"Among the thinkers to whom Julius Evola referred in each of the
successive moments of his intellectual activity and his personal
spiritual and doctrinal search, Giovanni Perez says, Nietzsche is
certainly prominent. The work of the German philosopher regarding, on
the one hand, the ethical problem and 'meaning of life' generally, and,
on the other hand - although it remained, to say the least,
unformulated - the problem of God, represented a horizon of reference
to which Evola was careful to devote constant attention in each of the
phases in which his complex human experience sought to clarify itself :
an experience in which there was expressed a vocation, both to the
domain of thought and speculation, and to that of action."
(...)
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