The Foundation anchors its public philosophy in Post-Dogmatic Humanism: a defense of free conscience, disciplined inquiry, dignity, repair, and human flourishing after monopoly belief.
The Anti-Christ is not presented here as a theatrical enemy of believers. It is a symbolic name for the civic duty to test any power that presents itself as sacred, final, machine-opaque, or beyond challenge.
The public target is counterfeit authority: any doctrine, institution, leader, platform, technology, or panic economy that protects itself from examination, rules through fear, turns obedience into virtue, or treats people as instruments rather than ends.
How To Read The Pillars
- Read them as interpretive instruments, not commandments.
- Begin with dogma and sovereignty to understand the Foundation’s core refusal of inherited fear.
- Read the adversary and material pillars as corrections to false goodness, disembodied morality, and systems that fear scrutiny.
- Read post-sacred evolution as the horizon of intellectual adulthood after compulsory belief and before machine-age obedience.