P
peregrinus_WA
Guest
Being a student of history, I am a firm believer that history is a good source to understanding the roots of today’s liberal societal and moral diseases. This includes reading the writings of people who, let just say, are the bases for these ills.
Now some will say reading these works sets a dangerous precedence and may even give credence to their philosophies, but I must disagree. To know one’s enemy, you must know how they think and there is no better way than to read them.
Saying that, I am wondering what other think of reading the works of those like Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche, and even Adolf Hitler (yes, I am one of the few who put Hitler with the rest of his Socialist brethren). Are there moral implications to reading their works?
Now some will say reading these works sets a dangerous precedence and may even give credence to their philosophies, but I must disagree. To know one’s enemy, you must know how they think and there is no better way than to read them.
Saying that, I am wondering what other think of reading the works of those like Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche, and even Adolf Hitler (yes, I am one of the few who put Hitler with the rest of his Socialist brethren). Are there moral implications to reading their works?