010s as a reaction to the perceived failures of liberalism and egalitarianism. The movement's proponents advocate for a return to traditional values, an embrace of inequality, and a rejection of modernism.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ayn_RandAyn Rand - Wikipedia

    1 day ago · Ayn Rand (1905-1982) was a novelist and the creator of Objectivism, a philosophical system that advocated reason, egoism, and laissez-faire capitalism. She moved to the United States in 1926 and became famous with her novels The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged.

  3. 1 day ago · In recent times "Reactionary" tends to be used more as a pejorative by progressive and socialist political movements, but the term "neo-reactionary" has more recently been applied to, and sometimes a self-description of, an informal group of online political theorists known as the Dark Enlightenment.

  4. Sep 15, 2024 · Enlightenment - Reason, Religion, Philosophy: The method of reason was applied to religion, and the product was Deism. The Enlightenment also produced the first modern secularized theories of psychology and ethics.

  5. Sep 6, 2024 · Welcome to the Dark Enlightenment. September 6, 2024. Loading video... Description. Curtis Yarvin is the philosophical godfather of the so-called ‘New Right’, a movement that defies simple categories and political expectations. His writing under the pseudonym Mencius Moldbug explores everything from anti-democracy to accelerationism.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Leo_StraussLeo Strauss - Wikipedia

    1 day ago · Strauss's thought can be characterized by two main themes: the critique of modernity and the recovery of classical political philosophy. He argued that modernity, which began with the Enlightenment, was a radical break from the tradition of Western civilization, and that it led to a crisis of nihilism, relativism, historicism, and scientism. He ...

  7. Enlightenment, a European intellectual movement of the 17th and 18th centuries that emphasized the use of reason to advance understanding of the universe and to improve the human condition. The goals of the Enlightenment were knowledge, freedom, and happiness.