Who are some philosophers that criticize capitalism and industrialism from a conservative/traditionalist perspective?
Who are some philosophers that criticize capitalism and industrialism from a conservative/traditionalist perspective?
he also believed in magical jack off crystals though...
knut hamsun but he wasn't a philosopher
Belloc
Charleston
Majority of them.
De Maistre, Schelling(late schelling), Carlyle are some of the more angsty ones.
this is julius evola btw for newfags. didnt realize it just saved as "download"
t. Kaczinski
Why does he look like a fat Nietzsche?
What was Chestertons alternative? Im assuming its not socialism.
He doesn't.
Don't know about Chesterton's specifically but Most Catholic thinkers prefer guild system to regulate labor, quality over quantity, protection from abuse, and emphases on higher ideals than making money, ect.
That sounds pretty attractive. I can imagine it working on a local level, but how well would you think it would work at a national level?
Where does this absurd idea that guilds were benevolent organizations come from? They were inefficient, oligarchical monopolies
>magical jack of crystals
Read some stuff about the man. I know he believes in some weird shit, but please elaborate on this point
>but please elaborate on this point
its a joke you dingus
>its a joke you dingus
The man believed in very outlandish things, it is not outside the realm of reason to expect the jackoff crystals comment could be based in reality
>I can imagine it working on a local level, but how well would you think it would work at a national level?
Its inherently localist, the national level takes care of other affairs.
>The man believed in very outlandish things
Actually its pretty universally agreed he had an incredible grasp on metaphysical/magical concepts in the intellectual sense, even if you disagree with his politics.
It's called distributism. The muslim leader in Submission cites it and Chesterton.
Peter "Morality Man" Hitchens
Tradcaths, reactionaries, and other losers.