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Forwarded from Arktos
"We do not merely study the past: we inherit it, and inheritance brings with it not only the rights of ownership, but the duties of trusteeship. Things fought for and died for should not be idly squandered. For they are the property of others, who are not yet born.'
โ Roger Scruton
โ Roger Scruton
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My perfect Utopia kind of looks like an:
Anonymous Poll
15%
Occult Empire
4%
Masonic Federation
20%
Archeofuturistic Atlantis
28%
Agrarian Neo-Hyperborea
9%
Fully Automated Gay Space Communism
7%
"Lunar Punk" Space Piracy
12%
Gnostic Theocracy
5%
Pluralistic Patchwork
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Forwarded from The Classical Wisdom Tradition
"[Pythagoras] cultivated philosophy, the scope of which is to free the mind implanted within us from the impediments and fetters within which it is confined, without whose freedom none can learn anything sound or true, or perceive the unsoundness in the operation of sense. ... The purified mind should be applied to the discovery of beneficial things, which can be effected by certain arts, which by degrees induce it to the contemplation of eternal and incorporeal things which never vary. ... That is the reason he made so much use of the mathematical disciplines and speculations, which are intermediate between the physical and the incorporeal realm, for the reason that, like bodies, they have a three-fold dimension, and yet share the impassibility of incorporeals. [These disciplines he used] as degrees of preparation to the contemplation of the really existent things, by an artistic principle diverting the eyes of the mind from corporeal things, whose manner and state never remain in the same condition, to a desire for true [spiritual] food."
Porphyry, Life of Pythagoras 46-47
Porphyry, Life of Pythagoras 46-47
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