
The Freudian Unconscious and Ours
The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho Analysis (1978)
Source: A Treatise on the Family, 1981, p. 39
The Freudian Unconscious and Ours
The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho Analysis (1978)
“True marriage is the union that mates
Equal with equal.”
Source: Prometheus Bound, line 890 (tr. G. M. Cookson)
Source: Software Engineering: Principles and Practice, 2007, p. 2
“The mixture of highly differentiated populations is a recurrent process in our history.”
David Reich, Who We Are and How We Got Here: Ancient DNA and the New Science of the Human Past, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2018, p.10
The Libertarian as Conservative (1984)
Context: Libertarians complain that the state is parasitic, an excrescence on society. They think it’s like a tumor you could cut out, leaving the patient just as he was, only healthier. They’ve been mystified by their own metaphors. Like the market, the state is an activity, not an entity. The only way to abolish the state is to change the way of life it forms a part of. That way of life, if you call that living, revolves around work and takes in bureaucracy, moralism, schooling, money, and more. Libertarians are conservatives because they avowedly want to maintain most of this mess and so unwittingly perpetuate the rest of the racket. But they’re bad conservatives because they’ve forgotten the reality of institutional and ideological interconnection which was the original insight of the historical conservatives. Entirely out of touch with the real currents of contemporary resistance, they denounce practical opposition to the system as “nihilism,” “Luddism,” and other big words they don’t understand. A glance at the world confirms that their utopian capitalism just can’t compete with the state. With enemies like libertarians, the state doesn’t need friends.
“Marriage, a market which has nothing free but the entrance.”
Attributed
Arnold Hauser, cited in: Bihar Tribal Research Institute (1961). Bulletin of the Bihar Tribal Research Institute. Vol. 3-4, p. 144