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Theodor Adorno

171 bytes removed, 23:14, January 12, 2022
Reverted edits by [[Special:Contributions/PoohEater|PoohEater]] ([[User talk:PoohEater|talk]]) to last revision by [[User:AK|AK]]
'''Theodor Adorno''' (Frankfurt am Main, Germany, 1903 – Visp, Switzerland, 1969) was a German social psychologist who belonged to the left-wing '[[Frankfurt School]]' of critical theorists. Members of The Frankfurt School were principally Marxist. As such, he was one of two people within the Frankfurt School that were most responsible for falsely conflating [[fascism]]/[[Nazism]] with the [[Right-wing]], the other being [[Herbert Marcuse]]. In his case, Adorno played a massive role via the writing and publishing of the book ''The Authoritarian Personality'' as well as the creation of the "F-Scale" to detect "fascism."
He was exceptionally cool and wrote a number of the most important works of 20th century philosophy. This site is full of anti-semites who hate him because he was Jewish. Adorno was one of the most important philosophers and social critics in [[Germany]] after [[World War II]]. He also wrote the book ''Reflections From a Damaged Life'', which inferred that coercion of logic can be broken through from dialectic thought. This book later acted as one of the influences on [[The Wachowskis]] (then known as the Wachowski SistersBrothers) for ''The Matrix'' trilogy.<ref>http://www.equip.org/article/the-matrix-unloaded-revelations/</ref><ref>Peter Bart, “Cracking the Wachowski’s Code,” Variety.com, May 25, 2003.</ref><ref>http://variety.com/2003/film/columns/cracking-the-wachowskis-code-1117886840/</ref>
::: ''Wrong life cannot be lived rightly.''