Thursday, March 02, 2006


We live in a time of historical Renaissance. The innovation and technology that allows you to view this document is just one miraculous manifestation in this period of expanding freedom, diverse expression, and cultural advancement. The 21st century Renaissance has succeeded most in those countries that have adopted open political systems, a free system of exchange, the rule of law (over the whim of tyrants and bureaucrats), and acceptance of diverse interests and lifestyles in human nature. Those who oppose this historically rare circumstance are among the same clique' that has always sought a return to a mythical/communal past or utopian future. They were the Jacobins of the French Revolution (and its Rein of Terror), and the Communists and Fascists of numerous 20th century nightmares. In our own time, fundamentalist-terrorists and socialist-collectivists still seek the same ultimate goals as their forebears; a rigid society under the direction and control of -- themselves -- intellectuals, bureaucrats, failed artists, and philosophers.

This site’s ultimate bias is for the free creative individual. As such, it is by default dedicated to opposing all aspects of socialist/collectivist philosophy. The most totalitarian and destructive personalities in political history have not been "greedy" businesspersons, but overwhelmingly, intellectuals, artists, and other assorted romantic idealists. It is a tragic irony that the authoritarian collectivist world view is often a stance held by many artists and intellectuals. Such perspectives ultimately stem from a psuedo-religious perspective that takes predictable stands on everything from how students should be taught in our schools, to how much CEOs "should" be paid (or if they should even be allowed to exist). Though these perspectives have traditionally been referred to as The Left, in reality they comprise a score of ideologies from Fascism to Communism. Those posing as guardians of morality, altruism, and "justice," are often mere control freaks of authoritarian ideology. They have thwarted, and would continue to restrain, the individual identity wherever its creative dynamism dared to manifest.

The stance expressed here is not a patriotic, jingoistic, Republican tirade -- as much as some may wish to pigeonhole it as such. Traditional right and left ideologies often share many common values in that they both desire a role for the state (and for themselves) to impose their moral standards and ideals regarding the way others should live.
It is easy for one to note the absurdities of the US government's abuses of power in a variety of areas. All the same, degrees of corruption or totalitarian menace lie upon a wide spectrum. George Bush is NOT Adolph Hitler. Bin Laden is NOT a "freedom fighter" promoting the "struggle of oppressed people's." The fact that the US government is, like all governments, corrupt or abusive is certainly no argument for increasing its authority, scope, and funding, as our "progressive rebels" would have it.




Who was Prometheus?


Prometheus was the Titan of Greek Mythology who stole fire from the gods and gave it to humans. As a symbolic story and archetypal image, "an allegory," the Promethean myth represents the human will’s potential for heroic defiance against arbitrary authority and the capacity of human reason to obtain knowledge from the natural world. Fire symbolizes knowledge and reason -- the divine spark of human thought and creativity. Prometheus is the archetypal revolutionary who helps to transform the human condition from one at the mercy of outside forces to one that is master of its own destiny. As a revolutionary, he represents genuine revolutionary impulses, not the contrived ideals of collectivists to squelch human autonomy for the obsessive need to impose communal equality (leveled conformity).

The Promethean archetype represents the dynamic hero figure, the catalyst to worldly advancement.
Socialists often paint their "struggle" (to use their word as well as Bin Laden’s and Hitler’s) in heroic terms, but there is nothing heroic about the socialist/collectivist worldview. Socialism has always sought to glorify weakness, suffering, victimhood, and imposed scarcity as means to justify theft from productive forces and impose even greater corruptions than the ones they claim to oppose. Its vision has always been to play upon envy and resentment. It is the antithesis of human heroism and brings with it stasis, decay, and a return to the club and the cave. Its nature is that of primitive tribalism. Its method is to cast the free mind’s achievement into the dusty file cabinets of bureaucratic incompetence.

In astrological perspectives, Prometheus is seen in the symbolism of the planet Uranus - the model of innovation, insight, individuality, and revolutionary dynamism. As the archetype of individual autonomy, it is diametrically opposed to "the Revolution" most political extremists speak of. While today’s "revolutionary" (or, "Progressive," as they often like to describe themselves) may be opposed to the powers that be,the Promethean rebel is one step ahead of the game and opposes the powers that would like to be, as well. In this regard, the businessperson and entrepreneur is not the villain portrayed by the Left, but a creative human figure as much as any artist or poet. The scorn and envy directed at societies most creative personalities has been the pathetic route used by the unproductive and incompetent (usually calling themselves "philosophers") in the guise of seeing their "spiritual" vision as a greater end than productive engagement in the real world.

A society in which individuals can freely choose to associate, trade, act, and interact openly without fear of imposed coercion, is one which has accepted the Promethean flame. The call to water down that divine spark and impose its product's distribution is a call to reject every true Renaissance in human history and place us all into blind obedience to the tribe and its corrupt leaders.

To restrict, regulate, control, and conform is to bind the Promethean free spirit.

Where one hears of envy and resentment against modernity, success, wealth, and achievement, one can be certain that it is no true "revolutionary" who is taking such a stand. Where calls are made to fortify and enhance the authority of the state over the human spirit, one can expect to move, not into the future, but back to the swamp of our cave dwelling forbearers.


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Expressions in the Promethean spirit:


Promethean Antagonist

The American College Ed School Experience

Beijing Diary-Travel log and rant

Promethean Observer - Aphorisms and Epigrams

Promethean Visions - Photos, Drawings, and Cartoons


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The Promethean worldview:




Things admired:


  • Free Markets, free choice, free thought, and voluntary association.
  • The diversity and creative dynamism of a free society.
  • The Promethean hero figure that creates, strives, and accepts the peaceful actions and choices of others.
  • Thinkers from Lao Tzu to Ayn Rand, who knew that self government "governs" best.
  • Cooperation as a voluntary act for the mutual benefit of freely acting agents.
  • The Middle class and the "materialistic," scientific world view which has led to unprecedented progress, diversity, and creative expression.


Things despised:



  • Radical Socialism (Communism and Fascism), collectivism, and authoritarianism.
  • The bureaucratic state and its minions.
  • Those intellectuals and artists who support and defend the most ruthless of totalitarian schemes to placate their envy and satisfy their will to dominate (all in the phony guise of egalitarian morality).
  • Philosophers from Plato and Marx to Rousseau and Chomsky, who despise the autonomous individual and a world beyond their personal control.
  • "Cooperation" as something arbitrarily defined and imposed.
  • The conjured "oppressed" in whose name the leftist intellectual seeks to impose their prison.





    …As a lazy person with a full-time job, I won't likely respond to praise or chastisements. The former are appreciated and the latter are accepted lightly with condescending laughter.


11 Comments:

Blogger SNAKE HUNTERS said...

The Wise Old Promethean,

Howdy Once Again! Check this:

http://www.usawakeup.org

reb

9:48 PM  
Blogger Promethean Antagonist said...

Howdy to you as well...and, thanks for the link.

Cliff

7:46 PM  
Blogger AuldMiseryGuts said...

I thought well of much I could say as "the latter" in this comment, but if you have already set your mind to disregard any opposition "lightly with condescending laughter"...

...it was such an elaborately conveyed paper displaying the your own individuality and the rights to others. I don't however agree with the extremity of the views of the "Promethean figure".

"The 21st century Renaissance has succeeded most in those countries that have adopted...a free system...the rule of law...and acceptance of diverse interests and lifestyles in human nature."

It seems to me that the term "human nature" is really a standard rather than an embodiment of diversity. human nature is human nature: the blend of natural morality and instinct we are born with. Unless that is to say that not all of us are "human", which you would then be correct.

"To restrict, regulate, control, and conform is to bind the Promethean free spirit."

Say there is nearly (or in future) a country in which the 21st century Renaissance has truly succeeded due to the country's complete adoption of diverse lifestyles and individuality: Surely it did not reach its "success" by delighting in the diverse behavior of unrestrained criminals! (who really would have no moral standards whatsoever if "human nature" is merely a epithet of uniqueness) I find it difficult to understand at all how a society should progress if there is no ethical foundation for it to base its actions upon.

However, if it is also true that "those who oppose this historically rare circumstance are among the same clique' that has always sought a return to a mythical/communal past or utopian future", then I see a lose-lose situation for any country's progression.

I am wholly against any form of Communism/Socialism, but I find it a little more than ridiculous to say that humans advance best when engrossed in self-autonomy. If one has come to a point of a complete autonomous outlook, then it is he--and only he--who can say whether his action are moral (how dangerous does that sound?)

"Those posing as guardians of morality, altruism, and "justice," are often mere control freaks of authoritarian ideology." ...And where did this morality originate from anyhow?--human nature.

Again, I feel as though my thoughts here are really in vain if your devotion to Promethean idealogy disallows you really to care at all.

7:11 PM  
Blogger Promethean Antagonist said...

You are indeed right. I don't care about your thoughts at all. In fact I'm going to leave them up because they so well exemplify the heady snobbishness of so may arrogant intellectuals. I think I stated my case well and could qualify and micro-debate endless fine philosophical points, but I've got better ways to spend my "complete autonomous" time (you appear to have missed the point on that issue). I've stated my world view quite clearly in this and my other writings. There are many others who share it just as there are many who share your abstract micro-critiques of life and society and would thoroughly despise everything I write and think – so?

Sip any fine wine lately? Yachting? Backpacking in exotic locales around the world?
Have fun...(yawn).

6:40 PM  
Blogger Finn said...

I read your other blog (The American College Ed...), but was not allowed to comment. I will do so here.

I think you are reading more into it than is there. Though they might mostly be sheeple, they are well-meaning and it is less conspiratorial and more just... confusion. Things are changing so rapidly and on such a ferocious spectrum that it is difficult for anyone to grasp the links between reality and theory.

What do you think of my "Equity" teacher's choice to have us read "Harrison Bergeron"? Just curious.

Why is there so much anger in you? Are you really directing it at the right people?

9:37 PM  
Blogger Promethean Antagonist said...

Hi Michelle,

'Just saw your comment now (I don't' check my sites often enough, particularly since I don't usually post anything new to some of them).

I didn't mean to imply that anything about the actions of Ed-land are "conspiratorial" thought there are certainly some who recognize they are working toward common "goals" and try to be consistent in their approach. The fact that so many think and act the same doesn't mean they're part of a conspiracy it just means there are like-minded people who share their hopes of imposing a world that suits their common vision.

"Harrison Bergeron" is an excellent short story. We could certainly agree or disagree on a host of specific assignments -- I think maybe you missed the overarching theme of what I've written.

"Why is there so much anger in you?" Your post was pretty reasonable up to that classic line. Actually most who know me find me to be rather childlike and very funny -- at the risk of bragging, I'll say that I was a very popular substitute teacher who many students preferred to their regular teachers (some kids really don't like wasting their time playing games, role-playing, or talking about global warming in a class about the history of Canada).

"Why is there so much anger in you?" Is just a classic line from many who disagree with the views of others. It's on par to calling someone a fascist because they believe in low taxes and constitutionally limited central political authority. In spite of some well-placed sarcasm in my writing, it's hardly an expression of anger. If you disagree with it fine, there are millions of people who would no doubt agree with you. The -- largely socialist -- philosophies of Ed-land today are hardly threatened by bloggers, former teachers, or conservatives who would hope to introduce some substance into what has become travesty of bureaucratically mandated nonsense.

...I you last name really "Goodness?"

Have a jolly day, week, year...

7:01 PM  
Blogger Finn said...

Okay, so you are not angry. Likewise, I do not entirely disagree with everything you have said about Ed-Land, I apologize if I sounded classically quarrelsome. I am really pretty curious about your point of view. No, I did not miss your overarching theme, but I guess my curiosity stems from your very overt distaste for "socialist" agendas. At the risk of sounding unworthy of your time or an explanation:

-What is it, specifically, that you find so horrid about socialist themes in education? Please don't see this as an attack. I would just like to know what risk you see inherent in this type of educational system.

Yes, my last name really is "Goodness"

Thanks for your comments.

1:58 PM  
Blogger Promethean Antagonist said...

Hey Michelle,

At the risk of sounding evasive, I'll have to be a rather brief. This is the kind of subject I've devoted hours of debate to and probably hundreds of pages of blog posts. I'm pretty constrained for time and I'm not one to get into long back and fourths on internet comment sites. I've done it before and in the end it's kind of a waste of time. None the less, I appreciate your interest in the issues and hope you will check out the many books and on-line material that addresses such things.

The quick answer to your question is that I don't like socialism in any of its guise. I realize that such thinking falls on a wide spectrum and that North Korean socialism isn't quite the same thing as the Scandinavian variety (I know, they're "radically" different – no pun intended). The U.S. has adopted many socialist ideals over its' history and some are tolerable and even helpful in the short term.

I've found that debating the merits of socialism vs. "capitalism" (a free system of exchange) is kind of a waste of time as no matter how many worthy facts either side can muster, the ultimate stance is an emotionally based on. Some people are more viscerally geared to collectivism and some more to individualism. The difference lies in the degree of force one wished to see used to "implement" their ideal. I often sum the issue up by merely saying that no matter how well one may argue the merits of freedom and maximum individual autonomy or – conversely -- the "need" to impose elements of a collectivist ideal, I still wish to be left alone. Individualism is often mistakenly associated with selfishness and a cruel world where no one helps each other – a totally bogus argument. In a truly free system, free people, acting independently choose, of their own accord, to join like minded others and to donate their time and money to a variety of causes. Viewing the state and a massive bureaucracy as somehow expressing compassion when it commands the direction of resources and allegiances is absurd in my view. Kind of like saying, "we care… because the government took our money and made a new office building devoted to caring."

(Continued in following comment post -- blogger limits the amount of words in each post).

5:34 AM  
Blogger Promethean Antagonist said...

That all aside, I'm one of the many millions of people (along a wide spectrum) who don’t the John Dewey inspired ideal of using public schools as a means to impose their new world order. Dewey and others like him today (i.e. William Ayers – an unrepentant terrorist) still harbor the view (that certainly isn't' new) that education should be indoctrination. Now, using post-modern philosophy (a dubious set of beliefs), they argue that not deliberately indoctrinating (for the socialist cause) is still indoctrinating for the capitalist one (the constitutional system originally established by Jefferson et al.).

I think that free people have a right to wish that their tax dollars not be used to usurp parental authority over their children to fulfill the ends of a political ideology that is in the end always authoritarian to some degree.

Again, I've said (wrote) all of this before in my Ed blog and other blogs. I certainly don't wish to just "keep repeating myself" and I don't expect to convince everyone. In some cases my beliefs are despised…but, whatever. Who cares?

There are many sources where views similar to mine are expressed and just as many where their opposites are written. I will say, in defense of my stance, that the opposite views currently hold significant sway over the education establishment. School districts, PTA's, unions, and the apparatus of the government's massive rule-laden bureaucracy are well along implementing their ideals and the resistance to those ideals is weak at best.

Like I wrote earlier, there are many books and web sites with similar views to what I articulate here. If I were to note some sources I would definitely look up John Taylor Gatto's books and, with brief references to education history, Jonah Goldberg's, "Liberal Fascism." The last books sounds fanciful but Its a rather scholarly piece with a rich overview of the history of "progressivism" and it's authoritarian character. Dewey and others in the early progressive movement in education theory (still being actively promoted) where no believers in individual freedom. They were intellectual elitists that wished to mold a new man [person] for a controlled society that most of us would not find very pretty.

Continue to explore the ideas out there. You'll come to some useful conclusions. I hope whatever conclusions you come to, that they guide you well in teaching.

Have a fun year.

Cliff

p.s. Typed in relative haste. Excuse random grammar errors.

5:34 AM  
Blogger Pat said...

Promethean allegory is no less embodies in any greater grandeur than that scupture in NY of Atlas with the world upon his shoulders, a relatively simple depiction of mankind's burden since the beginning of time.

The only thing missing is the chain which leads from his nose to the authoritarian of the moment guiding him toward his own destruction.

while he may not lay down his burden, the question is whether he may break the chain and do his own thinking, and choose his own direction.

9:39 AM  
Blogger Promethean Antagonist said...

Indeed, while living in New York years ago I had gazed upon that sculpture several times. It's not only a great work of Art Deco design, but captures the promethean spirit well -- its definitely got a "Randian" quality about it.

9:35 AM  

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