The Gaza conflict is no longer merely a territorial or ideological struggle—it has become a self-perpetuating mechanism for power. Both Netanyahu’s government and Hamas exploit the ongoing war to sustain their own systems: one clings to control through fear and national emergency; the other gains legitimacy through resistance and martyrdom. This tragic loop ensures that peace is not only unlikely—it’s structurally undesirable for those in power. Until these recognition-driven systems collapse or transform, Gaza’s future will remain suspended between rubble and rhetoric.

Continue Reading

Why are salaries systemically too low, even in essential jobs? The answer lies in a profit-driven economy where wages are not based on the real value of labor but on what can be withheld to maximize surplus. Employers reverse-engineer salaries to protect margins, while workers—trapped by survival needs and cultural obedience—lack the leverage to demand more. From an Eidoist perspective, this imbalance is not just economic but psychological: recognition replaces compensation, with praise, titles, and “team spirit” offered in place of structural fairness. True reform begins when labor is valued by the form it sustains—not by how well it performs in a hierarchy built on extraction and illusion.

Continue Reading

EU Russia Collaboration

As U.S. commitment to NATO wanes and Europe explores peaceful integration with Russia, a strategic contradiction emerges: EU–Russia collaboration renders NATO obsolete. This essay examines why these two security paradigms cannot coexist, and why Europe’s future depends on exiting the performance-based recognition loop that has defined its alliances since 1949.

Continue Reading

The brain does not seek truth — it seeks to preserve comfort. Beneath every habit, belief, and identity lies a hidden comparator system: a neural loop that checks whether you feel “okay” and suppresses change if you do. Eidoism reveals this loop — not to replace it with another ideology, but to exit the entire structure. This is not a call for revolution, but for revelation. Change does not begin in society — it begins in the nervous system.

Continue Reading

The Kashmir conflict is not just a territorial dispute—it is a clash between two incompatible neural systems shaped by religion, identity, and historical grievance. Radical Islam in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and Hindu nationalism in India, operate as closed recognition loops: cognitive architectures built from repeated associations that define enemies, heroes, and moral superiority. Each system filters reality through its own symbolic code, making true communication impossible. From an Eidoist perspective, peace cannot emerge while these loops dominate perception. Only by dismantling the recognition circuits and reorienting toward shared structural form—not inherited identity—can a path beyond conflict be seen.

Continue Reading

A Call for Greater Form and Recognition in Politics On May 6, 2025, Friedrich Merz, leader of Germany’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU), faced an unprecedented challenge in his bid to become Chancellor. Despite his CDU-SPD coalition holding 328 seats in the Bundestag, Merz failed to secure the required 316 votes in the first round, obtaining only 310. This marked the…

Continue Reading

The dream of colonizing Mars is less about survival and more about spectacle. Cloaked in narratives of human progress and planetary safety, the mission often serves as a vehicle for branding, geopolitical image-making, and personal glorification—particularly for Elon Musk, whose pursuit reveals a deeper psychological hunger for recognition. The red planet becomes not humanity’s lifeboat, but a stage for its unresolved ego.

Continue Reading

The Weaponization of AweWhy the Kawasaki “Horse Motorcycle” is Not a Motorcycle—And Why That Matters In a recent article by Popular Mechanics, the media presents a quadrupedal robotic vehicle—developed by Kawasaki Heavy Industries (KHI)—as a so-called “motorcycle” inspired by horses. The problem begins in the headline and continues through the entire piece. This is not a motorcycle. It never was.…

Continue Reading

A Capitalist Imperative In capitalist economies, businesses are driven by the imperative to maximize profits. Investing in automation, such as humanoid robots, allows companies to reduce labor costs, increase efficiency, and minimize risks associated with human workers. This trend reflects a broader shift where capital increasingly replaces labor, not necessarily to benefit society at large, but to enhance returns on…

Continue Reading

De-dollarisation is more than a shift in global finance—it marks a deeper rebellion against the symbolic power of recognition. Eidoism, a philosophy that seeks to free individuals and systems from unconscious validation loops, sees in de-dollarisation a parallel movement: the refusal to define value through external status. As nations move away from the U.S. dollar, they also begin to exit a system built on visibility, hierarchy, and symbolic dominance. This essay explores how the unraveling of monetary hegemony opens the door to a post-recognition economy grounded in form, function, and autonomy.

Continue Reading

In a world obsessed with convenience, the robot vacuum cleaner appears as a symbol of progress. But from an Eidoist perspective, it fails the test of form. It is not a tool born of necessity, but a product of avoidance—outsourcing presence, rhythm, and discipline to a buzzing machine. Beneath its clean surface lies a network of resource waste, digital complexity, and recognition-driven consumption. It does not simplify life; it disguises laziness as liberation. Eidoism reveals it not as a solution, but as a symptom of a culture trying to automate its way out of being.

Continue Reading

to top
en_US