On a recent visit to Prague, I came across the following passage from one of the most important literary figures of the 20th century, the modernist Franz Kafka, worth quoting in full: "The war has led us into a labyrinth of distorting mirrors. We stumble from one fictitious vision to another, bewildered victims of false prophets and charlatans who, with their cheap recipes for happiness, merely cover our eyes and ears, so that, because of the mirrors, we fall from one dungeon to another, like through open trapdoors". Whilst writing in a different era, in an entirely different culture and context, and obviously slightly polemic, Kafka's words seem strangely to resonate with a growing trend in politics today - what has recently been labelled 'post-truth' politics. Brexit is widely agreed to have ushered in a new age in British politics. Yet it seems more appropriate to regard it as symptomatic of a new period which began earlier, with the Financial ...
Observations on macroeconomics, politics and social philosophy