You can find his latest projects at on Twitter and his excellent political philosophy courses on Teachable at: Michael's recommended subversives are Leo Strauss, Alexander Dugin, and Martin Heidegger. being in your body - Gnosticism as a fundamental imbalance. The Marketplace of Ideas as a filter for truth.Įastern Mysticism and how it helps us see nuance in “the self”īeing embodied vs. Infohazards in understanding political philosophy. Going back to the roots of our tradition to understand the fruits of itĮach Ethnos and the possibility of universal political principles - does Ango-Saxon politics work in Eastern Europe? “Freedom means the freedom to reject liberalism” Questioning the Individual and replacing him with different other subjectivities. What does Alexander Dugin add to the conversation? Post-liberalism as a reality beyond liberalism, communism, and fascism Having roots in Eastern Europe as a motivation for learning political philosophy I chat to rogue scholar Michael Millerman about what political philosophy can teach us in a post-liberal age. Why you should read "The Demon in Democracy" by LegutkoĬharles' recommended subversives are Carl Schmitt and Ernst Junger.Ĭharles is a successful entrepreneur, an ex-lawyer, and the maximum leader of the Worthy House, a blog and podcast where he reviews a variety of books from a right-wing, post-liberal perspective. Seeing tech as a tool, not a savior and space, the final frontier What does the new online right look like and why is it so generative? Neoreaction and his take on Curtis Yarvin Gatekeeping on our side: "no friends to the right" The three strands of post-liberal thought - what does the territory look like? I talk to Charles about finding ourselves at a very generative intersection of political ideas, in what feels to be a pivotal moment & in great company - post-liberalism is here and it is up to us to feel out the contours of the future, to at least not let it surprise us, and at best have a part in creating it. His recommended subversive is Jaques Ellul and his book The Technological Society (plus a nod to Uncle Ted, who has explored similar territory). You can find his work on his website and his Substack, The Abbey of Misrule. He is the former deputy editor of The Ecologist and the co-founder of the Dark Mountain Project. Paul Kingsnorth is an English writer and former environmental activist who lives in the west of Ireland. I speak to Paul about freedom under liberalism, his conversion to Romanian Orthodoxy, the possibility of a truly secular society, transhumanism, the English people and their right to self-determination, the hedonic treadmill, London as the new Babel, what is Hell, scientism and the race for the preservation of bare life under Covid, materialism, localism, AI, technocapital and more. Or check out my writing and the early releases on Substack at You can support this podcast and get early releases and bonus content at
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