In the book, Dugin states that he wishes to devise an entirely new political theory to replace what he identifies as the previous three dominant political theories:
liberalism,
fascism and
communism. According to Dugin, his aim is to take elements from all three, 'neutralise and decontaminate' negative aspects such as
racism and incorporate them into this new ideology. He refers to this ideology as a 'timeless, non-modern theory' valid for all time. Dugin views liberalism as having 'defeated all its competitors'. He refers to the derision of the past by liberals and the modern concept of 'progress' as being seriously flawed, going so far as to describe it as racism and even 'moral genocide against the past'. From the three other political theories, he discards the aspects he finds unacceptable and highlights what he sees as the positive qualities. He combines them to form a new political theory based on the 'ethnos', describing this as 'the greatest value of the Fourth Political Theory as a cultural phenomenon; as a community of language, religious belief, daily life, and of sharing resources and efforts; as an organic entity'. == Reception ==