Gornahoor

Liber esse, scientiam acquirere, veritatem loqui

Category: Idealism

  • The Emptiness of Meaning

    The Emptiness of Meaning

    Platonic realism recognizes universal ideas, their appearance in the world, their knowability, and their expressibility.

  • The Temptation of the Absolute

    The Temptation of the Absolute

    Once thought has attained the Absolute, it sees religion as simply an appearance of the Absolute. However, if you accept a version of panpsychism, then the Absolute is not simply an object of thought. It, too, must be conscious and have a Mind, i.e., it is also a subject.

  • Mind and Cosmos

    Mind and Cosmos

    Being a review of Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature Is Almost Certainly False, by Thomas Nagel. A couple of weeks ago I watched the notorious atheist and Darwinist Richard Dawkins interviewed by a non-descript host on a cable news network. Since the context was a discussion of Ben Carson’s belief…

  • The God of the Metaphysicians

    The God of the Metaphysicians

    The goal of true philosophy is knowledge of the whole.

  • Social Surgery

    Social Surgery

    Does society have the right to determine its genetic future? An anti-Christian philosopher and a prominent Christian theologian consider the issue.

  • Hermann Keyserling – Part 2

    This is the second and final installment of Julius Evola‘s commentary on Hermann Keyserling from Saggi sull’Idealismo Magico. Evola refers to Keyserling’s “brilliant interpretation of the function of meaning, according to which understanding is removed from the rational and peripheral plane and compenetrated with the principle of deep self-realization and power.” ⇐  Part 1 Some of…

  • Hermann Keyserling – Part 1

    Hermann Keyserling – Part 1

    The key to Keyserling’s views is the phenomenon of understanding. It is essentially a point of spontaneity, freedom, and interiority.

  • Philosophy Around the World

    Philosophy Around the World

    Although Keyserling appreciates the wisdom of the East, believing it to be superior to the West, he sees them as unsuitable for practical life. Europeans strive to manifest their ideals in the physical world.

  • Some Aspects of the Traditional Medical World View: The Demiourgos-Physician

    Some Aspects of the Traditional Medical World View: The Demiourgos-Physician

    the worldview and practice of traditional medicine studies, contemplates, and actively harmonizes each term of the “Great Triad”, curing and ensuring health, while taking the body as “departure point” for the realization of cosmological and metaphysical Truth.

  • Numbers According to Iamblichus

    Plato said that no one could be a philosopher who had not studied mathematics. Undoubtedly, this is partially a reference to the Pythagoreans. Having been a mathematical dunce until college (although not innumerate entirely), this is part of my penance, to work through Iamblichus’ treatise. Luckily, this work supplies a beginner’s manual to understanding the…