melodius Posté 25 novembre 2004 Signaler Posté 25 novembre 2004 http://amconmag.com/2004_12_06/review.html Article intéressant de Paul Gottfried.
Ronnie Hayek Posté 25 novembre 2004 Signaler Posté 25 novembre 2004 Zut, je voulais aussi le poster. Cela me rappelle mes années d'études.
Ronnie Hayek Posté 25 novembre 2004 Signaler Posté 25 novembre 2004 Jäger also relates Adorno’s involvement in a project undertaken for the U.S. High Commission soon after his return to Frankfurt, a series of group surveys intended to ascertain the “fascist sympathies” of Germans then undergoing American-led re-education. Adorno’s chosen assistants, some of whom themselves had shady pasts in the Third Reich, blurred the distinction between Nazi sympathies and certain well-founded observations about the recent past. Germans who complained about the Allied bombing of civilian populations during the war or about vindictive American treatment afterwards, or who noted the harsh provisions of the Treaty of Versailles ending the First World War, were presumed to be sympathetic to Hitler or else mentally troubled German nationalists. Adorno, le prince de l'amalgame. Le plus drôle est que sa philosophie antirationaliste entretient de nombreux points communs avec celle d'un Heidegger.
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