Prussianism and Socialism by Oswald Spengler by Oswald Spengler
Author:Oswald Spengler [Spengler, Oswald]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Prussian Socialism & Other Essays
Amazon: B01A0BQ7IM
Publisher: Repressed Publishing
Published: 1656-09-15T00:00:00+00:00
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1 I have addressed these questions in The Decline and Fall of Civilisations, Black House Publishing, 2018.
2 The Decline of The West, Vol. I.
3 Because of Nietzscheâs philosophy of will-to-power as struggle, an overcoming of obstacles as the basis of âevolution,â he is often confounded with Darwinism. Rather, Nietzsche wrote to confound Darwin with a contrary idea of âevolutionâ that was self-willed rather than biologically determined. He saw Darwinism as a degrading of man to an animalistic existent for survival rather than an upward urge towards infinity. In that sense this is also the âFaustianâ imperative that Spengler used to describe the character of the Western soul. The two great influences on Spengler were Nietzsche and Goethe. (See: Bolton, âNietzsche Contra Darwin: An Examination of the Nietzschean-Darwinian Pseudosynthesis,â in Southgate, Nietzsche: Thoughts & Perspectives Vol. III, Black Front Press, London, 2011. Also: Walter Kaufmann, Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist, New York, 1968).
4 Spenglerâs philosophy is a refutation of the notion of history as a darwinianâtype evolution from âprimitive to modernâ âmankind;â a âmarch of humanityâ upward. There is no such uniform âmarch,â no such reality as âprogressâ and no such entity as âmankind.â What Spengler shows is an unfolding of cultures with their own life-cycles. The perspective of Spenglerâs time among scientists, politicians, and academics was that the 19th century had reached the epitome of âhumanâ âprogress,â where the blessings of a âworld civilisation,â at the time heralded by Britain, the home of the Industrial Revolution, would be bestowed on every corner of the Earth. The same outlook persists, with spokesmen of our time such as Dr Francis Fukuyama using phrases like âthe end of historyâ in âprovingâ that the Late Westâs Liberalism is the ultimate destiny of âmankindâ after which there is nothing more required.
5 However, Spengler as the herald of a new world-view for the Western Civilisation, was defeated and remains on the periphery. His historical-philosophy remains a heresy against what is âmodernâ and what is âprogressive.â Even the âRightâ has largely remained in the quagmire of 19th century materialism, and therefore rejects or at best under-rates Spengler.
6 Here is a key to Spenglerâs historical-philosophy.
7 This lineal path of imagined ascent for âhumanityâ continues to be the dominant outlook of scientists, politicians and philosophers in âThe West.â
8 It seems symptomatic of political unreality how Classical civilisation was imagined by Masons, Illuminati, Jacobins, Deists, and other âprogressives,â whose perceptions of the Classical polity became models for the American and French Republics; as unreal as âEnlightenmentâ assumptions about the âNoble Savage.â
9 Spengler was by no means indifferent to art and aesthetic appreciation. However, in the Late or âWinterâ epoch of a Civilisation such as the West has long entered, aesthetics become static and starts to degenerate in efforts to establish ânewâ schools such as Abstract Expressionism, Dada, and Surrealism, and even the atonal in music. The last course to greatness left for such a Civilisation is technical-military rather than aesthetic. Spengler devotes the last pages of The Decline of The West to this question.
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