Thursday, November 27, 2014

An Introduction

Ethnarchism is a new philosophy but it is by far the oldest.

It is new in that it has never yet been described or put into a philosophical context.

But it is also ancient since it seeks to achieve that one goal of Life since its inception: the duty to survive, prosper, and reproduce. By our deeds and careful planning, we must ensure the continuous repetition of the cycle and thus of our genetic lineage. This is the psychologist's "Biological Imperative".

Of course our genes are found not only in ourselves and our own children but also in our siblings, cousins, and more distant relatives, and even in those farther yet from us, with whom we still share common descent. Thus ethnarchism emphasis the bond we share with our ethnos, bound together not by language or custom but by blood, contra Herodotus. Implicit in this is the rejection of any kind of civic nationalism or ideological brotherhood. 

The general conclusions of ethnarchism can be outlined very quickly, and many of the conclusions you'll come to are completely straighforward and commonsensical, once the premise is accepted. How to implement them in modern life is a much more complex topic; dealing with these considerations will be the main purpose of this blog.

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