Yra tokia labai įdomi knyga "The Closing of the American Mind" , parašyta žydų autoriaus ALLAN BLOOM'o apie blogio filosofiją, slypinčią už politkorektiškumo. Tai knyga apie tai kaip marksistų įkūrta Frankfurto mokykla (taip, ta pati, kuri netyčia betyrinėdama visuomenes ir kaip jas užvaldyti, išrado Sociologijos mokslą. Erikas Fromas buvo iš jos išdgrūstas, nes per daug užsikrėtė krikščioniškaja meilės filosofija. O Hitleris 1933 perkėlė ją į JAV. Čia štai ištraukėlė iš knygos anotacijos: _Political correctness'' was a phrase originally used in Communist Party intellectual circles in the 1930s and 1940s. It was revived by neoconservative authors around 1990 as an insulting characterization of a general school of thought that might be more scientifically called postmodernism. All the lunacies being taught on campus are postmodernism. The postmodernists spend much of their time polemicizing with each other over who, exactly, has possession of the true grail of postmodernism; thus, there are structuralists, poststructuralists, feminist deconstructionists, Third World lesbian feminist deconstructionists, and so on. However, all postmodernist thought has its proximate origins, as Bloom implies, in the three sources of Nietzsche, Heidegger, and the Frankfurt School. The postmodernists will not deny this; most celebrate it. What, then, is postmodernism? In 1936, Nazi Culture Minister Josef Goebbels, on orders from Adolf Hitler, formed a committee of academics to edit the complete works of Frederich Nietzsche. Martin Heidegger was placed on that committee; in preparation, Heidegger prepared a series of lectures on Nietzsche's work. Heidegger concluded that the most important thing that he shared with Nietzsche was the commitment to extinguish the last traces in Western civilization of what he called ''metaphysical humanism.'' This commitment was also shared by the Frankfurt School. ''Metaphysics'' is the investigation of that which is not in the physical world, which generates the physical world, or generates changes in the physical world. Many readers will say at this point: ''Something which is not generated by the world, but which operates in the world? That's God.'' .......... Now, go back to Nietzsche, the context for Heidegger's analysis. Nietzsche is probably most famous for a single sentence, written a little over 100 years ago: ''God is dead.'' This, it should be noted, is a lot nastier than the classic atheist argument that ''God does not exist and here are my proofs;'' Nietzsche was saying, ''God is dead; I killed Him; and I want you to kill Him too.'' This statement--''God is dead''-- is the basis of all politically correct postmodernism._ -- Komentuoju straipsnį http://www.culture.lt/lmenas/?st_id=18458