In 1901, the German philosopher Edmund Husserl undertook a theoretical battle against psychologism, encompassing skepticism, anthropologism and relativism in the two volumes of Logical Investigations, preparatory studies for his phenomenology.
Psychologism not only permeates the three aforementioned currents, but also underpins them; its foundation is that logical laws are psychological and arise from the psychological process of the association of ideas. This will lead to relativism and the so-called anthropologism or cultural relativism. Husserl denounces the lack of logical connection between this theory, its main characteristic being that it claims to have the truth while relativizing the concept of truth; a good example of this are the scoundrels who currently preach the following notion: “An obese person would not be considered as such in another type of society, a schizophrenic would not be considered as such in Antiquity, etc.” Absolute truth would be unattainable, and so would the most basic truth, depending on the “social/cultural mode.”
One of the propagators and perhaps precursors of this absurd idea, Karl Marx, intended to explain how social relations were formed in different eras through economic organization. But what creates this economy? They say it is necessity, right? But who creates the most ingenious way to solve the problem? This question will be answered soon.
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The most famous cultural relativist was the jew Franz Boaz, a staunch miscegenationist who explained culture by itself, from which all the ideas of diluting traditional “racist” culture by a superior multiracial society, free from moral constraints, etc., come from. Boaz was the teacher of Margaret Mead, a leader of the sexual revolution of the 1960s, and he was also the teacher of Ashley Montagu, an “English” jew whose works are summed up in the pure and simple denial of reality, as well as the enhancement of his master’s tautological explanations. The echoes of his ideas are very present in our daily lives, such as Ricardo Duchesne, a Canadian professor who sees in Europeans only a cultural superiority over other peoples.
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