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Category Archives: Julius Evola
Cultural Marxism II
Main Forms Important forms of cultural Marxism are the collectivization of life and sensibility, mechanization and finally the unleashing of elementary forces. There in certain of its aspect, these tendencies lead to an anarchist liberation of the Self and subjectivity, in other of its forms we see a veritable destruction … Continue reading
Cultural Marxism

There is a social aspect consisting in tendentiously emphasizing all the cases in which ideals are presented as illusory, values as pure convention, institutions as unjust and defective. Corresponding to that, this culture emphasizes the higher right of life, instinct, the irrational, the purely “human” and, in a certain special domain, creates the new superstition of the subconscious, the unconscious, the libido and primigenial eros as the true root of existence and the human person. Continue reading
Objective and Impersonal Knowledge
Yesterday, we saw that Julius Evola claimed both knowledge and action as the two basic elements. Let’s be clear about what is meant by knowledge. This is not the scholarly knowledge of the professors nor is it related to any discipline like comparative religion. Rather, this knowledge is a gnosis, … Continue reading
Universality and the Heroic Life
The great conquerors always felt almost like sons of fate, carriers of a force that had to be realized and to which, starting from their own person, their own pleasure, their own tranquility, all of which had to be subdued and sacrificed. Continue reading
The Interior Lifelessness of the Nordics
This is a section from Il Fascismo visto dalla destra, published by Julius Evola shortly after WWII. As is evident from this paragraph, the process of decay, or progress, depending on your perspective, in the Scandinavian countries, has been going on for quite some time. Obviously, this cannot be attributed … Continue reading
Fabre d’Olivet and the Myth of Blood
In the face of the chaos of modernity, the only salvation is form. ~ Julius Evola, motto to Il mito del sangue Julius Evola regarded his books Il mito del sangue (“The Myth of Blood”) and Sintesi di dottrina della razza as two parts of a single work. The first … Continue reading
Further Misunderstandings of the Pagan Worldview
Evola continues his critique by pointing out that the goal should be to transcend Christianity by integrating it into something more comprehensive that incorporates the essential elements of the genuine antique paganism. This is actually analogous to the Catholic position as described by Fr. Heinrich Denifle: The Catholic Church is … Continue reading
Creative and Heroic Action
I have recently been asked why we are so “one-sided”. Such a thought can arise only in a mind conditioned to think on a single plane, thus interpreting everything polemically, in the manner of a teeter-totter. The Traditional mind, on the other hand, thinks in terms of “transcendence”, which Evola … Continue reading
Call to Empire
As for the “pagan” unity of the two powers, spiritual and temporal, far from signifying their confusion, it implied the supreme right that, in conformity to the tradition of the “solar race”, the spiritual authority has and must have at the center of every normal State. Continue reading