The Degeneration of the Nation
First Interviews
The beginning of the acquaintance of "The Degeneration of the Nation" editorial staff with the Netanya School, in meetings that left the editorial team slack-jawed, awakened them from their dogmatic slumber, and shifted the magazine's focus from current affairs criticism to intellectual innovation - and from dealing with the present to engaging with the future. On the fault line in the history of the spirit in Netanya
By: Bilhah Reuven, Rabbi Aluf, and Balak son of Zippor
The editorial board announces in astonishment  (Source)

The Meetings


Interview with the Most Important Philosopher in Netanya
A rare and exclusive interview with the philosopher, who agreed to speak with "The Degeneration of the Nation" envoy on the condition that only the answers would appear in the interview - without the questions. He was also asked about this, but you can only read the answer

What are the conditions for creating cultural golden ages and can they be recreated through technological means in our time?
Why are most intellectuals leftists? Was Plato more right-wing or more left-wing than Aristotle? Did technological development lead to the creation of the Bible? What is the connection between the myth of the Mount Sinai revelation and the invention of the alphabet in Sinai? A speculative interview with a speculative historian. The historian's name and the questions are kept confidential by the editorial board

Conversation with a Leading Radical Political Thinker from the Netanya School
On the occasion of the elections, we sat with the thinker in his living room as he watched the television news, ate bananas, and cursed in fluent philosophy. What are the goals of political technology? How does game theory explain the political stalemate in the West? Why is Trump the best thing that could have happened to culture? And which feminist myth could replace Christianity? Everything the Netanya School has to say about the news and weather

Interview with the Greatest Living Philosopher in Netanya: The Human as a Market
The cognitive victory of capitalism paints the inner workings of humans as a competitive economic system. Learning systems such as evolution and the brain are understood as a free market where men compete for women and neurons in one layer compete for neurons in the next layer. In this way, the competitiveness in the brain is what creates learning, just as competitiveness is the evolutionary engine. On thoughts competing for pleasure and motivation in the brain of one great Netanya thinker fueled by countless bananas
Philosophy of the Future