Man's Fight for Existence: The Primalist Manifesto by Savage Corey
Author:Savage, Corey [Savage, Corey]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Corey Savage
Published: 2016-12-17T16:00:00+00:00
Human Relations in the System
Mechanical Reorganization of Humans
The System has been disintegrating human bonding in all forms in its effort to transform the individual humans into economics units. As a result, relationships are increasingly becoming matters of transactions bereft of deeper-level connections. The unit of man is now the individual.
In the past, agriculture destroyed tribal groups and reshaped them into agrarian societies with families and national identities. Now, the System is destroying those families and nations through the commercial reorganization of the population. Tribal mutuality has been supplanted by systemic organizations, communal relationships with pecuniary relationships, and small-group autonomy by individualist dependency under multitudes of centralizing forces. With this reorganization, human interaction and its features have been reduced to mere pecuniary functions. And as the drive for success rises, many humans themselves are starting to view each other as objects for profit. The pecuniarization of human relationships is inevitable under the System.
As a result, even basic human cordiality, including the act of smiling, has been perverted by businesses as a means of fostering good impression. And once established, no one can stop the charade—no matter how blatant—due to competitive conformity. All interactions are now superficial, existing only to manipulate surface feelings to leave positive impressions and induce profitable behaviors. With the time, the superficiality begins to permeate in all social interactions. Today, people are too busy to connect, too scared to be authentic, and lost as to how to be human together.
Membership and Acceptance
In primal times, man was born into a tribe as its member. He was one and together with his fellow members whom he bonded through shared experience. Besides the initiation process that may have existed to prove his worth as a man, he didn’t need to actively seek validation just to be accepted. The modern man does not have this privilege. The modern man is born into a family within a society and must make extra efforts to bond with others and to belong to groups. While the primal man is socialized as a human being to become a thriving member of his tribe, the modern man is, instead, socialized by the System to conform to its mechanical rules. He must prove himself worthy of being a cog in its vast machine. In primal societies, relationships were human and tribe-oriented; in the System, relationships are transactional and individual-oriented. This is why there is a pervasive deficit of deep-level human connection in today’s society.
Depersonalization
Under the System, human beings become depersonalized in the eyes of each other as mere representations of creations. A person in the society is his race, culture, religion, ideology, a collection of opinions, an economic apparatus, political affiliation, level of success, physical attractiveness, education and career, a voter, a fan, a consumer and so on, but not a fellow human being. This becomes especially augmented as the society becomes more antiphysical and urbanized. The tribal community that once gave him an identity and humanity is no more; he is now a citizen of the modern world.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
| Anthropology | Archaeology |
| Philosophy | Politics & Government |
| Social Sciences | Sociology |
| Women's Studies |
Nudge - Improving Decisions about Health, Wealth, and Happiness by Thaler Sunstein(7669)
The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin(5393)
iGen by Jean M. Twenge(5390)
Adulting by Kelly Williams Brown(4540)
The Sports Rules Book by Human Kinetics(4355)
The Hacking of the American Mind by Robert H. Lustig(4345)
The Ethical Slut by Janet W. Hardy(4226)
Captivate by Vanessa Van Edwards(3823)
Mummy Knew by Lisa James(3663)
In a Sunburned Country by Bill Bryson(3513)
The Worm at the Core by Sheldon Solomon(3463)
Ants Among Elephants by Sujatha Gidla(3445)
The 48 laws of power by Robert Greene & Joost Elffers(3165)
Suicide: A Study in Sociology by Emile Durkheim(2995)
The Slow Fix: Solve Problems, Work Smarter, and Live Better In a World Addicted to Speed by Carl Honore(2984)
The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell(2878)
Humans of New York by Brandon Stanton(2851)
Handbook of Forensic Sociology and Psychology by Stephen J. Morewitz & Mark L. Goldstein(2684)
The Happy Hooker by Xaviera Hollander(2675)