Thursday, August 4, 2016

RED PILL UNREALITIES

    A commenter called 'OK Rickety' raised some points in one of our discussions which need some further elucidation in a longer essay. He took exception to a statement we had made concerning the differences between our culture's past and current sexual education of boys. Here is his observations:

    "Well we don't live in the past. Instead boys today experience the reality that most often their fathers or their friends' fathers have been divorced by their mothers. As they reach the point of considering marriage, they likely hear more details about these marriages and realize that it is unlikely that they will be any more successful."

    This statement, and variations of it are something like an axiom among followers of the Game/Red Pill Philosophy. The problem is that it is based on false premises, though superficially true. The general theme is something like this:

      1. Things were different in the past.

       2. Modern society has adopted a New Morality.

       3. The present is the reality we must deal with.

        4. Therefore, we must conform to this reality.

     Points 1 and 2 are obviously true, it is third premise, and consequently the conclusion, that are false.

       It is a common human tendency to assume that present social conditions represent reality, when in fact they do not. This is especially true during times of social instability. It is not a natural condition for children to be raised in broken and dysfunctional homes any more than it is natural for homosexual love-trysts are legitimate marriages or mass-violence is legitimate sociopolitical expression. The reality of what a marriage and family are have never changed. What we are experiencing in 21st Century America---divorce, abortion, broken children, gender-identity disorders, et cetera---are the consequences of avoiding reality.

      It is simply wishful thinking to assume that gender polarity is not essential to a healthy society's long-term viability. Remove the masculine component, as the Feminists teach, and you get an unstable and neurotic culture like the 21st Century West where violence, drug abuse, corporate and political expediency, and instant gratification are typical. Remove the feminine component as the Game Cultists teach, and you get brutal and authoritarian cultures like the Wahhabi Arabs where fanaticism and obedience to leaders of personality cults are typical. As a side note, it is not a positive sign that in our own presidential elections that Hilary Clinton represents one tendency and Donald Trump, the other.

     The correct response therefore is not to conform with or adapt to unreality. The only moral choices we have is either to resist the unreality actively, or withdraw from it passively (i.e. seek another society that respects correct choices). What the Red Pill Philosophy offers is a false solution; the idea that we can play by our opponents' rules and still emerge victorious. At best, such a course of action can only produce a variant form of social dysfunction; just as Red Pill Philosophy is nothing but a variant of Radical Feminism.

      It is not therefore a matter of teaching young men and boys outdated ideals concerning marriage and gender relationships as it about teaching them the correct ideals. As we mentioned in our earlier, Red Pill Philosophy fails here, because it is based on a materialist, marketing approach to relationships and marriage. These matters are not about selling oneself and winning a product. This is why marriage historically falls under the jurisdiction of religion. Religion recognizes the deeper universal principles underlying a marriage bond; that two individuals must spiritually bond as one for a higher purpose. This is much different than the economic models of the Gamers and Marxists who see marriage as something more like forming a corporation and sex as something to be negotiated like a sales pitch.

      What both Game and Feminism are ultimately based upon is narcissism. Neither likes the idea of one party giving up their independence and individual to become an integral part of a family. And one sees the divisiveness present in modern America, we understand that it has its roots in divided families. One situation is the direct product of the other.

5 comments:

  1. "1. Things were different in the past.
    2. Modern society has adopted a New Morality.
    3. The present is the reality we must deal with.
    4. Therefore, we must conform to this reality.

    Points 1 and 2 are obviously true, it is third premise, and consequently the conclusion, that are false."
    [...]
    It is a common human tendency to assume that present social conditions represent reality, when in fact they do not."


    Apparently, your definition of reality is greatly different from any I can find. It seems to me that you are defining reality to be the ideal view of things, even, I believe, referring to current actual conditions as "unreality". I find that absurd.

    I will use the definition from Oxford Dictionaries of reality as "The world or the state of things as they actually exist, as opposed to an idealistic or notional idea of them."

    I would restate "premise 3" as "The present situation is reality, whether we like it or not."

    I disagree with the conclusion ("4") you state, because I do not believe we should conform with this reality. Instead, I would state the conclusion as "Therefore, we must recognize the faults in the present reality, live in a way that avoids or, at least, minimizes the dangers it contains, and strive towards God's ideals."

    "What we are experiencing in 21st Century America---divorce, abortion, broken children, gender-identity disorders, et cetera---are the consequences of avoiding reality."

    No, these are the consequence of avoiding or ignoring the ideal of God's design.

    If "reality" was replaced by "ideal" (meaning God's design) in this post, I think I would agree with the parts touching on that concept. As it stands, your definition of reality makes it ridiculous.

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    1. It seems ridiculous to you because you are separating God's Ideal from the definition of reality. The Ideal is Absolute Reality. We progress individually and socially by trying to conform to that Ideal. The process of conforming to that Ideal, though imperfectly done, is living in Reality. Moving away from that Ideal is to live in Unreality.

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  2. "It seems ridiculous to you because you are separating God's Ideal from the definition of reality. The Ideal is Absolute Reality."

    I had no idea that there are multiple notions of reality. They are, as I understand it, "absolute reality" and "relative reality".

    No, I did not separate God's ideal from the definition of reality. You consider reality to be Absolute Reality, when the typical, casual reader would almost certainly consider reality to be Relative Reality. The only dictionary definitions of "reality" I find using the concept of Absolute Reality show this to be a definition used in Philosophy.

    As I consider reality to be "Relative Reality", your post made little sense to me.

    (Note: I did recognize you apparently had a different definition when I said 'It seems to me that you are defining reality to be the ideal view of things, even, I believe, referring to current actual conditions as "unreality".')

    I think it would be helpful to most readers if you would use "Absolute Reality" rather than "reality", rather than assuming the reader will immediately understand your usage to be that of Philosophy.

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    1. There are no multiple distinctions of Reality. If there is an Absolute Reality, then there can be no other kind. In the physical world, there is imperfection. Progress is moving towards the Absolute; Degeneracy is moving away from it. When the Apostles taught "Love not the World" they meant to love the Absolute and not settle for the status quo of imperfection.

      Hence, there's no need to make the distinctions you suggest, because Relative Reality does not exist. Our present condition in the physical world is one of Imperfect Knowledge which we must strive to overcome.

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    2. I didn't make those distinctions of reality. They already existed in the dictionaries, suggesting that many others subscribe to a different perspective than yours. I presume you are aware that few people would assume your definition as the default.

      It will be far simpler for me to live according to my understanding of reality than to try to understand yours.

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