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Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - Printable Version +- Lookism (https://bookism.net) +-- Forum: Lookism Forums (https://bookism.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Shitty Advice (https://bookism.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=2) +--- Thread: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? (/showthread.php?tid=50151) Pages:
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Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - Dreckssau - 20-05-2026 It's short, but dense and hard to read. I have yet to completely make sense of it. It's about rejecting the system, non-conformity, etc... Ted K. read it apperantly. Jünger was a chad, who lived to 102 and his WW1 heroism is well known. RE: Who read 'Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - Ropium - 20-05-2026 Sounds like escapist militiaman.fantasy. the problem with running away into the forest is that eventually the machine aka the leviathan is going to drop browns there too. RE: Who read 'Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - Dreckssau - 20-05-2026 (20-05-2026, 09:48 PM)Ropium Wrote: Sounds like escapist militiaman.fantasy. the problem with running away into the forest is that eventually the machine aka the leviathan is going to drop browns there too. He doesn't say you need to literally escape into the woods. It's about the state of mind. RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - Ropium - 20-05-2026 That's biology denialism. We are hardwired to seek environments which are conducive to our survival. As environment can inform our thoughts, being in an unsuitable environment creates tensions and traumas that harm our reproductive success and general wellbeing. I believe he is coping because he has not foreseen the modern environment. In his time he can walk away from town and be immersed in wild inside of 5 minutes. And where in his mind can he start a family and reproduce? Asceticism is cope RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - Ropium - 20-05-2026 Junger debunked RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - B00X - 20-05-2026 never read it RE: Who read 'Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - eldajaal1488 - 20-05-2026 (20-05-2026, 10:03 PM)Dreckssau Wrote: He doesn't say you need to literally escape into the woods. It's about the state of mind.max striner? original cynism? is it about doing whatever u want or not wanting in first place? i havent read these either but general idea? RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - eldajaal1488 - 20-05-2026 he sounds like schizo tbh, forest isnt meant to be taken literally i think but rather detaching urself from social norms. instead of going to actual forest u go into mental ,,forest'' while living in world just normally ![]() basically striner but more schizo RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - hitlersblackedwaifu - 21-05-2026 have you? because I feel like you bring up too many book titles for someone that gives major slapdasher vibes. RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - B00X - 21-05-2026 I'll consider reading out of respect to you RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - Dreckssau - 21-05-2026 (21-05-2026, 12:13 AM)hitlersblackedwaifu Wrote: have you? because I feel like you bring up too many book titles for someone that gives major slapdasher vibes. I have not completed it, but I've read it very carefully. You could easily read it in one day, without understanding much of it, unless you're a super genius or lying. RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - Dreckssau - 21-05-2026 (20-05-2026, 11:26 PM)eldajaal1488 Wrote: he sounds like schizo tbh, forest isnt meant to be taken literally i think but rather detaching urself from social norms. instead of going to actual forest u go into mental ,,forest'' while living in world just normally No, it is about the possibility of resistance, in a state that allows for very little resistance. It was written shorty after the fall of the nazis, but could apply to any system, where the installed forms of opposition are a sham, such as in modern western democracy, where voting is mostly meaningless. RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - Honest - 22-05-2026 (20-05-2026, 09:48 PM)Ropium Wrote: Sounds like escapist militiaman.fantasy. the problem with running away into the forest is that eventually the machine aka the leviathan is going to drop browns there too. (20-05-2026, 10:12 PM)Ropium Wrote: That's biology denialism. We are hardwired to seek environments which are conducive to our survival. As environment can inform our thoughts, being in an unsuitable environment creates tensions and traumas that harm our reproductive success and general wellbeing. I believe he is coping because he has not foreseen the modern environment. In his time he can walk away from town and be immersed in wild inside of 5 minutes. And where in his mind can he start a family and reproduce? Asceticism is cope youre the epitome of the modern mass-man who is simultaneously highly-opinionated and utterly ignorant. RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - bluerose - 22-05-2026 (22-05-2026, 01:26 PM)Honest Wrote: youre the epitome of the modern mass-man who is simultaneously highly-opinionated and utterly ignorant. based papa magnifat, more responses like dis from u pls, thanks RE: Who read 'The Forest Passage' by Ernst Jünger? - Honest - 22-05-2026 finished reading it last night. a couple of years ago, i had an idea that was quite similar to the core theme of the forest rebel, so the description of the book was highly appealing. however, reading it made me remember why i abandoned the idea:
and i'm not a big fan of Junger's mysticism. but still, i liked a lot of it. i very much sympathise with his stance on bureaucracy, self-sufficiency, healthcare, constitutional rights, right to bear arms, and resoluteness. as i've mentioned, my main criticism is that he focuses too much on the tyranny of the state (although this is very understandable, as he'd just lived under the nazis), which is reactive and fear-based. but it seems that Junger also thought this, and later abandoned the Forestrebel for the Anarch. if you're interested in societal criticisms from that period, then Ortega y Gasset's 'Revolt of the Masses' is very good (Junger's idea of the Worker seems less enduring than Ortega's Mass Man). and Heidegger (in Being and Time) and Nietzsche are both very good for their discussions of a less reactive sort of resoluteness. |