Thebestoftherest wrote: ↑Fri Jul 01, 2022 7:27 pm Can you give an example of what it supposed to be?
Actually, no.CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Fri Jul 01, 2022 8:00 pmWell Caesar's version is the idea of a Golden Mien. He believes that the Caesar's Legion is kind of shitty (because it is) and doesn't have anything in the way of infrastructure or culture. You know, despite the fact he has godlike control over their entire lives. He also believes that the New California Republic is soft and weak due to its facile democracy as well as capitalism. Stupidly, Caesar believes that invading the NCR will result in the destruction of the Legion but a transformation of NCR into a much more powerful ruthless society. I'm assuming he's envisioning something like the Nazis from The Man with the High Castle or, ironically, Enclave.Thebestoftherest wrote: ↑Fri Jul 01, 2022 7:27 pm Can you give an example of what it supposed to be?
Thesis + Antithesis=Synthesis.
Which is superficially accurate to the Hegelian dialetic. Two opposites become merged and stronger for it. Except anyone who looks at the above can tell this is utter bullshit and makes no goddamn sense. Probably because the Dialetic is about ideas transforming not societies. Like, if Caesar was trying to say that combining his fake Roman religion with Enclave materialism, that makes sense, but this is a much bigger and more chaotic conflict that he's just slapping the label of the philosopher on.
Anything could happen with the war between NCR and the Legion up to and including NCR becoming more democratic or both sides collapsing completely.
What I meant was, "Thesis + Anthithesis=Synthesis" isn't the Hegelian Dialectic at all.
It's often SAID to be the Dialectic, but the only place Hegel actually mentions Thesis and Antithesis and Synethesis is to complain about it, saying it was something Kant did (Kant wasn't necessarily the first to do it either). He NEVER uses this formulation himself. Hegelian scholars aren't sure why the Th>Ant>Syn is attributed to Hegel when it predates him by decades at least, but might have been Bertrand Russel or some other English speaking writer who was giving a summary of Hegel's ideas and got confused.
The ACTUAL Hegelian Dialectic is Idea> Negation> Concrete, by which he meant that we all have innate Ideas which we project onto the world, only to run into contradictions (Negations) in the actual world which challenge those ideas when we try to bring them into reality, and the result is something Concrete that is a compromise between our Ideas and the Negation of those Ideas.
Caesar, and possibly the devs, probably read "A History of Western Philosophy" or "Philosophy for Dummies" or some other introductory stuff that glanced over Hegel but didn't read much of Hegel himself...which, as I said, works out for Caesar anyway though since he's the sort of person who isn't as smart as he portrays himself to be.