In this book, Evolahas discussed the spiritual aspects of war in different spiritual traditions, including Vedic, Iranian, Islamic, and Catholic. By doing this, he concludes that war in certain circumstances can have a "sacred character" th ...
In this book, Evolahas discussed the spiritual aspects of war in different spiritual traditions, including Vedic, Iranian, Islamic, and Catholic. By doing this, he concludes that war in certain circumstances can have a "sacred character" through which man can achieve self-awareness.
Julius Julius Evola selects specific examples from the Aryan and Islamic traditions to show how traditionalists can prepare themselves to experience wars in a way that allows them to transcend the limited possibilities of life in our material age and enter the world of heroism, i.e. Achieving a higher position. The state of consciousness is the effective realization of the meaning of life. However, his call to action is not that of today's armies, who want nothing more from their soldiers than to become mercenaries in the service of a degenerate class. Instead, Evola presents the warrior as someone who lives a coherent and unified way of life—one who adopts a specifically Aryan worldview, one that sees the political ends of war not as the ultimate justification for war, but merely as a means. The warrior perceives his calling as something higher than existence.
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