Originally posted by french frank
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It was above all, I think, the ideas of the post-Freudians and post-Jungians such as Norman Brown, Gregory Bateson and Eric Fromm, that informed the New Left thinking of the late 1950/s early 1960s, as well as the more liberal or left-libertarian ethos of much of the post-'68 radical left in America and Europe: these ideas - in their turn most probably originating in pre-Marx utopians including Blake and the late Victorian idealists, with/alongside the oppressed by neo-colonial exploitation, race, gender and sexual orientation. Slower, in my estimation, to filter through to this radical left has been the challenge and potential posed in advances in ecology and environmental campaigning, in re-grounding Marxian thinking in conjunction with the broadening understanding in anthropology of societies hundreds if not thousands of years ago, evolved on sustainable technologies, and the relationship between societies and their underpinning spiritual and ethical value systems, leading to a realisation of the tight interdependence existing between the technological advancements of Western civilisations and the ideas based on the mastering of lower orders in society and in the evolutionary food chain to profitable and therefore, it has been axiomatically assumed, beneficial ends. This is not to claim that nations conquering nations and slaveries did not exist in earlier ages, but rather to argue that technological advances post the Industrial Revolution, coupled with population outgrowths and their conferring of competitive advantage in advancing nations' money-governed wealth terms, substantiated the established establishment viewpoint based on victory through a nation's strength - the rights devolving from said victories dependent on maintaining ideologies based on ideas of superiority and inferiority, whether directed towards the "lower orders" of nature or people who are "different" and therefore of less worth. It may seem strange to some that many of these ideas are still being contested, but this need not necessarily be so.
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