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>> No.12468145 [View]
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12468145

>>12468058
Nietzsche's work is quite insular and he doesn't suggest the reader to 'go' anywhere other than into solitude to forge their own values.

Nonetheless, as many of the Greeks as you can handle, especially Heraclitus. I personally find Evola to compliment and critique Nietzsche's positive nihilism/materialism well.

"The fundamental principle underlying all justifications of war, from the point of view of human personality, is ‘heroism’. War, it is said, offers man the opportunity to awaken the hero who sleeps within him. War breaks the routine of comfortable life; by means of its severe ordeals, it offers a transfiguring knowledge of life, life according to death. The moment the individual succeeds in living as a hero, even if it is the final moment of his earthly life, weighs infinitely more on the scale of values than a protracted existence spent consuming monotonously among the trivialities of cities. From a spiritual point of view, these possibilities make up for the negative and destructive tendencies of war, which are one-sidedly and tendentiously highlighted by pacifist materialism. War makes one realize the relativity of human life and therefore also the law of a ‘more-than-life’, and thus war has always an anti-materialist value, a spiritual value."

http://www.cakravartin.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Metaphysics-of-War-Evola-Julius.pdf

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