Peter
Thiel
This article is more than 2 months old
Peter
Thiel’s off-the-record antichrist lectures reveal more about him than
Armageddon
Silicon
Valley titan desperately tries to detach self from power in amateurish talks
attempting to ape his favorite philosopher
Inside tech billionaire Peter Thiel’s
off-the-record lectures about the antichrist
Adrian
Daub
Fri 10
Oct 2025 16.24 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/ng-interactive/2025/oct/10/peter-thiel-antichrist-lectures
Peter
Thiel famously isn’t into academia. And yet, in four recent off-the-record
lectures on the antichrist in San Francisco, the billionaire venture capitalist
has made a good case for credentialing.
In these
meandering talks, Thiel is clearly aiming for the kind of syncretic thinking he
so relished in the books and lectures of the philosopher and professor René
Girard, whom he knew at Stanford University and whose work he has long admired.
Unfortunately, more often than not, Thiel ends up with something that reads
like Dan Brown.
Thiel has
previously workshopped his talks on Armageddon at Oxford and Harvard, at
various theology departments, and with a few unfortunate podcasters. For a man
so vocal in his disdain of our institutions of higher education, he seems to
spend an awful lot of time in them.
Overall,
the picture of Thiel that emerges in these lectures is someone desperately
trying to disidentify from their own power. “You realize,” he tells his
audience when interpreting a particular Japanese manga, “in my interpretation …
who runs the world is something like the antichrist.” Here’s a man who,
together with a couple of fellow Silicon Valley freaks, helped return a
sundowning caudillo to a presidency he is obviously unsuited for, and who uses
the awesome might of the US government to remake society and the world. A man
who funds the companies that harness your data and determine who gets doxed,
deported, drone struck. Who funds far-right movements that seek to remake the
very face of liberal democracy.
Immanentizing
the Katechon
To be
fair, Thiel has blazed a successful path outside of the ivory tower. Ungodly
rich by age 30, the founder and investor has since spread the gospel of not
going to college. He believes that higher education is a bubble. In his first
book, co-authored with his Sancho Panza, David Sacks, he attacked US
universities as bastions of diversity group-think, with slipping standards. He
has evidently stuck to this diagnosis, even though admissions rates, scholarly
output and Nobel prize recognition would seem to contradict it. To Thiel, even
then, Jerusalem was definitely not build’d here, among these dark Satanic
diploma mills.
In
September, Falter in Austria published a long profile about the theologian
Wolfgang Palaver, who is one of those academics Thiel used as beta testers on
his antichrist material. Palaver says it makes sense to him that Thiel is
seeking out academics: “It’s really difficult in his environment: who tells him
the truth to his face?”
There is
something deeply funny imagining a rapt audience, cowed by Thiel’s legend and
wealth, following the billionaire into the autodidact’s private cosmos, in
lectures whose bullet points were certainly more robust at the start of lecture
one than at the close of lecture three. Thiel is lost in a bizarre thicket of
his own references and preoccupations. You picture the theological faculty at
the University of Innsbruck sitting politely through disquisitions about the
manga One Piece, Alan Moore’s Watchmen, or gripes with specific effective
altruists in Silicon Valley. In one lecture, Thiel identifies “the legionnaires
of the antichrist”, such as the researcher Eliezer Yudkowsky and former Oxford
professor Nick Bostrom. In another, he considers Bill Gates as an antichrist
candidate. With enemies like these, who needs friends?
But such
is Thiel’s odd relationship to academia. For someone who dislikes universities
and researchers, he has a hard time staying away. Thiel, who received a
bachelor’s degree from Stanford in 1989 and a JD from Stanford Law School in
1992, was deeply impressed with the thinking of Girard, his Stanford professor.
He has spent decades promoting Girard’s “mimetic theory”, including attributing
his famous investment in Facebook to “betting on mimesis”. His current “Whore
of Babylon” tour started with a presentation at a Paris conference devoted to
Girard’s work.
Thiel
clearly admired Girard not just for his arguments but for his style of
argumentation. These lectures don’t so much feel inspired by Girard’s ideas.
They feel like his attempt to do Girard.
Mimetic
style over substance
Girard’s
books were breathtaking in their range. They were deeply eclectic, but managed
to be a mad dash through the western canon. The connections the philosopher
made could seem to come out of left field, but at times the absurd swerves were
held together by the sheer force of his erudition. Most importantly, Girard was
always having a conversation all his own: his work could look like theology,
but it wasn’t ultimately that religious; his work could look like philosophy,
but wasn’t really in dialogue with academic philosophy. In San Francisco, Thiel
appeared to be cosplaying this kind of performance.
One of
the things he replicates is the airtight and airless insularity of Girard’s
thought. Thiel seems to take on board objections only to then barrel ahead with
his initial instinct. Palaver is quoted in Falter as saying that he is “no
longer the professor, and he’s no longer the graduate student”. It’s a funny
remark because watching Thiel take feedback makes him seem exactly like a
graduate student about to crash out of his comprehensive exam.
In his
telling, Thiel is already a part of an intellectual community. He loves telling
his audience what he “always” says, he refers to standard answers and even a
“spiel” that he gives. He seems a little bored with himself. Based at least on
the recording, the actual audience in San Francisco seemed puzzled by Thiel’s
disquisitions.
Like his
inspiration Girard, Thiel is prone to speaking in absolutes that, in order to
make any sense at all, have to be quite a bit less than absolute. “In all times
and all places, people want to always scapegoat the Christian God for our
problems,” he said in his second lecture. Big if true, as they say.
What is
Thiel actually arguing? He suggests that we live in an age obsessed with
apocalyptic thinking (keep that “we” in mind, it’ll become important later).
“It’s AI, of course, it’s climate change, bioweapons, nuclear war,” “maybe
fertility collapse”, he says.
His
overall point is that the current fixation on the apocalypse gets it wrong in
two different directions: we’re too apocalyptic and “not apocalyptic enough”.
Not apocalyptic enough because we tend to think of the various plausibly
forecast ends of days as mutually exclusive: either climate change will get us,
or nuclear war. The antichrist is Thiel’s attempt to think about the end of the
world holistically.
But we’re
also too apocalyptic: in each lecture, Thiel comes back to the idea that “the
Antichrist will come to power by talking about Armageddon nonstop.” Or, as he
puts it in the second lecture, “the Antichrist might present himself or itself
or herself as the Katechon”, meaning that withholding element that forestalls
the apocalypse. This lecture is more or less a gloss on Carl Schmitt’s
assertion in Nomos of the Earth, that the Katechon was what allowed for the
identification of Christianity with the Roman empire. The doubleness of Thiel’s
apocalypse – that what halts the apocalypse might in fact bring about the
apocalypse – allows the billionaire to tilt boldly at any number of big
questions: empire, Christianity, progress, and Silicon Valley’s dominance. Each
of these, to Thiel, is ambiguous, might stymie or accelerate Armageddon.
Warring
with windmills, confusion and contradiction
So who or
what is the antichrist? Thiel is admirably and uncharacteristically specific on
this matter in a scattershot sort of way. The antichrist wants to erect a
one-world state, which largely seems to mean any kind of global regulatory
regime. Longtime Thiel watchers will recall his preoccupation with sovereignty
and seasteading. The antichrist appears to be any force opposing that. The
antichrist also is people who are against AI, especially those who seek to
regulate it. If you were hoping for Al Pacino chewing scenery, this might be a
bit of a letdown. It does lead, however, to the insight that the antichrist is
“someone like Greta”, as in Thunberg, the climate activist, but “not
Andreessen”, as in Marc, the venture capitalist.
“I think
Andreessen is not the antichrist. Because, you know, the antichrist is
popular.” Respect where it’s due: that is a good line.
But let
me return to Thiel’s list of possible apocalypses: artificial intelligence,
climate change, bioweapons, nuclear war, fertility collapse. The list is
unintentionally revealing. Thiel is probably not wrong to say that people are
pretty worried about the climate crisis. But the examples of AI, bioweapons and
fertility collapse in particular suggest that Thiel has confused the world’s
worries for those of a very recherché set of aging tech entrepreneurs he
hobnobs with. And the antichrist, too, seems very Silicon Valley-coded. This
suggests, I think, that in Thiel’s mind there are two cosmic forces warring
over creation itself, and they both consist of Peter and his friends.
Thiel
thinks that by both increasing knowledge and particularizing knowledge,
modernity has made thinking of the totality more difficult. He has observed
there is “this sort of incredible fragmentation of knowledge”. We do more
science than ever but without true insight. In the “post-modern multiversity”,
“science continues to grow like a colony of rabbits”, but since the inputs, in
terms of people, degrees awarded, investment, etc, keep increasing, “you have
to suspect that there are diminishing returns,” he says.
So for
those playing along at home: Thiel is both a “classical liberal” who just
thinks in terms of inputs and outputs and wants the university to be as
efficient as it can possibly be. And he is a fire-breathing theologian who
thinks that the university is failing at its job of considering the totality,
venerating at the altar of hyperspecialization and postmodern deathworks. He is
the libertarian offended at researchers “stealing money” and “not doing
anything”, he says in one lecture. And he is the campus critic he was during
his Stanford days, the one who refers to former Harvard University president
Claudine Gay as “the DEI person”.
How any
of that mishmash fits together isn’t as important as why it goes together: it
serves as a justification for Thiel’s own autodidactism.
What does
it all mean? Anything?
It’s
important to note that he holds himself to a vastly different standard than
just about anyone else: he thinks just raising some questions about the
antichrist might be useful in its own right – which may be true for all I know.
But then he wants to quantify what everyone else contributes to knowledge in a
way I can only describe as Doge-like. It would be difficult to count the
monetary value of theorizing about Armageddon, as he is doing while
pontificating about the cost-ineffective academic from the other side of his
mouth. The rules appear to be different for Thiel, at least in his own mind.
And such is Thiel’s odd relationship to power.
One is
reminded of the scene in Apocalypse Now where Martin Sheen’s character comes
across a platoon and asks who’s in charge here. “Ain’t you?” Ain’t you running
the world, Peter? If it isn’t you, who is?
If we
want to look at Thiel as something he can’t seem to see himself as – as, in the
end, a pretty standard specimen of homo siliconvalliensis – then what is
interesting in these lectures is not the amateurish breadth and ambition. It’s
the narrowness. Thiel’s vision of the antichrist may not be holistic enough. In
the first lecture, where Thiel proposes that the catastrophes we see in the
various end-of-days narratives in the Bible are threatening to play out
literally in our day. He says we shouldn’t think of “the apocalyptic prophecies
in the Bible … in a mystical way”, but almost as “rational scientific
calculations of what people will be able to do to themselves in a world in
which human nature is not changed or improved”.
But that
is surely not what Revelation is about: the end of days in the Bible is in
there because it attests to a view of the cosmos, its alpha and omega, its
entire meaningful constitution. Otherwise, it is just a bunch of trumpets and
locusts and people who give suspiciously good speeches. In the end, it isn’t
clear how meaningful these four lectures make the antichrist or indeed the
apocalypse.
It’s not
even clear how they make meaning. During the Q&A after the second lecture,
someone in the audience asked Thiel whether he was moving away from his
erstwhile teacher Girard – which is the central question, though perhaps not
for the reason the questioner thinks. It gets at what Thiel is aiming at with
these lectures. Perhaps some of their surface strangeness is explained by the
fact that Thiel is ultimately engaging in some kind of Girardian play with
doubles, mirrors and imitation. Not least among those would be the fact that
the description he gives of the antichrist might also apply to one Peter Thiel.
So maybe
getting stuck on the details means we are missing the hidden, esoteric meaning
within? But in that case, what’s the point of these lectures? As he warns in
his third lecture, “excessive esotericism means you don’t really think
coherently enough about your ideas; they get lost and you communicate them too
subtly”. It feels like Thiel is keeping both options open. He gets to tap dance
between “I said what I said” and “you don’t understand what I’m doing here”. He
seems to want to stand apart from his own immense power – apart from his own
positions, apart from his own attempts to make himself understood – in
something like bemused contemplation.

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