Summary
Aleksandar Dugin: Conspirology
The science of conspiracies, secret societies and occult war
The book includes indexes and an extensive biography of the author A. Dugin, an adviser in the Russian Duma since 2012.
Back in the nineties of the last century, Dugin noticed how the strong increase in interest in conspiracy topics among the general public was not accompanied by almost any serious study of social phenomenon, both in Yeltsin's Russia at the time and in the West. Unlike the Western academic community, which generally places "conspiracy theorists" on the margins of
science fiction, eccentric weirdness, and even to the stigma of mental disorder, Dugin sees in conspiracy theories an important form of deeper understanding of world historical processes, the spiritual, and if we will, the "occult" background of the origin
and collapse of world civilizations, wars, causes of the global crisis, etc. in short, an insight into a certain "metaphysics of history".
Unexpectedly for many, the process of political "transition" in Croatia is most similar, not to the Czech, Polish or Hungarian "transition", but precisely to the Russian one (i.e. the general disintegration and plunder) in the Yeltsin period: namely, geopolitical affiliation to the "Atlantic" or "continental" camp is deeper, according to Dugin, than national, ideological and even religious affiliation. the publishers are convinced, therefore, that this book will provide a fresh impetus for the study of "conspiracy" topics, and a suitable and new point of view for understanding Croatian reality. Europe.
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