By: Jay Dyer Dune is an amazing novel: There is a reason it’s the best-selling science fiction series of all time. Prescient for his time (1965), author Frank Herbert was able...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer I have highlighted fake news recently, and in a fit of 80s mania, I decided to watch the Charlie Sheen/Michael Biehn Navy Seals because I had never seen...
Read More“‘Everything that is in motion must be moved by something.’ Gregory of Nazianzus, responding to Aristotle’s identification of God as a “fifth element” alongside the traditional four stoicheia, asked: ‘What...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer I started this out as a long comment, but I decided it would make for a good post, as I’ve been seeking an educated atheist to debate...
Read MoreBy: Jay What is “reason”? Dr. Bahnsen made a great point several years ago about the mass equivocation on the subject of “reason.” It’s a common word, used by everyone,...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer Vertigo is the best place to start a Hitchcock analysis. While many themes repeat in his films, Vertigo is most memorable for its psychological depth and mystique. ...
Read MoreAuthor and historian James Kelley returns to JaysAnalysis to discuss his groundbreaking research on the history of the Frankish empire and its relationship to various developments in western theology and...
Read MoreThe Dooms Chapel Horror director John Holt and producer Chris Bowers return to JaysAnalysis to discuss more details of the upcoming film. We joke about directors and some of the funny...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer Now You See Me is, on one level, a silly, contrived film about a group of magicians invited to be part of a large-scale heist and con operation. ...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek: Into Darkness differs quite a bit from the original reboot with a much deeper, esoteric geo-political plot. While Star Trek was much better rated, and in ways...
Read Moreγνῶθι σεαυτόν By: Jay Dyer Certain snotty critics in a forum posted a criticism of my Thomism article, where I looked at the flaws in Thomism that led to, I believe, to Enlightenment scientism. That’s...
Read MoreDownload a higher quality mp3 here. Right click, save as In this interview, I quiz the Collins brothers on their claim that the alien mythos is manufactured by the power...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer When contemplating the present zeitgeist, I am constantly struck by the never-ending stream of inane retardation that assaults my senses on a daily basis. From the perspective...
Read MoreBy: Jay Working my way through the Spielberg canon, I couldn’t pass up an esoteric analysis of E.T. While I think Close Encounters is loaded with esoteric and conspiratorial clues and...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer I have written before about the importance of Leibniz, especially when it comes to complex metaphysical questions. Some have wondered in the past why I have seen...
Read MoreIn this exclusive interview with Reuters’ award-winning D.C. economics correspondent, Pedro da Costa, we explore the Federal Reserve system, economic and philosophic history, “free markets,” the “third position,” the bail...
Read MoreNote: apologies for the Skype quality which skips and jumps here and there, and which I could not help. We’ll just pretend it’s cryptographic and we’re “agents” (not spies!) and...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer Max Horkheimer and Theodore W. Adorno, key figures of the Frankfurt School of Marxist Critical Theory, wrote in their landmark work, “Dialectic of Enlightenment,” that “myth...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer The study of conspiracy leads directly to the study of covert operations and intelligence agencies. As one reads about the plots and intrigues of secret societies, one...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer These 80s cult classics do well for analyses. Vitrually all the classics children of the 80s like myself grew up with were loaded with deeper, esoteric symbolism,...
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