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Great book that explains the looney thoughts that you hear the enlightened progressives spout
funny
informative
reflective
medium-paced
Gad Saad is brutally honest and genuinely funny. It's refreshing to read something from someone who has literally no interest in what other people think of him. Saad eviscerates our culture of victimhood and the lack of critical thinking inherent in it.
I imagine this book would anger a great many people, thereby proving his point.
A great read for anyone interested in the plague of illiberalism spreading through western society.
I imagine this book would anger a great many people, thereby proving his point.
A great read for anyone interested in the plague of illiberalism spreading through western society.
tense
fast-paced
Hateful, one sided, angry, misogynistic an homophobic rhetoric. Complete garbage.
Moderate: Bullying, Homophobia, Misogyny, Racism, Sexism, Transphobia, Xenophobia, Gaslighting, Classism
Ok so I agree with the arguments but not particularly enjoying the delivery so going to give up
informative
reflective
fast-paced
Book Review
The Parasitic Mind
"Seemingly a Linear Combination of Many Other Books"
4/5 stars
*******
This book feels like an expansion/rewrite of several books that I've read:
1. Richard Dawkins' evolutionary concept of a meme. (The Selfish Gene.)
Viruses (nonliving entities) can take over the replication machinery of a cell in such a way that they cause destruction. And so, ideas (also nonliving entities) can take over the reasoning process of human beings in such a way that they cause massive destruction. (The author gives several real life examples of neuroparasitology. p.18)
2. Douglas Murray (Madness of Crowds)/ Heather MacDonald (Burden of Bad Ideas°°°Diversity Delusion)/ Levitt& Gross (Higher Superstition). The general inanity of left wing academia plus witch hunts against dissidents. (p.16) Universities serve as patient zero for a broad range of other dreadfully bad ideas and movements. Paul Johnson calls them "that traditional home of lost causes, the university campus. "
3. Eric Hoffer. (The True Believer.) The interchangeability of mass movements. It's a coincidence that these idiots become "Diversity and Inclusion Specialists." In another time and place, they might have been Nazis or Communists or Satmar Hasidim.
4. Ryan Anderson. (When Harry Became Sally.) Expansion of the transgender hysteria.
5. Hairy/Lukianoff. (The Coddling of the American Mind.) Opposing viewpoints constitute a form of "violence," and everyone is entitled to be safe at all times and places (p.95). Excessively safe spaces are maladaptive. Concept creep.
*******
The author is a secular Lebanese Jew who lived through the Lebanese Civil War. (People who live through wars / the end of wars are a great source of creativity. Think Nicholas Taleb. Secular Jews also seem to be a huge source of intellectual creativity- some good, much bad. Think Noam Chomsky/ Saul Alinsky.)
Lebanese Civil War survivors are also helpful because they have lived through an event that was entirely a creation of the intelligensia: Saad draws analogies of how foolish ideas can set people who have been living in peace for many centuries against one another with disastrous consequences (p.4), such as the Lebanese civil war. (Nicholas Taleb made the exact same observation years before this book.)
Saad's betes noires are all identified within the first chapter (p.21): 1. Radical feminism; 2. Post-modernism; 3. Social constructivism; 4. Political correctness; 5. Identity politics coupled with self flagellation; 6. Culture of perpetual offense and victimhood; 7. Echo Chambers void of intellectual diversity; 8. Cultural and moral relativism.
*******
Second order thoughts:
¶¶¶If we keep the biological analogies going, shouldn't we question that....
1. Death is a natural thing for all organisms/ societies?
2. Death is a sine qua non for all types of evolution? (Some societies have to make mistakes so that something better can come from their ashes.)
3. As organism-societies die, doesn't create room for newer and better of the same to take their place? (For example: one that understands that "academic freedom" ain't free?)
4. Won't an organism with absolutely no adaptive stressors tear itself apart? (Sitting on the couch eating too many donuts for too long will bring you to your end quicker than going out and running 10 miles a day. The Ascendant West has had a comfortable position for too long, and they have been sitting on the Metaphorical Sofa of Comfort too long.... with predictable disastrous consequences.)
So, if Western society is in the process of tearing itself apart (and that process is facilitated by its Chattering Classes / universities), then does that mean that societies that learn to keep them in check will be the ones that survive? (China. Russia.)
¶¶¶So, some number of intellectuals are all on the wrong side of something. So now what? (In point of fact, that entire book was written by Thomas Sowell. Intellectuals and Society.)
The entirety of both World Wars was an example of such miscalculation...... Plenty of death, destruction, and loss of life.
All for no ostensible reason.
And we may be headed toward the same thing all over again.
And.....so now what? Is this the first time that this has happened? (Answer: NO. Historical China and historical Tibet were both stagnant societies for in excess of 1,000 years because cognoscenti class caught onto stupid ideas.)
*******
Idea streams and topics rehashed:
1. Memetics. (Richard Dawkins.)
2. System 1 and system 2. (Daniel Kahmemann.)
3. Deontological versus consequentialist notions of truth. (Immanuel Kant. Jeremy Bentham.)
4. Sokal Hoax is expanded into the "seven accepted grievance studies papers" (p.78).
5. Cogito ergo sum-->I am a victim therefore I am.
6. Popper's Falsification Principle.
7. Kleptogamy. (Q: Why are all of these men at feminist rallies wimpy beta males? A: "Freud was a fool and reductionist, but sexual strategizing by losers is the source of nearly all left-wing ideology")
8. Paradox of Tolerance. (Popper, again.)
*******
Of the book:
1. 191 pages of prose over eight chapters works out to ≈24 pages / chapter. Enough to read in one sitting or over a lunch break.
3. Several hundred bibliographic citations.
4. Some new words: epistemological dichotomania/polylogism/ kleptogamy.
The book is useful not because of novelty (as before, these ideas have been rehashed many other times and many other places), but because it is a repetition to make people aware of what is happening.
Verdict: I purchased this book for $14.99 for used copy, but since it is so much recapitulation of things that I already knew.....I will value it at about $2
The Parasitic Mind
"Seemingly a Linear Combination of Many Other Books"
4/5 stars
*******
This book feels like an expansion/rewrite of several books that I've read:
1. Richard Dawkins' evolutionary concept of a meme. (The Selfish Gene.)
Viruses (nonliving entities) can take over the replication machinery of a cell in such a way that they cause destruction. And so, ideas (also nonliving entities) can take over the reasoning process of human beings in such a way that they cause massive destruction. (The author gives several real life examples of neuroparasitology. p.18)
2. Douglas Murray (Madness of Crowds)/ Heather MacDonald (Burden of Bad Ideas°°°Diversity Delusion)/ Levitt& Gross (Higher Superstition). The general inanity of left wing academia plus witch hunts against dissidents. (p.16) Universities serve as patient zero for a broad range of other dreadfully bad ideas and movements. Paul Johnson calls them "that traditional home of lost causes, the university campus. "
3. Eric Hoffer. (The True Believer.) The interchangeability of mass movements. It's a coincidence that these idiots become "Diversity and Inclusion Specialists." In another time and place, they might have been Nazis or Communists or Satmar Hasidim.
4. Ryan Anderson. (When Harry Became Sally.) Expansion of the transgender hysteria.
5. Hairy/Lukianoff. (The Coddling of the American Mind.) Opposing viewpoints constitute a form of "violence," and everyone is entitled to be safe at all times and places (p.95). Excessively safe spaces are maladaptive. Concept creep.
*******
The author is a secular Lebanese Jew who lived through the Lebanese Civil War. (People who live through wars / the end of wars are a great source of creativity. Think Nicholas Taleb. Secular Jews also seem to be a huge source of intellectual creativity- some good, much bad. Think Noam Chomsky/ Saul Alinsky.)
Lebanese Civil War survivors are also helpful because they have lived through an event that was entirely a creation of the intelligensia: Saad draws analogies of how foolish ideas can set people who have been living in peace for many centuries against one another with disastrous consequences (p.4), such as the Lebanese civil war. (Nicholas Taleb made the exact same observation years before this book.)
Saad's betes noires are all identified within the first chapter (p.21): 1. Radical feminism; 2. Post-modernism; 3. Social constructivism; 4. Political correctness; 5. Identity politics coupled with self flagellation; 6. Culture of perpetual offense and victimhood; 7. Echo Chambers void of intellectual diversity; 8. Cultural and moral relativism.
*******
Second order thoughts:
¶¶¶If we keep the biological analogies going, shouldn't we question that....
1. Death is a natural thing for all organisms/ societies?
2. Death is a sine qua non for all types of evolution? (Some societies have to make mistakes so that something better can come from their ashes.)
3. As organism-societies die, doesn't create room for newer and better of the same to take their place? (For example: one that understands that "academic freedom" ain't free?)
4. Won't an organism with absolutely no adaptive stressors tear itself apart? (Sitting on the couch eating too many donuts for too long will bring you to your end quicker than going out and running 10 miles a day. The Ascendant West has had a comfortable position for too long, and they have been sitting on the Metaphorical Sofa of Comfort too long.... with predictable disastrous consequences.)
So, if Western society is in the process of tearing itself apart (and that process is facilitated by its Chattering Classes / universities), then does that mean that societies that learn to keep them in check will be the ones that survive? (China. Russia.)
¶¶¶So, some number of intellectuals are all on the wrong side of something. So now what? (In point of fact, that entire book was written by Thomas Sowell. Intellectuals and Society.)
The entirety of both World Wars was an example of such miscalculation...... Plenty of death, destruction, and loss of life.
All for no ostensible reason.
And we may be headed toward the same thing all over again.
And.....so now what? Is this the first time that this has happened? (Answer: NO. Historical China and historical Tibet were both stagnant societies for in excess of 1,000 years because cognoscenti class caught onto stupid ideas.)
*******
Idea streams and topics rehashed:
1. Memetics. (Richard Dawkins.)
2. System 1 and system 2. (Daniel Kahmemann.)
3. Deontological versus consequentialist notions of truth. (Immanuel Kant. Jeremy Bentham.)
4. Sokal Hoax is expanded into the "seven accepted grievance studies papers" (p.78).
5. Cogito ergo sum-->I am a victim therefore I am.
6. Popper's Falsification Principle.
7. Kleptogamy. (Q: Why are all of these men at feminist rallies wimpy beta males? A: "Freud was a fool and reductionist, but sexual strategizing by losers is the source of nearly all left-wing ideology")
8. Paradox of Tolerance. (Popper, again.)
*******
Of the book:
1. 191 pages of prose over eight chapters works out to ≈24 pages / chapter. Enough to read in one sitting or over a lunch break.
3. Several hundred bibliographic citations.
4. Some new words: epistemological dichotomania/polylogism/ kleptogamy.
The book is useful not because of novelty (as before, these ideas have been rehashed many other times and many other places), but because it is a repetition to make people aware of what is happening.
Verdict: I purchased this book for $14.99 for used copy, but since it is so much recapitulation of things that I already knew.....I will value it at about $2