Worker and Parasite

Ride the Tiger by Julius Evola

4 snips
Apr 20, 2026
They debate a book that sees modernity as a terminal decline from traditional hierarchies. They discuss a tactic of embracing modern decadence while preparing to transcend it. They wrestle with the author’s fascist ties, elitist tone, and apolitic stance. They touch on metaphysics, critiques of Nietzsche and existentialism, and odd takes on art, drugs, and cultural roles.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
ANECDOTE

Common Misconceptions About Evola And His Politics

  • Jerry recounts common assumptions about Evola as an American-style conservative tied to Bannon and alt-right internet attention.
  • He clarifies Evola is anti-Christian, esoteric, and not easily placed in modern American partisan boxes.
INSIGHT

Modernity As Terminal Decline And The Ride The Tiger Strategy

  • Julius Evola diagnoses modernity as terminal decline where traditional hierarchy evaporated and left people without inherent meaning.
  • Evola argues capitalism and communism both fill that void with materialism, so the 'differentiated man' must 'ride the tiger' toward transcendence while awaiting cyclical renewal.
INSIGHT

Tone Matters Much More Than Diagnosis

  • Jerry objects to Evola's aristocratic, superior tone and contrasts it with compassionate traditions like Buddhism or Schopenhauer's ethics.
  • The hosts agree you can critique modernity's meaninglessness without endorsing elitist contempt for the masses.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app