Halls of the Hyperboreads – Telegram
Halls of the Hyperboreads
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In this Atlantean Academy you will find the gymnasium of the heroes, the library of the philosophers, and the temple of the druids
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Forwarded from The way of the warrior
The roof of the world. The Dalai Lama, the highest priest of Buddhism, is in Lhasa. Kutuktu occupies the third tier in the hierarchy compared to him. The center of Asia is not in Mongolia. Mongolia is only the outer circle, the Shield. We should go to Tibet.

There, among the peaks, we will find people who have not forgotten their Aryan ancestors. On the dizzying border of India and China, my empire will be reborn. We will speak Sanskrit and live according to the principles of the Rig Veda. We will gain the law that Europe has lost. And once again the light of the North will shine. The eternal law, dissolved in the waters of the Ganges and Mediterranean, will prevail.

~ Ungern von Sternberg
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Forwarded from Sagittarius Granorum (Sagittarius Hyperboreius)
"By presenting itself essentially as a theological-ritualistic system on the one hand, and on the other as a devotional and moralizing practice, it seems to offer very little to the need for the supernatural, as has been sensed by many persons in recent times, who for this reason have been attracted to other doctrines which seemed to promise something more."

"Naturally, in such a case one views the supernatural as an experience; Catholicism is without doubt characterized by the claim of having, more than any other religion, its own true theology of the supernatural, with reference to the conception of a personal God detached from all the natural world, standing over this world. But it was not for any theology that these individuals went searching, and the theistic Catholic conception of God-person seemed to be inadequate already from the start, since it admitted, in principle, only a “dual” relation, between “I” and “You,” between the creature and the Creator.

"It is true that there exists also a Christian mysticism and that Catholicism has had its monastic Orders, which intended to cultivate a life of pure contemplation. But apart from the fact that these presupposed extremely specific vocations, and that moreover in its removal of the distance deriving from the conception of the God-person, Orthodoxy sees a dangerous heresy in the mystic life itself (thus strictly limiting the concept of a unio mystica or a “unitary life”), Catholicism of modern times, practically speaking, has emphasized all of this to an ever lesser degree
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"The so-called “pastoral cure of the soul” has become its principal preoccupation — not to speak of certain recent postCouncil revolutions toward “modernization” and “opening to the left,” which have brought to the foreground mere social or socializing claims intermixed with well-known and squalid humanitarian, pacifist, and democratic ingredients. All that which might have had a character of true transcendence has thus been sidelined, or at least has not been encouraged in the least. From here, the emptiness which, along with the crises of the modern world, has pressed many to seek elsewhere, more or less along the lines of contemporary neo-spiritualism, exposing themselves to the danger that dark forces might pervert their highest aspirations."

"But in an objective analysis certain recognitions must be made.
If we are referring to early Christianity, this religion presents itself as a typical religion of the kali-yuga, of the “dark age,” which in the Western formulation of the same teaching corresponds to the “iron age,” in which Hesiod believed that the destiny of the many would be “to extinguish themselves without glory in Hades.” Christian preaching, addressed originally above all to the masses of the dispossessed, and to those lacking the tradition of the Roman ecumene, took as their presupposition a type of human much different from that which traditions of a higher level had in mind: a type who, so far as access to the divine went, was in desperate straits.

Thus this Christianity took the form of a tragic doctrine of salvation. The myth of “original sin” was affirmed, and the alternative between eternal salvation or eternal perdition was indicated — an alternative which was to be decided once and for all for everyone on this Earth, and which was sharpened by awesome depictions of the afterlife and with apocalyptic visions. This was a way of arousing in certain natures an extreme tension, which, especially if it was associated to the myth of Jesus as “Redeemer,” might also bear its fruit — if not in this life, at least at the brink of death or in the afterlife, whenever these indirect means, working on human emotionality, succeeded in profoundly modifying the basic forces of the human being.
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Forwarded from Sagittarius Granorum (Sagittarius Hyperboreius)
"In addressing itself to the broadest masses, later Catholicism concealed, to a certain degree, the extremistic crudeness of these views, preoccupying itself with furnishing certain supports for the human personality, of him who had recognized the supernatural destination, and to exercise a subtle action on his deepest being by means of the power of rite and sacrament."

"In this context, one might indicate the possible pragmatic, practical raison d’être for several aspects of Catholicism.

Already certain principles of the Catholic-Christian morality, such as that of humility, caritas and the renunciation of one’s will, if understood in the right way and in the right place, might have been formulated as a corrective teaching, in light of the closure and the individualistic self-affirmation toward which Western man often inclined.

In view of the same limitation on the intellectual plane, and of the corresponding “humanization” of every capacity of vision, it might have been desirable to present in the form of a dogma, and through an authority, that which is situated above the common intellect, but which, at a higher level and at least for an elite might rather become knowledge, direct evidence, gnosi.

It is possible that for a similar reason it was thought desirable to speak of “revelation” and of “grace”: to underline the character of relative transcendence of the true supernatural with respect to the possibilities of a more or less fallen human type which would demonstrate itself ever more prone to every kind of rationalistic and humanistic abuse.

In the end we have already mentioned that the relations of simple “faith” in a theistic framework, with the distance that these allow, while they are certainly limiting (for which in more complete traditions they have always been addressed to the inferior strata of a civilization), might be such as to guarantee the integrity of the person — that individual who, amidst pantheistic mysticisms and forays into the supersensible, as has been said various times, can no longer find any solid ground.
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"These are the limitations of the Catholic doctrine, which have potentially positive aspects, useful with respect to the great mass of men, in light — let us repeat it — of the negative conditions of the latest epoch, of the “dark age.” Given that one holds to this level, ideas like those of the Catholics, such as H. Massis and also A. Cuttat, might also be justified: Catholicism represents a defense of Western man — while every no longer dualistic-theistic form of spirituality (and in this connection one often delights in referring to the Orient) might represent a danger for him.

But when one no longer keeps to that level, the question alters, and significantly. If one aims at positive openings to the supernatural, and one has in sight, as an end, that which might be called the superpersonality, which is to say the integrated personality beyond common human conditionalities, then Catholicism (we are not speaking, however, of the Catholicism of our days) is no longer a limitation which protects and preserves, but a petrifying factor which destroys itself for the reactions which its intolerance and sectarianism might provoke and have provoked in whomever aims toward that other realization of self, whomever has brought attention to non-Western and non-Christian traditions or doctrines in which the metaphysical or initiatic content is more visible than its religious, dogmatic or ritualistic reduction in the form of a rigid theistic mythology.
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Forwarded from Sagittarius Granorum (Sagittarius Hyperboreius)
"Today, it is highly unlikely that the potential of original Christianity, the “tragic doctrine of salvation” of which we have spoken, might be re-actualized, save exceptionally in certain men and through dangerous existential crises. For whomever has long been such a one, the problem does not present itself at all, and we shall furthermore state that if individuals, who have known nothing else than the exceedingly vain constructions of philosophy and of the profane plebeian-university culture, or the contaminations of various contemporary individualisms, aestheticisms, and romanticisms, were to “convert” to Catholicism and to live truly at least in faith, with a total devotion and if possible in a “sacrificial” attitude, this would signify not an abdication but already, despite everything, a progress."
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So are we reminded, through these anecdotes on Plato, Milo, and Polydamas, that physical and mental strength carry with them the obligations of modesty and humility.  As Fontenelle counsels, we offer our brows to laurel wreaths, and our noses to blows to be endured with equanimity and patience...

https://qcurtius.com/2022/07/09/ancient-greek-athleticism-and-the-idea-of-virtue/
Forwarded from Modern Kshatriya
This sense of wonder is the mark of the Philosopher. Philosophy indeed has no other origin... Then just take a look around and make sure that none of the uninitiated overhears us. I mean by uninitiated the people who believe that nothing is real save what they can grasp with their hands and do not admit that actions and processes or anything invisible can count as real.

Theaetetus, Plato
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Forwarded from SanatanaDharma
“Let man and woman, united in marriage, constantly strive in themselves, that they may not be disunited and may not violate their mutual true-heartedness.” (Manava Dharma Shastra, 9.102)
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Minerva removes the doubts of Penelope, Theodoor van Thulden, between 1632 and 1633
& Penelope Unraveling Her Web, Joseph Wright of Derby, 1785
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Odysseus slays the suitors, Skyphos by the Penelope Painter, from Tarquinia (Italy), around 440 BCE
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Slaughter of the suitors by Odysseus and Telemachus, Campanian red-figure bell-krater, ca. 330 BCE

In Contest of Homer and Hesiod, it is alleged that the Roman Emperor Hadrian asked the Delphic Oracle about Homer's birthplace and parentage. The Oracle replied that Homer came from Ithaca and that Telemachus was his father by Epicasta, daughter of Nestor.
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"As everybody knows, the doctrine of the Golden Age is part of the doctrine of the four ages, which testifies to the progressive spiritual involution unfolding in the course of history since very ancient times. All of these ages also have a morphological meaning and express a typical and universal form of civilization. Following the Golden Age, we encounter the Silver Age, which corresponds to a priestly and feminine rather than regal and virile type of spirituality: I have called it lunar spirituality, since the symbols of gold and silver have traditionally been in the same relationship as that between sun and moon. In this context, such correspondence is particularly revealing: the moon is the feminine star that, unlike the sun, no longer has in itself the principle of its own light. Hence the shift to a spirituality conditioned by mediation, namely, an extrovert spirituality characterized by an attitude of submission, of abandonment, of loving or ecstatic rapture. Here we find the root of the 'religious' phenomenon, from its theistic-devotional forms to its mystical ones.

Any insurgence of a wild and materialized virility against such spiritual forms characterizes the Bronze Age. This age is characterized by the degradation of the warriors' caste and by its revolt against him who represents the spirit, insofar as he is no longer the Olympian leader but only a priest. The Bronze Age is also marked by the unleashing of the principle proper to the warriors' caste, namely, pride, violence, war. The corresponding myth is the Titanic or Luciferian revolt, or the Promethean attempt to steal the Olympian fire. The age of 'giants,' or of the Wolf, or of the 'elemental beings;' is an equivalent figuration found in various traditions and in their fragments preserved in legends and epics of various peoples."

- Julius Evola, The Mystery of the Grail
Halls of the Hyperboreads
"As everybody knows, the doctrine of the Golden Age is part of the doctrine of the four ages, which testifies to the progressive spiritual involution unfolding in the course of history since very ancient times. All of these ages also have a morphological meaning…
"The last age is the Iron Age, or, according to the corresponding Hindu term, the Dark Age (Kali Yuga). This age includes every deconsecrated civilization, every civilization that knows and extols only what is human and earthly.
Against these forms of decadence there emerged the idea of a possible cycle of restoration, which Hesiod called the heroic cycle or age of heroes. Here we must employ the term heroic in a special, technical sense distinct from the usual meaning. According to Hesiod, the 'generation of heroes' was created by Zeus, that is to say, by the Olympian principle, with the possibility of reattaining the primordial state and thus to give life to a new 'golden' cycle.

But in order to realize this, which is only a possibility and no longer a state of affairs, it is first necessary to overcome both the 'lunar' spirituality and the materialized virility, namely, both the priest and the mere warrior or the Titan. These archetypes are found in the 'heroic' figures of almost every tradition. In the Hellenic-Achaean tradition, for instance, Heracles is described as a heroic prototype precisely in these terms; his perennial nemesis is Hera, the supreme goddess of the lunar-pantheistic cult. Heracles earns Olympian immortality after allying himself to Zeus, who is the Olympian principle, against the 'giants'; according to one of the myths of this cycle, it is through Heracles that the 'titanic' element (symbolized by Prometheus) is freed and reconciled with the Olympian element."

- Julius Evola, The Mystery of the Grail
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Forwarded from Modern Kshatriya
For we should not occupy ourselves with all philosophers, or with all doctrines, but only with those philosophies that imbue us with piety and teach us about the gods

Emperor Julian
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Consider lost all the time in which you do not think of divinity.

Sextus the Pythagorean
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