Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas

Evola, in a single page, demolishes the myth of the Middle Ages as a dark and barbaric period and of the Renaissance as a return to classical ideals—showing that, in many ways, the opposite is true: https://t.co/0j4S2Ar8t8

"This is why, for us, the return to race cannot merely mean a return to blood — especially in these twilight times, where almost irreversible mixtures have occurred. It must mean a return to the spirit of the race, not in a totemic sense, but in an aristocratic sense, related to the original germ of our 'form,' our... See more




I have read Eros and the Mysteries of Love – The Metaphysics of Sex by our esteemed baron Julius Evola. As the title of the book suggests, Evola explores the higher dimensions of the union of man and woman. He refutes the merely material view of sex (i.e. the view that sex is only related to procreation and about primal desires).... See more

Julius Evola on Christianity:
"Superstition that brutalizes souls" - this was the judgement by which paganism, through the words of Rutilius Namatianus, stigmatized the emerging Christian belief. But today, anyone who, having overcome the bias of obscure acquiescence spanning two millennia, looks at things with a cold... See more

EVOLA, PAGANISM & IMPERIUM
(Feat. @VDAREJamesK)
Kevin DeAnna and I discussed Paganism concerning its essential relationship to European identity, Julius Evola’s philosophy and application to modern politics, Artificial Intelligence and the Future.
YouTube link below -



Evola on Education
Most people know Evola from his books, but he also wrote dozens if not hundreds of articles for a range of publications. Here he discusses Montessori education - he was actually at their conference in Fascist Italy, presided over by Mdm. Montessori herself. https://t.co/HLrFc8XfYx
Il fascismo eterno (Italian Edition)


Julius Evola on Baron von Ungern-Sternberg
Recently, there has been a spate of writings about a figure who, in spite of his extraordinary stature, had passed almost unnoticed in the tumult following the First World War: Baron Roman Nikolai Maximilian von Ungern-Sternberg.
His enemies called... See more

OUT NOW FROM ARKTOS
Julius Evola — PAGAN IMPERIALISM
With a foreword by James Kirkpatrick and an introduction by Dmitry Moiseev
“In the 20th century, now, and in the forever future, we are unlikely to find a better spiritual guide than the immortal Baron of... See more