02-07-2019, 09:19 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-07-2019, 09:33 AM by Bill the Piper.)
Regarding Jefferson:
https://www.amazon.com/Psychology-as-Rel...B003XT60BS
In this book, Paul Vitz discusses the modern "humanistic psychology" and its cult of self-actualisation. He names three sources for this worldview:
There is no question that the corrosive countercultural ideas of 1960s and 70s were inspired by this radical individualism fashionable among intellectuals, rather than by Marxism which is after all a collectivistic, working-class ideology. Actual Marxist regimes can be very tough on drugs, sexuality, religion, etc.
To be more exact: within the American Revolution, there seems to have been a proto-Democrat current led by Jefferson, and proto-Republican current led by Alexander Hamilton. I argue that the counterculturals are among the heirs of the Jeffersonian current.
https://www.amazon.com/Psychology-as-Rel...B003XT60BS
In this book, Paul Vitz discusses the modern "humanistic psychology" and its cult of self-actualisation. He names three sources for this worldview:
- Feuerbach (a German philosopher who inspired Carl Marx)
- the American Revolution with its slogan, "don't thread on me".
- some varieties of liberal protestantism which did away with the idea of original sin
There is no question that the corrosive countercultural ideas of 1960s and 70s were inspired by this radical individualism fashionable among intellectuals, rather than by Marxism which is after all a collectivistic, working-class ideology. Actual Marxist regimes can be very tough on drugs, sexuality, religion, etc.
To be more exact: within the American Revolution, there seems to have been a proto-Democrat current led by Jefferson, and proto-Republican current led by Alexander Hamilton. I argue that the counterculturals are among the heirs of the Jeffersonian current.
![[Image: maxresdefault.jpg]](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/qsAncAfM40Q/maxresdefault.jpg)