“Now it is beginning to dawn on maybe five or six brains that physics too is only an interpretation and arrangement of the world (according to ourselves! if I may say so) and not an explanation of the world.”
— Nietzsche
— Nietzsche
“What separates two people most profoundly is a different sense and degree of cleanliness”
— Nietzsche
— Nietzsche
Forwarded from Lance's Legion
No matter how hard life beats me down, I will always dream big, with luster, and act on those dreams.
They call Don Quixote a fool for dueling windmills, and maybe I am a fool too, but you will see me side by side with him charging giants till the sun sets, hearts ablaze.
They call Don Quixote a fool for dueling windmills, and maybe I am a fool too, but you will see me side by side with him charging giants till the sun sets, hearts ablaze.
Forwarded from 𝑬𝒖𝒓𝒐𝒑𝒆𝒂𝒏 𝑺𝒐𝒄𝒊𝒂𝒍𝒊𝒔𝒎
The_Adventurous_Heart_Figures_and_Capriccios_Ernst_Jünger_2016.pdf
1.4 MB
The Adventurous Heart: Figures and Capriccios
by Ernst Jünger
The 1938 version of Ernst Jünger's The Adventurous Heart: Figures and Capriccios must be considered a key text in the famous German writer's sprawling oeuvre. This superb translation offers Anglophone readers a fresh look at one of twentieth-century Germany's most extraordinary writers.
"Even Jünger's war reports include a metaphysical and moral dimension, replete with insights into nature and appeals to meditative reflection. This aspiration is especially evident in The Adventurous Heart, an extraordinary work where one finds not only the care of a certain literary poetics but also a reflection that one might well designate as mineral or crystalline, concerning the immutability of things and therefore nourishing a 'stereoscopic vision' in which two flat images overlap in order to reveal a dimension of depth."
—Alain de Benoist, Editor of Krisis
by Ernst Jünger
The 1938 version of Ernst Jünger's The Adventurous Heart: Figures and Capriccios must be considered a key text in the famous German writer's sprawling oeuvre. This superb translation offers Anglophone readers a fresh look at one of twentieth-century Germany's most extraordinary writers.
"Even Jünger's war reports include a metaphysical and moral dimension, replete with insights into nature and appeals to meditative reflection. This aspiration is especially evident in The Adventurous Heart, an extraordinary work where one finds not only the care of a certain literary poetics but also a reflection that one might well designate as mineral or crystalline, concerning the immutability of things and therefore nourishing a 'stereoscopic vision' in which two flat images overlap in order to reveal a dimension of depth."
—Alain de Benoist, Editor of Krisis
Forwarded from Lance's Legion
There are always reasons to quit, the strength of your Will is determined by affirming the reasons to keep fighting.
Forwarded from Lance's Legion
“Perseverance is more prevailing than violence; and many things which cannot be overcome when they are together, yield themselves up when taken little by little.”
— Plutarch
— Plutarch
Forwarded from Titanic Vanguard
YouTube
Nietzsche on Courage: Why Fear Is Holding You Back
Nietzsche on Courage: Why Fear Is Holding You Back
Discover how fear silently holds you back from living your fullest life and how Nietzsche’s philosophy can help you break free. In this video, we explore the true essence of courage—not the absence of fear…
Discover how fear silently holds you back from living your fullest life and how Nietzsche’s philosophy can help you break free. In this video, we explore the true essence of courage—not the absence of fear…
Forwarded from Lance's Legion
Don’t stop moving forward. And don’t stop attacking. And don’t succumb to the suffering and the pain and the fear. Don’t succumb, but instead, move forward and attack.
I will see you in Elysium Mr. Le Pen. Thank you for fighting for us when no one would!
"We didn't have tolerance in our hearts. We had glory and strength, heroic courage, and national feeling."
— Bowden
— Bowden
"When a man loves, he is a good liar about himself and to himself: he seems to himself transfigured, stronger, richer, more perfect; he is more perfect."
— Nietzsche
— Nietzsche