Notes on the Third Reich
The Path of Cinnabar
Recognitions
A Traditionalist Confronts Fascism
Guillaume Faye
Archeofuturism
Archeofuturism 2.0
The Colonisation of Europe
Convergence of Catastrophes
A Global Coup
Sex and Deviance
Understanding Islam
Why We Fight
Daniel S. Forrest
Suprahumanism
Andrew Fraser
Dissident Dispatches
The WASP Question
Génération Identitaire
We are Generation Identity
Paul Gottfried
War and Democracy
Porus Homi Havewala
The Saga of the Aryan Race
Lars Holger Holm
Hiding in Broad Daylight
Homo Maximus
Incidents of Travel in Latin America
The Owls of Afrasiab
A. J. Illingworth
Political Justice
Alexander Jacob
De Naturae Natura
Jason Reza Jorjani
Prometheus and Atlas
World State of Emergency
Roderick Kaine
Smart and SeXy
Peter King
Here and Now
Keeping Things Close
On Modern Manners
Ludwig Klages
The Biocentric Worldview
Cosmogonic Reflections
Pierre Krebs
Fighting for the Essence
Stephen Pax Leonard
The Ideology of Failure
Pentti Linkola
Can Life Prevail?
H. P. Lovecraft
The Conservative
Norman Lowell
Imperium Europa
Charles Maurras
The Future of the Intelligentsia & For a French Awakening
Michael O’Meara
Guillaume Faye and the Battle of Europe
New Culture, New Right
Brian Anse Patrick
The NRA and the Media
Rise of the Anti-Media
The Ten Commandments of Propaganda
Zombology
Tito Perdue
The Bent Pyramid
Morning Crafts
Philip
William’s House (vol. 1–4)
Raido
A Handbook of Traditional Living
Steven J. Rosen
The Agni and the Ecstasy
The Jedi in the Lotus
Richard Rudgley
Barbarians
Essential Substances
Wildest Dreams
Ernst von Salomon
It Cannot Be Stormed
The Outlaws
Sri Sri Ravi Shankar
Celebrating Silence
Know Your Child
Management Mantras
Patanjali Yoga Sutras
Secrets of Relationships
George T. Shaw
A Fair Hearing: The Alt-Right in the Words of Its Members and Leaders
Troy Southgate
Tradition & Revolution
Richard Storey
The Uniqueness of Western Law
Oswald Spengler
Man and Technics
Tomislav Sunic
Against Democracy and Equality
Homo Americanus
Postmortem Report
Titans are in Town
Abir Taha
Defining Terrorism: The End of Double Standards
The Epic of Arya (2nd ed.)
Nietzsche’s Coming God, or the Redemption of the Divine
Verses of Light
Bal Gangadhar Tilak
The Arctic Home in the Vedas
Dominique Venner
For a Positive Critique
The Shock of History
Markus Willinger
A Europe of Nations
Generation Identity
Alexander Wolfheze
Alba Rosa
Notes
[←1 ]
TN: Arthur Koestler (5th September, 1905–1st March, 1983) was a Hungarian-British author and journalist.
[←2 ]
TN: Generally shortened to ESP.
[←3 ]
TN: Otherwise known as telepathy.
[←4 ]
TN: A planarian is a kind of flatworm of the Turbellaria class. Planaria can, in fact, be cut into pieces, with each piece retaining the ability to regenerate into a complete organism.
[←5 ]
TN: Leonid Leonidovich Vasiliev (1891–1966) was a Russian Soviet parapsychologist and physiologist who played a decisive role in establishing the first parapsychological laboratory in Leningrad.
[←6 ]
TN: Joseph Banks Rhine (29th September, 1895–20th February, 1980) was an American botanist who founded parapsychology as a branch of psychology as well as the parapsychology lab at Duke University.
[←7 ]
TN: Wolfgang Ernst Pauli (25th April, 1900–15th December, 1958) was an Austrian-born Swiss and American theoretical physicist and one of the pioneers of quantum physics. In 1945, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for his ‘decisive contribution through his discovery of a new law of Nature, the exclusion principle or Pauli principle’.
[←8 ]
TN: All of this is a reference to quantum physics and the fascinating and conclusively proven aspects of what is generally termed ‘the double slit experiment’.
[←9 ]
TN: The rules and principles by which relativity and quantum physics respectively abide are in blatant contradiction with each other. Many physicists, including the late Stephen Hawking, have attempted to reconcile the two by striving to establish a so-called ‘theory of everything’. All efforts in this direction have, unfortunately, proved entirely fruitless. We do, therefore, inhabit an ‘impossible universe’.
[←10 ]
TN: Sir James Hopwood Jeans (11th September, 1877–16th September, 1946) was an English physicist, astronomer and mathematician.
[←11 ]
TN: The Thirteenth Caesar.
[←12 ]
TN: Henry Marie Joseph Frédéric Expedite Millon de Montherlant (20th April, 1895–21st September, 1972) was a French essayist, novelist and dramatist; he was elected to the Académie française in 1960.
[←13 ]
TN: François-Marie Arouet (21st November, 1694–30th May, 1778), otherwise known as Voltaire, was a French Enlightenment author, historian and philosopher famous for his wit, his criticism of Christianity and his advocacy of freedom of religion, freedom of speech and the separation of church and state.
[←14 ]
TN: In the New Testament, the Second Epistle to Timothy is one of the three Pastoral Epistles traditionally attributed to Saint Paul.
[←15 ]
TN: Celsus was actually a 2nd-century Greek philosopher and an opponent of early Christianity. He is best known for his literary work entitled On the True Doctrine.
[←16 ]
TN: Mediums and Apparitions.
[←17 ]
TN: The Mysteries of the Supernatural.
[←18 ]
TN: An Overview of the Supernatural.
[←19 ]
TN: Victoria Helen McCrae Duncan (25th November, 1897–6th December, 1956) was a Scottish medium and the last person to have been imprisoned under the British Witchcraft Act of 1735. She is widely known to have produced fraudulent ectoplasm made from cheesecloth.
[←20 ]
TN: Pierre Marie Félix Janet (30th May, 1859–24th February, 1947) was a pioneering French psychologist, philosopher and psychotherapist specialising in dissociation and traumatic memory.
[←21 ]
TN: From Anguish to Ecstasy.
[←22 ]
TN: Philippe de Félice (31st March, 1880–6th March, 1964) was a Reformed clergyman, theologian
, religious historian and mass psychologist.
[←23 ]
TN: Sacred Poisons, Divine Drunkenness.
[←24 ]
TN: The Enchantment of Dances and the Magic of Words.
[←25 ]
TN: Jean de La Fontaine (8th July, 1621–13th April, 1695) was a French fabulist and one of the most widely read French poets of the 17th century. His fables are among the most influential ever written.
[←26 ]
TN: Meaning conscious autosuggestion.
[←27 ]
TN: A placebo effect is a remarkable phenomenon in which a placebo, meaning a fake treatment, inactive substance or saline solution, can sometimes lead to visible improvement in a patient’s condition simply because the person expects it to be helpful.
[←28 ]
TN: Jean Edmond Cyrus Rostand (30th October, 1894–4th September, 1977) was a French biologist and philosopher.
[←29 ]
TN: Erroneous Science and False Science.
[←30 ]
TN: Robert Imbert-Nergal seems to be an author who has targeted occultism with sharp criticism, denying it the right to be called a ‘science’.
[←31 ]
TN: Occult Sciences Are No Sciences at All.
[←32 ]
TN: Guy Fau (23rd June, 1909–1st June, 2000) was a French essayist and author.
[←33 ]
TN: When Charlatans Are Brought to Justice.
[←34 ]
TN: Alexis Carrel (28th June, 1873–5th November, 1944) was a French surgeon and biologist who won the 1912 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his pioneering vascular suturing techniques.
[←35 ]
TN: Pierre Paul Broca (28th June, 1824–9th July, 1880) was a French physician, anatomist and anthropologist. He is most famous for his research into ‘Broca’s area’, a region of the frontal lobe that has been named after him.
[←36 ]
TN: Sir Julian Sorell Huxley (22nd June, 1887–14th February, 1975) was a British evolutionary biologist, eugenicist, and internationalist. He was also an advocate of natural selection and a prominent figure in mid-20th-century modern synthesis.
[←37 ]
TN: The Fabric of Dreams or Astrological Fabrications.
[←38 ]
TN: Aimé Michel (12th May, 1919–28th December, 1992) was a French writer who specialised in the topic of UFOs; he also had a degree in psychology and philosophy.
[←39 ]
TN: Mysticism.
[←40 ]
TN: Psychology.
[←41 ]
TN: Marc Beigbeder (11th August, 1916–2nd March, 1997) was a French author.
[←42 ]
TN: Nouvelle école is a French intellectual magazine run by Alain de Benoist and Michel d’Urance.
[←43 ]
TN: The kinetic theory of gases describes a gas as a large number of small particles (atoms or molecules), all of which are in constant, random motion.
[←44 ]
TN: Stéphane Lupasco (11th August, 1900–7th October, 1988) was a Romanian philosopher who developed non-Aristotelian logic.
[←45 ]
TN: The theory of the Included Middle, literally ‘the logic of the Included Third’ (position), is an idea proposed by Stéphane Lupasco in 1951 (in The Principle of Antagonism and the Logic of Energy). The notion pertains to physics and quantum mechanics and could also have wider applications in further domains such as information theory and computing, epistemology, and theories of consciousness. The Included Middle is a theory proposing that logic has a three-part structure, namely the position of asserting something, the negation of this assertion, and a third position that is neither or both.
[←46 ]
TN: Rémy Chauvin (10th October, 1913–8th December, 2009) was a biologist and entomologist, and a French Honorary Professor Emeritus at the Sorbonne, PhD. He was also known for defending the rights of animals and for displaying great interest in such topics as parapsychology, life after death, psychics, clairvoyance and the UFO phenomenon, sometimes writing under the pseudonym Pierre Duval.
[←47 ]
TN: Physics and Parapsychology.
[←48 ]
TN: One of the principles of quantum physics is that reality does not exist until it is experienced. Prior to this ‘experiencing’, there are only ‘potentialities’.
[←49 ]
TN: The National Centre for Scientific Research.
[←50 ]
TN: The Second Principle of Science and Time.
[←51 ]
TN: The Hidden Aspects of the Impossible.
[←52 ]
TN: Founded around 307 BC, Epicureanism is a philosophical system based upon the teachings of the ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus, who was an atomic materialist, thus following in the footsteps of Democritus.
[←53 ]
TN: Stoicism is, above all, a philosophy of personal ethics rooted in its own system of logic and views on the natural world. It states that from a social perspective, the path to happiness is found in the acceptance of the moment as it presents itself; this is achieved by not allowing ourselves to be controlled by our desire for pleasure or our fear of pain, by using our minds to understand the surrounding world and to play our role in nature’s plan, and by working together and treating others fairly and justly.
[←54 ]
TN: Karl Marx (5th May, 1818–14th March, 1883) was a German philosopher, economist, historian, political theorist, sociologist, journalist and revolutionary socialist.
[←55 ]
TN: Born Sigismund Schlomo Freud, Sigmund Freud (6th May, 1856–23rd September, 1939) was an Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis, a clinical method for treating psychopathology through dialogue between a patient and a psychoanalyst.
[←56 ]
TN: Wilhelm Reich (24th March, 1897–3rd November, 1957) was an Austrian doctor of medicine and second-generation psychoanalyst.
[←57 ]
TN: Herbert Marcuse (19th July, 1898–29th July, 1979) was a German-American philosopher, sociologist, and political theorist associated with the Frankfurt School of Critical Theory.
[←58 ]
TN: Princeton Gnosis.
[←59 ]
TN: In actual fact, many Gnostics believed the Spirit to be trapped in the material world, a world which had been created by a lesser deity, the demiurge, and acted as a veil preventing the return of the confined spiritual spark to the realm of the Unknown/Alien/True God. Only ‘Gnosis’, meaning a special kind of knowledge that is acquired through spiritual awakening and direct communion with the Unknown God, can thus release the Spirit of man from its material prison.
[←60 ]
TN: In philosophy, Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (1st July, 1646–14th November, 1716) is most famous for his optimism, i.e. his conclusion that our Universe is, in a restricted sense, the best possible one that God could have created, an idea that earned him a great deal of derision, especially at the hands of Voltaire.
[←61 ]
TN: Giordano Bruno (1548–17th February, 1600) was an Italian Dominican friar, philosopher, mathematician, poet, and cosmological theorist who believed in an infinite universe with no centre. He was eventually tried for heresy and burned at the stake.
[←62 ]
TN: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (28th August, 1749–22nd March, 1832) is a renowned German writer who also acted as a statesman.
[←63 ]
TN: René Descartes (31st March, 1596–11th February, 1650) was a French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist. He has been dubbed the father of modern Western philosophy, and a major part of subsequent Western philosophy is a response to his writings.
[←64 ]
TN: A Roman African, Saint Augustine of Hippo (13th November, 354–28th August, 430) was an early Christian theologian and philosopher from Numidia whose writings exerted great influence upon the development of Western Christianity and philosophy.
> [←65 ]
TN: Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (15th October, 1844–25th August, 1900) was a German philosopher, cultural critic, composer, poet, philologist, and Latin and Greek scholar whose work has exerted a profound influence on Western philosophy and modern intellectual history.
[←66 ]
TN: Eric Berne (10th May, 1910–15th July, 1970) was a Canadian-born psychiatrist who, in the middle of the 20th century, created the theory of transactional analysis as a way of explaining human behaviour.
[←67 ]
TN: Games and Men.
[←68 ]
TN: David Herbert Lawrence (11th September, 1885–2nd March, 1930) was an English writer and poet. His collected works represent, among other things, an extended reflection upon the dehumanising effects of modernity and industrialisation. Some of the issues Lawrence explores are sexuality, emotional health, vitality, spontaneity, and instinct.
Controversies and Viewpoints Page 43