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  • Members: 121
  • Category: Spirituality
  • Founded: Nov 19, 2004
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Guenon and Hyperborea   Topic List   < Prev Topic  |  Next Topic >
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Re: Guenon and Hyperborea

Joscelyn Godwin's book 'Arktos: The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism,
and Nazi Survival' could perhaps be of use to you.


--- In evola_as_he_is@yahoogroups.com, "brightimperator"
<brightimperator@...> wrote:
>
> Original Theosophy, Guenon and Evola all share the belief in the
> Hyperborean, polar origins of mankind and a subsequent solidification
> and devolution. The main theses: Hyperborea and Thule are the golden-
> age centers of civilization and spirituality; and Humankind does not
> rise from the ape, but progressively physicalizes into the apelike
> condition. A few questions for detectives and scholars:
>
> 1: Does Guenon understand Hyperborea in an anthropological
> sense, as does Evola, where Northern spirituality is linked to Nordic
> Indo-European blood as its imperfect vehicle? (A related inquiry is
> Guenon's stance on racial issues as a whole).
>
> 2: What is the common root for these teachings? Did Guenon
> derive his ideas on Hyperborea and devolution from Blavatsky, and then
> Evola from Guenon, or did all three arrive at their understanding by a
> a common source, or different but analogous sources? What possible
> sources? Mysterious Hindu contacts?
>
> Let us investigate.
>









Thu Oct 5, 2006 5:15 pm

zenon_noir
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Original Theosophy, Guenon and Evola all share the belief in the Hyperborean, polar origins of mankind and a subsequent solidification and devolution. The main...
brightimperator Offline Send Email Oct 3, 2006
11:37 am

Considering that both Evola and Guenon regarded Blavatsky as a dangerous fraud, surely neither one derived any of their beliefs from her. The idea of the polar...
Michael Lord
ouro_boros Offline Send Email
Oct 5, 2006
10:05 am

I believe Guénon had no time for personalities. He was focused on one thing the centre....
darkiexx Offline Send Email Oct 5, 2006
10:18 pm

The two tomes of 'Etudes sur la franc-maçonnerie et le compagnonnage', Editions traditionnelles, Paris, 1980, are filled with 'reviews of articles' made by...
evola_as_he_is Offline Send Email Oct 6, 2006
11:42 am

The owner has been faster than me on Mabire. The quoted book (Thulé, le soleil retrouvé des Hyperboréens, Laffont, Paris 1978) has many oddities, for...
vandermok
charltonroad36 Offline Send Email
Oct 6, 2006
2:59 pm

As for Guénon's hypersensitiveness nothing could have been more rectified, than a good measure of the father's slipper, but apparently the father suffered the...
darkiexx Offline Send Email Oct 7, 2006
12:13 pm

Gentlemen, I was only looking at this provocative issue last night regarding the hyperborean mythos. Guenon wrote a very good essay on the matter in "Symbols...
darkiexx Offline Send Email Oct 5, 2006
10:21 pm

This matter has already been partly tackled on this list, as far as Evola is concerned. As early as 1928, in 'Critica del teosofismo', the third chapter...
evola_as_he_is Offline Send Email Oct 5, 2006
10:40 pm

Joscelyn Godwin's book 'Arktos: The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism, and Nazi Survival' could perhaps be of use to you....
zenon_noir Offline Send Email Oct 5, 2006
10:17 pm

Most of the idea of Guénon on the polar origin and the races/castes have been written under the name of 'Palingénius' in 'L'Archeomètre' on the magazine 'La...
vandermok
charltonroad36 Offline Send Email
Oct 5, 2006
10:18 pm

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