Foreign.
Blair:Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another episode of the secular Foxhole
Blair:podcast.
Blair:Today, Martin and I are thrilled to have a gentleman who actually reached out to me to
Blair:come on the show.
Blair:That's like the first time, I think that's
Blair:happened in all our episodes.
Blair:Scott Powell is an objectivist and historian living a, quote, nomad, capitalist lifestyle
Blair:in Mediterranean Europe.
Blair:He is the author of the History of Now and its sequel, the History of Tomorrow, which
Blair:together present his integrated view of history, which he refers to as present
Blair:centrism.
Blair:Excuse me.
Blair:Along with his partner Heather Schwartz, which I hope I pronounced correct, he is the co
Blair:founder of Knowable World, the world's only fully integrated history curriculum for
Blair:students from kindergarten through 12th grade.
Blair:He is currently working on a science fiction novel about time travel and the true power of
Blair:history entitled the 14 Points.
Blair:Welcome, Scott.
Scott:Nice to be here.
Scott:Thank you.
Blair:All right, nice.
Blair:Now, what do you mean by this was a new
Blair:concept to me, Present centrism.
Scott:Right.
Scott:Well, it's certainly a neologism.
Scott:So in other words, I had to invent the term because I simply could not find an adequate
Scott:way to represent my thought concerning history.
Scott:And so the, you know, the basic idea is that typically the serious study of history is
Scott:considered to be the study of the past.
Scott:And the unserious study of history that has kind of been spawned by a variety of
Scott:ideological movements in, in modern times is really focused on the present, very much at
Scott:the expense of the past and very much, you know, dependent on prejudices and
Scott:presuppositions in the, in the present.
Scott:And then there's the process of cherry picking and, and all of the typical things that
Scott:corrupt what serious historians, quote, unquote, serious historians consider to be the
Scott:proper study of the past.
Scott:And you can see in both of these options, which are the two, basically the, the four
Scott:false dichotomy that currently dominates the study of history.
Scott:You can see that on the one side you have the past, which historians are dedicated to,
Scott:serious historians are dedicated to, but the problem is at the expense of the present.
Scott:And then you have people that are activists, have a variety of reasons why, but they
Scott:emphasize the present, of course, at the expense of the past.
Scott:Well, what's missing, of course, is a proper integration of the two.
Scott:Right.
Scott:We could simply refer to that as past, present
Scott:integration.
Scott:And so that's what present centrism is about.
Scott:Present centrism, if you want me to give you a
Scott:formal definition, it is a mode of historical inquiry that seeks to achieve an integrated
Scott:historical awareness of the world we live in.
Scott:There's a lot to unpack there, but basically that's what it is.
Scott:You can see the object of study is not the past.
Scott:The object of study is the world we live in.
Scott:The past doesn't exist anymore.
Scott:Right? Okay, it once existed.
Scott:That's an important thing to recognize.
Scott:But why does it matter? Why it matters is because of how the well of
Scott:cause and effect has brought us to where we are now and where it's taking us.
Scott:And so we live today.
Scott:There's only one reason for us to study the
Scott:past.
Scott:That's in order to empower us with the
Scott:knowledge that it can provide us the insight and instruction that is available by studying
Scott:this amazing spectrum of experiences that all of humanity has gone through and deriving what
Scott:we need from it, right?
Scott:Finding some positive mental intellectual outcomes from it and allowing us to navigate
Scott:through the world and hopefully to shape it for the better.
Scott:So that's where we are.
Scott:We're in the present.
Scott:We need to live well.
Scott:And so the idea of present centrism is we need to be able to use the past, not merely study
Scott:it as an end in itself, but to use it as a means to an end, to better shape the world we
Scott:live in.
Blair:Very, very good.
Blair:Now, I hope I'm not jumping around too much,
Blair:but you use the terms Americanism and Americanistic, they may be in one.
Blair:One in each book.
Blair:Do you want to jump into that for me?
Blair:Or is that.
Scott:Well, I mean, so this is, you know, an example of periodization.
Scott:So in other words, one of the critical things that has to be done with the past, which of
Scott:course, is a plethora.
Scott:It's a vast ocean of facts which typically
Scott:overwhelms the student.
Scott:And of course, you and I, and just about anybody listening can remember studying
Scott:history and being forced to rote, memorize a whole bunch of useless stuff.
Scott:Stuff and then regurgitate that for.
Scott:In order to pass the test and then promptly forget it and then develop, you know, this.
Scott:This perspective, of course, that history is useless.
Scott:And the problem, of course, is though, that because history is vast, essentially about
Scott:5,000 years worth of decent recorded information because it's so vast and because
Scott:it involves so many cultures that we have to have a method of organizing, condensing and
Scott:essentializing the vastness of it so that we can render it into something useful now.
Scott:So, you know, because there you go, right? Present centrism, the goal is to.
Scott:For us to.
Scott:To embody the idea that knowledge is power.
Scott:Well, how can we generate powerful knowledge?
Scott:So in the.
Scott:In the problem of studying History, we
Scott:encounter something that I know some of your listeners are interested in.
Scott:Ayn Rand.
Scott:Ayn Rand, as a philosopher, fascinating.
Scott:Gave us fascinating insight into the importance of concepts in terms of how they
Scott:allow us to condense our perceptual experience and arrive at this really powerful conceptual
Scott:level of awareness.
Scott:As it turns out, with regard to history, which is a massive stream of one of a kind events
Scott:which are linked in this web of cause and effect, there's a different problem.
Scott:It's a problem that is not quite akin to the need that we face on a general basis of
Scott:processing the concretes that we find in our experience and integrating them into concepts.
Scott:There's a different problem.
Scott:There is a problem of this absolutely unique
Scott:stream of events, a procession and succession of events that are constantly unfolding.
Scott:And how do we.
Scott:How do we render that into some sort of useful mental outcome?
Scott:And I discuss this on a theoretical level as part of the History of Tomorrow.
Scott:Broadly speaking, I refer to the need to employ what I refer to as constructs.
Scott:Now, there's a. We could probably spend an entire podcast on what are the difference
Scott:between concepts and constructs.
Scott:I don't think it's probably the best place for
Scott:us to go right now.
Scott:But periods, historical periods, are examples of constructs because they are composed of
Scott:absolutely unique events which combine in some way.
Scott:We have to mentally integrate them in order for them to add up to something, use.
Scott:And to now circle back around a little bit to your original question in order to take now,
Scott:American history, relatively short compared to, let's say, Chinese history or something
Scott:else.
Scott:Right.
Scott:So we're talking 1776 word, if we're going to
Scott:be strict about it.
Scott:There's the colonial period before that.
Scott:But, okay, let's talk 1776 onward.
Scott:Well, that's still, you know, we're coming up
Scott:on 250 years worth of stuff, right?
Scott:And so that's a lot.
Scott:And most people try to memorize a few things
Scott:and forget and can't integrate.
Scott:All right, so how do we integrate those
Scott:things? Well, first of all, we have to definitely be
Scott:selective about how we approach it.
Scott:And the foundation of the method of periodization that I employ in present
Scott:centrism is to identify what I refer to as anchor facts.
Scott:And so that's the beginning of the answer.
Scott:There are certain facts.
Scott:Let's talk about the biggest one of all.
Scott:1776, the 4th of July, 1776.
Scott:To my mind, the single most important anchor
Scott:fact, what I call a cardinal anchor fact with regard to world history at this time.
Scott:The reason Why I say that is because it's an America centric world.
Scott:And so the United States is overwhelmingly the most important country in the world.
Scott:It's not a matter of good or bad.
Scott:We all know it's also good.
Scott:But it's a matter of what is the significance
Scott:of American culture in terms of shaping the world.
Scott:And it's overwhelmingly the most important.
Scott:And so where does that come from?
Scott:How did that come about? Well, the 4th of July, 1776 clearly is an
Scott:anchor point we want to talk about eventually.
Scott:We want to recognize, of course, the fullness
Scott:of something called the American Revolution and so many other things.
Scott:But basically, how did there even come to be an America?
Scott:Well, of course, there's a birthday.
Scott:And so the country got started at a certain
Scott:point, Right.
Scott:And then there are other anger facts that have
Scott:brought about the transformation of American culture into what it is today.
Scott:And there have been, to my mind, two overarching successions.
Scott:There was an original American culture that of course, was dedicated to individual rights.
Scott:We have the classic statement in the Declaration of Independence concerning life,
Scott:liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Scott:And we have other statements by the founders as well that are really wonderful.
Scott:And we see that.
Scott:We see also, unfortunately, the inability of
Scott:that generation and later generations of politicians to abolish slavery.
Scott:Right.
Scott:So we have a strange problem.
Scott:We have a contradiction embedded in what I refer to as American culture, the original
Scott:incarnation.
Scott:And there are other elements to that as well.
Scott:There's. There's political economy, There.
Scott:There are a number of other dimensions that
Scott:can be thought of.
Scott:There's the level of industrial development.
Scott:There are a variety of factors that go into the construct that I refer to as the American
Scott:period.
Scott:And in my view, that period basically ended in the.
Scott:In simple terms, with World War I, at which point America began to exhibit a number of new
Scott:cultural traits.
Scott:Up to that point, its foreign policy was one
Scott:of political separation as embodied by the Monroe Doctrine.
Scott:And then America began to embark on this quest to quote, unquote, Quote, unquote, make the
Scott:world safer.
Scott:Democracy.
Scott:Actually, that's not an exact quote.
Scott:It's always hard to quote that one because
Scott:Woodrow Wilson said the world must be made safe for democracy.
Scott:So we have to carefully quote.
Scott:But.
Scott:And then, of course, you know, there was a backlash.
Scott:And then America began to, you know, got dragged into World War II.
Scott:And then there's the Cold War, and now there's.
Scott:There's been the war on Terror and all of that.
Scott:That's foreign policy as well.
Scott:The United States became focused on civil
Scott:rights rather than Natural rights.
Scott:The political economy shifted from one of
Scott:encouraging industry through mercantilism to now one of regulation and a mixed economy and
Scott:growing elements of socialism.
Scott:So you can see that there are a variety of trends.
Scott:And when you try to encompass those and say, okay, we've got one way that America was at
Scott:the beginning, and we still have America, but it's clearly not the same thing, well, how do
Scott:we then, you know, how do we then capture that fact?
Scott:And so I refer to the more modern inter incarnation of the United States as
Scott:Americanistic.
Scott:If I can.
Scott:I'll just elaborate on that just a little bit, because I think there's something powerful
Scott:here.
Scott:Please, some of your.
Scott:Some of your listeners will enjoy.
Scott:The reason why I adopted that terminology is because in my studies of history, I came upon
Scott:a really interesting periodization by another thinker.
Scott:And actually it was a delimited one.
Scott:It was meant to be one that was applicable
Scott:only in the area of art history, but it really struck me as being more widely applicable.
Scott:And so it was the work of a German historian named Droysen, Gustav Droysen, something like
Scott:that.
Scott:And what he identified was that back in
Scott:ancient Greece, there was a succession of two different fundamental artistic styles.
Scott:And he referred to the first as being Hellenic.
Scott:In other words, you know, the essential one, the.
Scott:The one of Praxiteles and.
Scott:And the other, you know, great sculptors of
Scott:that era.
Scott:And then he said, after Alexander the Great, he referred to the.
Scott:The merger and hybridization of Greek art with Asiatic elements as Helenistic.
Scott:So you can see it as interesting.
Scott:What he's trying to say there is that there
Scott:was something essentially Greek and then there was something else which was derivative and
Scott:involves some sort of mixture and hybridization and unfortunately also a
Scott:downgrade.
Scott:And he called that Hellenistic.
Scott:So that's a terminology that I really found
Scott:empowering.
Scott:And I said to myself, well, that's exactly
Scott:what happened to America.
Scott:America had this original culture, which in
Scott:terms of fundamentals and especially on an aspirational level, as expressed by the
Scott:founders, is really as good as it ever got.
Scott:And now we have this lesser version, and it's got all of these elements in it, especially
Scott:from Europe.
Scott:The hybridization of American culture, the
Scott:invasion of European ideas, especially the social theory of rights as advocated during
Scott:the French Revolution by Rousseau and then the thinkers of the French Revolution.
Scott:And then you get this organization and this takeover, because Europe's always been more
Scott:intellectual than America.
Scott:And so there's a lot of powerful ideas
Scott:circulating in European culture all the time.
Scott:And America's had this way of being the younger kind of prodigal culture.
Scott:But it's always kind of been getting closer and closer and losing its distinctiveness and
Scott:becoming more European.
Scott:So that's my thinking.
Scott:Is that similar this year?
Blair:Let me just throw something in there that, I mean, for me, I've noticed the
Blair:default, if you will, is always whenever there's a big crisis here, we fall back to
Blair:religion, we fall back to ancient religious ideas instead of, you know, instead of
Blair:exploring, oh, why did this happen?
Blair:You know, and using our intellect and using our.
Blair:Does that make sense to you as far as the periodization?
Scott:Well, I would say that.
Scott:Well, I don't think, you see, that's a
Scott:difficult one because if you look at the trajectory of American political culture, you
Scott:can't see.
Scott:Find a dominant religious strain in it.
Scott:What you see is the Founding Fathers.
Scott:And there, there is, of course, the, the idea
Scott:of, of, you know, individual rights being God given, natural rights.
Blair:Yes.
Scott:But in, in the founders, in thinking of the founders, there's a. There's an element of
Scott:deism there which kind of, you know, the idea being that God is somehow necessary as an
Scott:Aristotelian prime mover, but then basically is retired.
Scott:Right.
Scott:And he's just, he's just taking in the
Scott:metaphysical dividends and just, you know, sitting on the couch.
Martin:Hands off.
Scott:So it's, it's not really dominant.
Scott:And now we have, of course, influence of
Scott:religion.
Scott:Absolutely.
Scott:It's.
Scott:It's undeniable and we see it in, in many.
Scott:But it's not a dominant element.
Scott:It's one that's difficult to factor in.
Scott:And it's one that really, for me, is an area of continuing study because I'm always
Scott:interested in the most fundamental and most powerful trends.
Scott:And then, if possible, I like to see if I can investigate, well, what's feeding into that
Scott:and what are some of the conditioning aspects.
Scott:And I would.
Scott:That's the way that I would characterize religion so far in American politics as being
Scott:a conditioning element, not a dominant element, but always present, always
Scott:conditioning things, you know, and so we could refer.
Scott:We could talk about that in relation to progressivism.
Scott:We could talk about it in relation to conservatism.
Scott:You know, you can see it.
Scott:Right?
Scott:You can see it, but it's not always obvious how does it play into the development.
Scott:So. So it's not a basis of periodization for the time being in my thinking, but it's just a
Scott:recognized conditioning element.
Blair:I see, I see in, in your first book, the History of Now, you do break it down into
Blair:into great things.
Blair:Let me just.
Blair:Let me.
Blair:I want to throw this word at you.
Blair:Supranationalist, Europe.
Blair:Can you delve into that?
Blair:Yeah, because that's a word I don't.
Scott:Think I've ever heard, so.
Scott:Oh, okay, good.
Scott:Well, you know, so basically, European history, of course, is very complex.
Scott:Europe is, in my treatment of Europe, which I gotta tell you, Europe is, for me, as a
Scott:historian, Europe is my Everest.
Scott:Okay. In other words, it's the most complex and significant cultural block in world
Scott:history by far.
Scott:And so you've got, of course, these
Scott:overwhelmingly important cultures of Germany and France.
Scott:These are the really core nations of Europe.
Scott:And then you've got this very strange element
Scott:of Britain and how does it relate?
Scott:And then you've got these adjunct cultures which play a role and, you know, every once in
Scott:a while rise to prominence, like Italy and Spain and so on.
Scott:But typically, it's a Franco German condition that dominates the history of Europe.
Scott:And so in my.
Scott:In my presentation in the History of Now, I
Scott:tried to ask myself, well, how do we properly characterize the history of Europe?
Scott:Because it's very easy to get totally dragged into the past at the expense of the present
Scott:when you're studying Europe, because you're talking 1500 years now, so it's already a
Scott:problem when you're dealing with the United states, which is 250 years.
Scott:But if you want to start the history of Europe, let's say, with the fall of the Roman
Scott:Empire in 476, when you're dealing with 1500 years, okay, so now you got a big problem.
Blair:Right.
Scott:And so, you know, I would say that the, The.
Scott:The. The kind of standard or classical way of dealing with this is to refer to the first
Scott:thousand years, let's say, as medieval and then modern.
Scott:Right.
Scott:Okay, but this is kind of empty.
Scott:What do you mean modern exactly? And what.
Scott:What matters about being modern? Right.
Scott:And, and so in my view, I came to the.
Scott:I came to this view that European history is
Scott:best understood currently because present centrism demands that it be characterized
Scott:according to what we need to know now in order to navigate through the world we live in it.
Scott:Basically, the question of European history is where did the European Union come from?
Scott:This is what the Europe fundamentally is today.
Scott:This is the dominant construct in politics and in culture.
Scott:Right. And what does the European Union represent?
Scott:Well, it represents something very technical, Europe, always very ideological and very
Scott:complex.
Scott:It represents an ideological point of view
Scott:which is known as supra nationalism.
Scott:So supra means over and above.
Scott:Above and clearly the root word nationalism,
Scott:right, is the point of view that the nation, fundamental unit of reality and standard of
Scott:value in human affairs.
Scott:And so the.
Scott:The issue is that the history of Europe all
Scott:the way up until the World wars, was the history of separate and increasingly mutually
Scott:alienated nations, right? The tribes coalescing into countries, early
Scott:kingdoms and so on, always wars, wars, wars.
Scott:We've got the extra element, here we go, a good example of religion as a conditioning
Scott:factor.
Scott:We have the element of the Reformation and
Scott:religious wars, introducing sectarianism.
Scott:And so we've got all of these various factors
Scott:producing alienation.
Scott:And then while in modern times you have the advent of the freedom French Revolution, so
Scott:now you get politics as alienating.
Scott:Everybody gang, young ganging up on France.
Scott:You've got, of course, Britain with its own traditions, staying relatively separate.
Scott:And so you've got all these various factors leading to the Europeans always being at war.
Scott:I mean, that's why the founders.
Scott:That's why George Washington said, let's not
Scott:get entangled in that mess, right?
Scott:Let's stay at it.
Scott:That was his farewell address.
Scott:He said, we.
Scott:We stay out of those wars.
Scott:And.
Scott:And James Monroe, of course, followed that up
Scott:with the Monroe Doctrine and basically said, the political system of Europe is
Scott:fundamentally different from that of America.
Scott:There's no benefit to us getting entangled in that.
Scott:And so that's why America's original policy of political separation was so valuable to the
Scott:United States in, in terms of Europe, though, right?
Scott:They just kept going, going.
Scott:It got worse.
Scott:There was paired with imperialism and then it.
Scott:It culminated in the crescendo and the climax
Scott:of the world war, World War I. And then that doesn't resolve anything, largely because of
Scott:America.
Scott:And then you've got World War II, which of course is the catastrophe, at which point.
Scott:And leading up to that, there was already some thinking along these lines.
Scott:Internationalism, meaning fundamentally diplomacy, this hadn't cut.
Scott:It wasn't working.
Scott:The League of Nations, none of that managed to
Scott:really put a dent in the alienation of the various national peoples and their collective
Scott:identifications then.
Scott:So they said to us, how do we.
Scott:How do we solve this problem, right? And so they said, we've got to.
Scott:Now, the Europeans have never been able to shed collectivism.
Scott:And so they've all.
Scott:It's always been a very collectivist culture.
Scott:And so basically what they came up with was, we've got to have some greater good, that
Scott:we're going to some identity that is overarching, that permits us to suppress the
Scott:alienating factor of nationalism.
Scott:What's that going to be.
Scott:It's going to be Europe as a whole, something
Scott:over and above of the nation as a fundamental value.
Scott:So that's what's ideologically referred to as supra nationalism.
Scott:And, and if you look at the history of now, you can see, okay, they did a prototype of it.
Scott:It's called the European Coal and Steel Community.
Scott:The whole idea there was put the government of the, of the.
Scott:This new union in charge of these industries so that we can ideologically transform our
Scott:thinking about how we use resources and make war materially impossible, supposedly.
Scott:Right.
Scott:And.
Scott:And then they kept on working on it.
Scott:They created the European Community, and then it gradually evolved and, and in 1993, they
Scott:just went all in with the European Union.
Scott:And, you know, that's what we have today.
Scott:Of course, what we have today is largely a crisis.
Scott:And in its present form and the ways in which it functions, it's not viable in the long
Scott:term.
Scott:And there's a lot of reasons why, fundamentally, it's collectivist, so it's
Scott:always going to be a problem.
Scott:But also the European Union, you'd wish that
Scott:it would be in some way truly dedicated to freedom.
Scott:And it has some elements which are positive, such as freedom of travel within the European
Scott:Union and things of that nature and free trade within the European Union.
Scott:But these are very much collectivists.
Scott:So it's a tariff barrier that insulates Europe
Scott:from the rest of the world, and then there's the Schengen Zone, which insulates Europe from
Scott:the rest of the world.
Scott:And so it's really.
Scott:Now it's organized.
Scott:It's trying.
Scott:The idea is to organize Europe into a peaceful
Scott:whole, but create a cultural block that can stand on its own and largely also supposedly
Scott:stand up to the United States.
Scott:But as it turns out, it's not working in any.
Scott:It's not working in so many regards that it's,
Scott:it's, it's going to be a long, long road here.
Scott:A lot of problems.
Scott:I'm not predicting that it's going to collapse entirely, but it's in trouble.
Scott:It's in trouble.
Scott:If you want to talk details, maybe that's
Scott:another podcast.
Scott:Let me throw.
Blair:I'll throw a small curveball then.
Blair:How did you yourself discover objectivism?
Blair:And then over the years, how did you learn or discover your present love of history and so
Blair:on and so forth?
Blair:Yeah. Et cetera, et cetera.
Scott:Yeah, absolutely.
Scott:Oh, well, thanks.
Scott:That's a fun story to tell.
Scott:So, yeah, I mean, I first read Ayn Rand in.
Scott:Let me get this right 1996, 19 in 1990s.
Scott:And if I'm getting that right, so I might be off by a couple years.
Scott:And I was in college at the time.
Scott:I was studying engineering.
Scott:And I don't mind, I laugh when I tell this story, so it'll be all right.
Scott:It's a little bit traumatic.
Scott:I failed my first class in engineering because I was relatively smart guy, but I didn't
Scott:study.
Scott:I never studied.
Scott:And so I just could get away with it in high school.
Scott:I didn't care.
Scott:And so I got to college and the difficulty level went way up and I failed my first class.
Scott:And that was my wake up call.
Scott:And, and so I said to myself, okay, how am I gonna grow up, right?
Scott:How am I gonna put.
Scott:Pull this back together here?
Scott:And I have this promise.
Scott:You know, one of the things that I can be thankful for in.
Scott:My father was somewhat of a, an eclectic intellectual and, but he had strangely made
Scott:mention of Ayn Rand at one point and, and, and, and purchased a book for me called the
Scott:Early Ayn Rand.
Scott:And it was on the shelf, I wasn't touching that.
Scott:He was very critical of my own reading, which was entirely science fiction.
Scott:And so it was like, for me, it was all about Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke and, you
Scott:know, Robert Heinlein and that kind of stuff.
Scott:And so it's like, okay, Ran character floating
Scott:around.
Scott:Okay, I don't know what that's about.
Scott:But you know, at that point where in, in my,
Scott:in my college career where I flunked out of a class and I was like, okay, I gotta get my act
Scott:together.
Scott:And so how do I, how do I mature intellectually?
Scott:How do I get my act together? I thought, okay, maybe there's something here
Scott:that I have to investigate in the form of philosophy.
Scott:And it took me a while.
Scott:I won't tell the whole story.
Scott:I'll tell the short version.
Scott:And I saw the back of the Early Iran and it
Scott:said, it's really playing up Iran.
Scott:It's talking about these amazing novels, the Fountain Head and Atlas Shrugged.
Scott:And I'm like, okay, let's see what that's about.
Scott:So I just, you know, headed over to the public library and I see the COVID of, of the
Scott:Fountain Head and it's this dramatic, you know, weird art deco like thing with the
Scott:architect looking up the skyscraper.
Scott:And I'm like, hey, that's kind of cool.
Scott:And so, all right, start reading it, right?
Scott:And all of us, that first reading experience of on it blew me away.
Scott:I couldn't believe it.
Scott:I, I'M like, I can't believe it.
Scott:This is exactly what I need.
Scott:It was unbelievable, as I like to joke, it was Howard Roark that prevented me from becoming
Scott:an architect because, you know, I was.
Scott:I was studying civil engineering, and I didn't
Scott:think it was that interesting.
Scott:That was kind of leaning towards architecture.
Scott:Funny thing happened about Howard Rourke.
Scott:And I said, that's not for me.
Scott:I'm gonna go into philosophy.
Scott:I'm gonna go.
Scott:And then.
Scott:And I became interested at that point and
Scott:what's going on?
Scott:Where did this Iron man character come from?
Scott:And I said to myself, well, let me study the history of philosophy.
Scott:Let's see, you know, what's going on.
Scott:And now, immediately after reading the
Scott:valentine, like, immediately, I just went right back to the bookshelf and I picked up
Scott:Atlas Shrugged and started in on that.
Scott:Right. So I was like, I couldn't wait and pour through that.
Scott:It was absolutely hectic reading.
Scott:I couldn't believe it.
Scott:And. And that.
Scott:That right there, of course, is the magnum
Scott:opus.
Scott:It's just incomparable in so many regards.
Scott:And that was.
Scott:That's it.
Scott:I was that.
Scott:That I was.
Scott:I was.
Scott:I knew.
Scott:That's what I. This is it.
Scott:This.
Scott:These are the right answers.
Scott:And. And then, you know, there's mention of Aristotle in there.
Scott:There's some really interesting things, right? So I'm like, okay, we're.
Scott:What happened? Where did the Sein Rank character come from?
Scott:And what's the.
Scott:What's the background story to this?
Scott:And why are her ideas so good? And why have I never heard them from pretty
Scott:much anybody else up until now?
Scott:And that was a. That was a tough slog.
Scott:The history of philosophy is not fun.
Scott:I mean, I enjoyed studying the Presocratics and then the rise of Plato and Aristotle.
Scott:I found that totally fascinating.
Blair:Sure.
Scott:But then, you know, this.
Scott:Each, you know, a lot of bad stuff.
Scott:And then the modern period and human Descartes and then finally into Kant and Hegel and Marx
Scott:as absolutely dismal.
Scott:And so it was very difficult to study that topic.
Scott:And I. And then I asked myself the question, well, what is this story in relation to the
Scott:history of the world?
Scott:I don't see it.
Scott:I don't see what is the interface between
Scott:these stories.
Scott:And so I was very much aware that I don't really know history at that point.
Scott:I really had, you know, memorized and forgot.
Scott:And so therefore, that became my new interest, and I started studying that when I finished
Scott:my.
Scott:My engineering degree, went out, got a job.
Scott:I was working and stuff like that.
Scott:But I started studying history part time in college and that was, that was a disaster in
Scott:the sense that everything that I was being told to learn was just unbelievably tedious
Scott:and useless.
Scott:And I was really upset by that.
Scott:And I didn't know what, what I could do with
Scott:this subject.
Scott:It felt overwhelmingly complex and there
Scott:didn't seem to be any application of philosophy at all.
Scott:So how, how could I solve that?
Scott:And, and I think I'm giving you a bad timeline because I know that it's earlier than 96.
Scott:The reason why I know that is because I'm thinking more along the lines of 94.
Scott:Because I went to my first Objectivist conference in 1997, which was a Lyceum
Scott:conference in Orange County, California.
Scott:I was there at that conference.
Scott:Yeah, where are you?
Scott:So at that conference, the highlight for me there were a lot of highlights that was quite.
Scott:Back then we had some heavyweights really doing some great stuff.
Scott:But the highlight of that conference for me was John Ridbath.
Scott:And John Ridpath gave a lecture on Locke and the American Revolution versus Rousseau and
Scott:the French Revolution.
Scott:Oh boy, did that, that right there was super
Scott:exciting.
Scott:And so I also happened to met my wife at that
Scott:conference.
Scott:I'm sure a lot of people have similar experiences.
Scott:Anyway, we, we had a long distance relationship there for a while and, and, and
Scott:she was pushing me to ask me figure things out about my life and where I was going.
Scott:And I said, well, I'm, I think I'm in transition to becoming a historian.
Scott:I wasn't absolutely convinced.
Scott:And, and I said okay.
Scott:And, and she pushed me and, and ultimately I said, you know what, I think what I need to do
Scott:is go study with Redpath.
Scott:And lucky for me he still was teaching and I think he retired in 2002.
Scott:So I, I headed to Toronto and I went to study with him for two years, two, 2000 to 2002.
Scott:And that was big in a number of regards.
Scott:It took economics from him.
Scott:We studied intellectual history.
Scott:That was, wow, there was some wonderful stuff there.
Scott:And, but as good as that was the pivotal moment for me, which looking back on it was
Scott:just a really huge moment for me, historiographically speaking speaking, the big
Scott:moment was 9 11.
Scott:I remember being on campus that morning walking through, it happened to be the
Scott:economics walking through and there was a student lounge there with a big screen tv,
Scott:walking from the parking lot to, you know, the social science building, whatever, and there
Scott:you go, you're seeing the first of the tower smoking and pretty soon the other one's
Scott:getting struck.
Scott:And that, of course, was extremely traumatic.
Scott:And that's, you know, that's for me, for my
Scott:parents generation, it's like, where were you when JFK was assassinated?
Scott:Everybody remembers, right? And for me, it's two things.
Scott:It's the Challenger disaster in 1987 and 9 11.
Scott:Those are the moments in my life where I
Scott:remember exactly where I was when those things happened.
Scott:Never forget.
Scott:But more than that, I was on my way to a
Scott:history class.
Scott:And so.
Scott:And of course, all the students were on their
Scott:phones.
Scott:There was a big buzz.
Scott:Everybody was very upset.
Scott:And I remember thinking, well, so here we are in academia.
Scott:Here we are in the place where we have these wise men, these people that are learned and
Scott:that are going to give us insight into what's happening.
Scott:And so there was, you know, there were some questions about what's going on.
Scott:And the historian in that class basically said, you know, that what we need to do now is
Scott:we need to study the terror, because we were studying the French Revolution, not.
Scott:Not the war, not, not the terrorism of 9 11, but the.
Scott:The terror of 1793.
Scott:Yeah, I think that's what he was saying.
Scott:History is the study of the past.
Scott:And I have nothing to teach you.
Scott:I cannot tell you anything about the world we
Scott:live in.
Scott:I can only tell you about the France of the
Scott:late 18th century that I've been studying my whole life.
Scott:And that's all I know.
Scott:Right.
Scott:So this was a really tragic confession on his part, but it stuck with me for the rest of my
Scott:life.
Scott:And so then, you know, graduating from that, I
Scott:went on to teach at a school you've probably heard of in Southern California called Van
Scott:Damme Academy.
Scott:And I started teaching history there to young kids.
Scott:And that was the most wonderful experience of all in so many regards, including the fact
Scott:that it didn't work.
Scott:There was a problem which was hard for me to
Scott:accept and to identify, which, as it turns out, fundamentally stemmed from the same
Scott:problem that I was experiencing in college, which is I hadn't yet figured out that the
Scott:past divorced from the present, doesn't mean anything, has no objective value.
Scott:And so I was a good storyteller.
Scott:I got a good sense of humor.
Scott:I had the kids laughing and rolling around, and I had them loving, you know, everything
Scott:from Martin Luther to Martin Luther King Jr.
Scott:And so they were fine with all that.
Scott:They enjoyed it, but it didn't stick, and it
Scott:didn't produce results for them that I could really point to and say, yeah, this is a
Scott:better person because they're studying History, and they actually know it and it has
Scott:significant intellectual outcomes for them in the long run.
Scott:And so I just began to challenge this question of what is it and why isn't history working?
Scott:And after being there for a few years, I started teaching homeschoolers as a private
Scott:business.
Scott:And that's now what I do with my company,
Scott:that's called Knowable World, with my partner Heather Schwartzen.
Scott:And on that journey, just at some point became an epiphany and that the problem is the lack
Scott:of past, present integration and how do we achieve that.
Scott:And just, you know, there's just so much to say about that.
Scott:But fundamentally that's how I came to my view of present centrism.
Scott:So there you go.
Scott:That's kind of the story it wound up.
Blair:Wow, that's great though.
Blair:Thank you for that.
Martin:Great story, Scott.
Martin:And thanks for being here.
Martin:You are here and you're making history now, so.
Scott:Well, I hope so.
Scott:I hope so in more than one sense.
Scott:I mean, I hope that not only am I helping people to learn history in many regards, for
Scott:the first time and hopefully as many students as possible, our goal at Noble World is to
Scott:become the, literally the best place in the world for parents anywhere to help their
Scott:children learn history and discover the true power of history.
Scott:And I think we have, we're working on it.
Scott:It's tough project, but we're working on
Scott:scaling it and really reaching a really huge audience.
Scott:And I think at some point, because it's overwhelmingly the best curriculum there is,
Scott:that it will take over the homeschooling market and from there we'll try to get into
Scott:the private schools.
Scott:And by then hopefully public school will have been abolished, so we won't have to worry
Scott:about that.
Scott:So anyway, we'll see.
Blair:Do you have a, do you have a web address for Knowable World or.
Scott:Well, there you go.
Scott:It's, it's two words, of course, Knowable
Scott:World, but you mash them together and that's it.
Scott:Knowable world dot com.
Scott:That's it.
Scott:Okay.
Scott:And we have live classes and we have recorded
Scott:classes.
Scott:And so, I mean, if you can't pull your kid out of public school, then you better be putting
Scott:your kid in the Knowable World recordings in order to give them the antidote to all the
Scott:irrationality of history and social studies today.
Scott:That's the absolute best place you can do it.
Scott:Our curriculum is literally From K to 12.
Scott:So in other words, we have a program called History Detectives, which is the first year of
Scott:a three year program that's still under Development.
Scott:But history Detectives, level one is complete.
Scott:It's basically a lesson, lesson a week for the youngest possible kids.
Scott:Not every child at a kindergarten level is going to be ready, but some are.
Scott:And I've had the pleasure of teaching 5 year olds that are totally ready.
Scott:So it's sometimes the case that they're not ready until 6, 7, 8.
Scott:But, you know, basically you just start it when they're ready.
Scott:But we start at the kindergarten level and then the live classes and recordings are for
Scott:basically for about second or third graders on up.
Scott:And we have an elementary program and a junior senior high program.
Scott:And for the first time ever this year, I'm teaching something called the advanced history
Scott:program, which is for my absolute elite students because we're graduating students up
Scott:through the ranks and they're just getting so good at history.
Scott:It's unbelievable.
Scott:And so they're pushing me to the highest
Scott:levels of requirements for me and my own learning.
Scott:It's basically far beyond anything you can get in college, but they're doing it in high
Scott:school, so.
Scott:So, yeah, that's our project Noble World.
Blair:I'm so, I mean, I'm just.
Blair:I think Covid exposed the public education
Blair:scam so completely that.
Blair:And I know homeschooling has just exploded to
Blair:like, from like 3% of, you know, parents to 20%.
Blair:And that's continuing to grow from the COVID debacle.
Scott:Yeah, I mean, it's hard to measure.
Scott:It's hard to measure.
Scott:It's certainly constantly growing.
Scott:That's great for a variety of reasons.
Scott:And the, you know, the challenge for homeschoolers is, of course, that, well,
Scott:they've got to now be parents and they've got to, you know, they have two incomes or how are
Scott:they going to manage that?
Scott:It's always difficult.
Scott:My wife and I homeschooled our son.
Scott:He's now a senior and just finishing up.
Scott:And so we know how hard that is, and it's very difficult a lot of the times.
Scott:And of course, history, who, who actually knows history.
Scott:And so that's a lot of what homeschoolers do, is they try to find experts, resources out
Scott:there where they can find somebody to do subjects that they themselves are not equipped
Scott:to do.
Scott:Right.
Scott:And so that's exactly what Knowable World is
Scott:about.
Scott:I know that there's no way that you, as a
Scott:homeschooling mom or dad, are going to have time to not only figure out the entire
Scott:curriculum and manage the day and what.
Scott:And study history and teach it to your kid properly.
Scott:Thank you.
Scott:I've been studying history for 20 years, more
Scott:than 20 years.
Scott:And I know how hard it is and that's been full
Scott:time.
Scott:Thank you very much.
Scott:So, so no, it's not going to happen.
Scott:Right.
Scott:So that's why it's nice that there are experts
Scott:like myself.
Scott:You know, I'll just give a shout out here to Luke Travers, who's, who runs a program called
Scott:Literature at our house.
Scott:And so, so you know, there's another example
Scott:of, okay, you want to have some literature, you want to have some poetry, you want to have
Scott:a resource like that, great.
Scott:So you just hire an expert.
Scott:And so knowable world is your place where
Scott:basically history check, you're done.
Scott:You get your kid in there as soon as you can
Scott:and you're done.
Scott:That's taken care of.
Scott:The whole thing is taken care of.
Scott:And in most cases, you know what I like the best is when parents are invest, are really
Scott:invested in their child's education.
Scott:It's quite frequently the case that they will just sit in and they'll listen and they're
Scott:like, wow, this is what I was supposed to learn when I was a kid.
Scott:Wonderful time being in my elementary class because that's about the level of adults when
Scott:it comes to history.
Scott:So you may as well just get in on it, right,
Scott:and just listen and learn.
Blair:Not surprised in the slightest.
Blair:Yeah, I'm sure it's fantastic.
Blair:Go ahead.
Martin:I was thinking of asking that do you still have courses for adults and older
Martin:people?
Scott:Do I still have.
Scott:I have recorded classes for adults now.
Scott:I recently finished the, the course that accompanies the History of Tomorrow.
Scott:So I have a number of course and all recorded.
Scott:I don't have plans for any live classes at the moment, but basically I've got a present
Scott:centric history of Russia, of China, of Europe and of the United States.
Scott:Those are available in.
Scott:And so those are, those are recorded classes.
Scott:And then I've got a recorded class in fact,
Scott:two of them on the history of Church Tomorrow.
Scott:And I've also got one on the History of Now I shouldn't fail to mention.
Scott:So that's really for most adult readers, the History of Now and the History of Tomorrow.
Scott:That's a very deliberate sequence of two books.
Scott:You can't read the History of Tomorrow without having read the History of Now for reasons
Scott:which are explained in the, in the second of the two books.
Scott:And so basically there is a, there's a, there's the History of Now as a book.
Scott:And yeah, for anybody that's really interested in understanding what's going on in that book.
Scott:The History of Now course is a recorded session with 10 lectures, which is absolutely
Scott:critical to gain insight into how it works and how you can help yourself reprogram your own
Scott:thinking about history and make your own thinking present, centric.
Scott:And then the History of Tomorrow is the next level.
Blair:And those are all available through nobleworld.com.
Scott:Those are available through Noble World.
Scott:Yeah.
Scott:All right.
Scott:And if anybody wants to reach out to me, I don't know if you have notes or how exactly
Scott:the listing podcast goes, but you can.
Scott:You can just reach out to me at Mr. Powell.
Scott:M r p l o, Mr. Powelloworld dot com.
Scott:Anybody listening can just shoot me an email if they want to follow up on that.
Blair:That's great.
Blair:Thank you.
Scott:Go.
Blair:More quick things, if I may.
Blair:And then, Martin, you can.
Blair:You can have it.
Blair:But you still reading science fiction today at
Blair:all? Are you too busy or.
Scott:Yeah, I mean, I do, but I'm writing science fiction, so I'm.
Scott:Yeah, yeah.
Scott:Thank you.
Scott:Thank you for the segue into that.
Scott:Right.
Scott:So thanks.
Blair:That.
Martin:I was thinking of asking that.
Martin:So that's good.
Martin:How many points are.
Scott:Yeah, I mean, like I said, when I was younger, I loved Isaac Asimov, the robot
Scott:novels, the foundation series.
Scott:Those were my top favorites.
Scott:And so that's always kind of been in.
Scott:In the back, in.
Scott:In my deep, in my subconscious.
Scott:I reread them as adults multiple times.
Scott:As an adult multiple times.
Scott:And over the past, I'm gonna say, five to 10
Scott:years, I've just been taking notes and prepping to write my own novels.
Scott:I've got two novels planned, but now, actually, everything's changed.
Scott:The fourteen Points is probably actually gonna have to be a trilogy because I've got so much
Scott:to write.
Scott:But that's the title of the novel that I'm writing.
Scott:It's called the 14 points.
Scott:And the obvious source of the title of the
Scott:book is that Woodrow Wilson, announced in 1918, made a proclamation that is known as the
Scott:Fourteen Points.
Scott:And it has to do with America becoming the world police power, effectively.
Scott:Right.
Scott:And so, without spoiling too much, right.
Scott:In my time travel novel, that ain't gonna happen.
Scott:And so there's going to be.
Scott:You know, one of the things I particularly
Scott:enjoyed about the foundation series was that effectively, historians are the heroes.
Scott:They're psycho historians.
Scott:Okay, but they're historians, if you ask me.
Scott:And so Harry Seldon is a historian.
Scott:Right.
Scott:So historians are the heroes.
Scott:Well, in my novel, historians are the heroes.
Scott:So it's going to take a combination of a brilliant physicist And a brilliant historian
Scott:to figure out how to save the world effectively.
Scott:So anyway, anybody that's interested can just go to the 14 points reading group on Facebook
Scott:and there's a trickle there.
Scott:It's. I'm just gonna pick up again.
Scott:I'm. And I've got the 14 points channel on YouTube where I'm talking about the way things
Scott:are going there.
Scott:And.
Scott:And the first chapter is available in the first draft.
Scott:I have to say it's being massively edited at this point.
Scott:So. Because I'm not a natural fiction writer so I've got a lot of skills to develop and so
Scott:I'm really massively editing.
Scott:I've written 250 pages and I know that there's a tremendous amount of work that needs to be
Scott:done to fix it up as a fiction story.
Scott:So.
Scott:So. But it's.
Scott:Yeah, it's still fun.
Scott:I still love science fiction, of course, and I'm hoping to make a science fiction
Scott:masterpiece, which is of course a tall order for a first novel.
Scott:But I'm gonna try to do it right off the bat.
Blair:Wait for the fences, swing for the fence.
Martin:Yeah, that's good.
Scott:Waiting for the fence.
Martin:Have you talked to Warren Fahey? We have had this guest.
Martin:He's writer.
Scott:No, I have not.
Scott:So thank you for the mention.
Scott:I'll have to think about that.
Blair:Yeah, I just let me throw in that this is my.
Blair:The gentleman named Jack Vance is my favorite science fiction author and he wrote the first
Blair:book I ever read by him is still my favorite.
Blair:It was called in paperback, it's called To
Blair:Live Forever.
Blair:And the Kindle version is called Clarges, which is the city.
Blair:This all takes place in C L A R G E S. So I highly recommend that to you and Martin.
Blair:And let me nitpick a little bit more about.
Blair:One of the things that's always bothered me is.
Blair:Well, when I think about it, the division of North Korea and South Korea, I don't think
Blair:that's ever gonna be united because the border of North Korea is China.
Blair:And if it's going to be one way, it'll probably be swallowed up.
Blair:But I hope that doesn't happen.
Blair:What do you any thought on that?
Blair:Because I. I have not gotten to yourself.
Scott:Yeah, I mean I have a chapter on Korea in the History of Tomorrow.
Scott:And you know, basically, if you want the short answer, you know, the Korean quote unquote
Scott:unification process is the same thing as the Middle east peace process.
Scott:These are total, you know, BS neologisms which are never going to happen unless one side
Scott:Basically destroys the other.
Scott:And so, yeah, basically it's a, it's a just a
Scott:joke.
Scott:And so it's not going to happen.
Scott:The jucha ideology of North Korea is literally
Scott:the.
Scott:It's, it's not really communist, it's in fact
Scott:much more akin to Nazism than just about anything else in the world today.
Scott:And, and so it's a virulently ultra nationalist ideology.
Scott:And there's another problem for Korea, and that is that Korea, like Japan and now China,
Scott:is facing a demographic cliff.
Scott:And so this is a country which is going to
Scott:begin to strain rapidly.
Scott:And so if they don't get their act together and start procreating, they're in big trouble.
Scott:And so that's another factor over the next couple generations that these countries are in
Scott:big trouble.
Scott:And.
Scott:Yeah, so Korea, no unification.
Scott:No, that's not, that's not.
Scott:The only, the only possible thing is something completely unpredictable, like a coup within
Scott:the, you know, the highest ranking families in the strangely ideological, you know,
Scott:aristocracy of North Korea.
Scott:But there's no reason to expect that that would produce any really positive results.
Scott:So. No, I don't see it.
Scott:I don't see it.
Scott:But basically, you know, North Korea is, is checkmated.
Scott:Right.
Scott:There's nothing they can do.
Scott:They know that if they make the wrong move, they cease to exist.
Scott:So that's the story.
Scott:It's, there's really, there's almost nothing
Scott:to it.
Scott:It's tragic for the people there, but hey, if
Scott:they want better, they got to get their act together.
Blair:All right, ladies and gentlemen, we've been talking to historian Scott Powell and he
Blair:has three great books out and he's working on fourth.
Blair:Scott, thanks for manning the foxhole with us.
Scott:Been great.
Scott:Thank you.
Blair:All right, Martin, you want to add anything?
Blair:Are you good or.
Martin:I'm all.
Martin:I'm all set.
Martin:So we will do a follow up and we'll talk more about how to support your work, Scott, and
Martin:support our show.