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Showing posts with the label cancel culture

The Ethics of Exhaustion: Nietzsche on Decadence and Cancel Culture

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The Blond Beast in Chains. AI art Introduction Cultural decay rarely announces itself with fanfare. Nietzsche insists that exhaustion often parades as virtue, cloaking weariness beneath moral rectitude. When a society creaks under that disguise, it not only loses its imaginative pulse but also clears a path for domineering personalities. This essay draws on Nietzsche’s critique of décadence and ressentiment to show how moral fervor—especially when fortified by popular psychology—can erode creative life and invite manipulative power. By tracing the genealogy of moralized outrage, we will see why guarding aesthetic vitality matters as much as guarding legal rights. Diagnosing Decline For Nietzsche, decline is not mere laxity; it is “that exhaustion which no longer attacks what is harmful” ( Twilight of the Idols , “Skirmishes,” §37). A culture in decline elevates symptoms of frailty—pity, timidity, compliance—into commandments, congratulating itself on its own restraint. Beca...

John Milton and the Heresy of Truth: The Danger of Unquestioned Beliefs

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Introduction Truth is not a possession to be inherited but a challenge to be confronted. It must be sought actively rather than accepted uncritically. John Milton’s Areopagitica , a bold defense of free speech and open inquiry, warns against the dangers of intellectual passivity. He argues that even truth, when blindly accepted without personal examination, can turn into mere dogma. His insight remains profoundly relevant today, as society continues to grapple with issues of censorship, ideological conformity, and the suppression of dissenting views. Milton’s assertion that “A man may be a heretic in the truth; and if he believe things only because his pastor says so... the very truth he holds becomes his heresy” captures the paradox of unexamined beliefs. Truth must be tested and understood, not simply absorbed. Similarly, he acknowledges that “Good and evil we know in the field of this world grow up together almost inseparably,” underscoring the necessity of engaging with op...

Areopagitica 2.0: John Milton and Censorship in the Digital Era

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"Let truth and falsehood fight it out; has anyone ever seen truth lose in a fair and open debate?" John Milton (Modern Version) Introduction John Milton’s Areopagitica (1644) stands as one of the most compelling defenses of free expression in history. Written in response to the Licensing Order of 1643, which required government approval before publication, the work passionately argues against censorship and in favor of an open marketplace of ideas. Although Milton is best known for Paradise Lost , where he explores free will, Areopagitica examines a different but equally vital aspect of liberty: free speech—the right to publish and debate freely. For him, just as individuals must navigate moral choices in a fallen world, societies must likewise allow the contest of ideas, trusting that truth will ultimately prevail. The title itself is drawn from the Areopagus, an ancient Athenian court known for its role in overseeing legal and moral matters. By invoking this c...