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The left’s dubious heroes — 3 Comments

  1. > Romanticism has found a cozy home on the Left.

    Yes. No.
    Romanticism, in its (cognitive) desire to explain and accept the outliers, has found a cozy home on the Left (but lost the cognitive part).
    Romanticism, in its (cognitive) desire to accept and explain the silently adopted norms, has found a home on the Right. (See “Romantic Nationalism”. See also “Apocalyptic Romanticism”. See also “The Inklings”. Etc., etc.)
    Romanticism, by itself, is every direction of thought that’s not satisfied with the presumption that the man is a mechanism, and the perfect man is a perfect mechanism.
    In other words, Romanticism is realism, and its opponent, Classicism, is (the absence of “the” is intentional here) helpless philosophy of watchmakers and social engineers trying to stay relevant.

  2. Let’s not forget George Floyd, a career criminal and drug addict who overdosed while resisting arrest and was NOT murdered by Derek Chauvin. Also Ahmet Aubery, a low-IQ individual who committed petty thefts while posing as a jogger. When two men tried to perform a citizen’s arrest of him, he tried to take away the shotgun of one of them, resulting in his own death. I believe the two were given life sentences, as was a third man who merely recorded the event on his phone from a distance.

  3. I’m a poet and a programmer. I see Romanticism as an important, even necessary, mode of being human. Sure, it can be taken to pathological extremes, as described above. But that’s far from the whole story.

    I would say Romanticism has long had a cozy home in religion and art.

    And still does.

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