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To the modern man, accustomed to consider spirituality as something woolly,
abstract and conceptual, to hear of a spirituality of action could sound strange. However, where spirituality means an impulse
of the human being towards an awakening, an inner presence, a liberation from the I and the mine, then action proves to be
a powerful instrument of such a self-transcendence. According to Evola, this refers to action purified of selfishness, not
subservient to desire but led by a lucid consciousness of 'doing what is to be done'. This is the path that the Western warlike
world has always perceived as its own.
Evola obviously refers to a Western world which existed prior to the
advent of the Levantine and Christian ideal of the so-called 'natural law' according to which any man is identical to others
and his true nature unmodifiable. On the contrary, it is to the vision of the sacred of the white and Indo-European races
that he refers when he says : "It was through action which Rome knew and achieved spirit, in the form of those who fight and
not of those who pray, and achieved it in victory in the ultimate solar form of the Empire", or, when, quoting Nietzsche,
he declares : "Beyond ice, North, death - our life, our joy".
The other path to the sacred, essentially oriental, to which Guenon attributed
supremacy, is that of contemplation, of 'non-action' : the examination, at first sporadic and vague but thereafter increasingly
continuous and crystalline, of one's body, voice, and ensemble of feelings and thoughts, acknowledging them as mere mirror-images,
incapable of modifying in any way the mirror of consciousness, which identifies itself with the true 'I'.
Action and contemplation, joined in the sole figure of the Universal
Sovereign in mythological epochs, subsequently bifurcated into two paths suitable for, and further constituting, two human
types.
While Evola, paying more attention to man, attributes a supremacy to
the spirituality of action, to royal initiation rather than to sacerdotal initiation, Guenon, taking into greater account
man's function, grants only to the Brahmanic caste the exercise of spiritual faculties and considers the 'revolt of the Kshatriya'
as a first step towards the decadence of man, who, forgetting his own origin and his own destiny, has 'abandoned the sky to
pursue the earth'.
A.M.
Action, Contemplation, and the Western Tradition
(*)
Esoterically, when we speak of 'tradition', we mean the 'transmission'
(traditio) from generation to generation of a 'presence' of 'transcendent' nature, just as a flame lights another flame. A
chain of individuals thus becomes the mediator of a continuity of contact with metaphysical reality and a non-human force.
This transmission can happen in an elite existing as an hidden vein behind
the great historical and ethnic forces. But it can also occur that the occult shows itself and dominates, that is to say,
that, in a given civilisation, all activities become organised around this elite, which becomes their manifest centre, the
axis from which they draw their meaning and their orientation in a system of hierarchic participation.
All the original civilisations, albeit to varying degrees, have a traditional
character in this sense. It must however be noticed that, from a certain point, a law of differentiation comes into play.
When it appears as spirit of a given epoch or civilisation, the metaphysical identity bifurcates itself. In its most immediate
manifestation, it produces two distinct trunks and gives rise to two fundamental forms.
The two trunks are : action and contemplation.
The two related forms are : royal initiation and sacerdotal initiation
- hence there are two types of tradition: warlike-magic tradition and ascetic- contemplative or Brahmanic tradition.
The Two Traditions
Mortal life's rule is 'flow'. It does not possess Being, and, caught
in varying external fortunes, it moves, restless, in the world of particular things and temporal interests. This law has been
pointed out many times in these pages. Above this is the area of Being, according
to which life becomes basis, reason and value in itself, gains stability, possesses in itself its own principle. Identical
to that of the incorruptible and the eternal, this area can be reached either by means of Action as well as by means of Contemplative
Knowledge.
Action can lead to it insofar as it is pure. At the inferior limit, there
is the purity of the one who follows faithfully the rule of his own life and gives to his action the meaning of a rite and
of a sacrificial offering. On a higher plane, there is the internalisation and development of this bent in the one who acts
without aiming at contingent and particular fruits, considering as the same happiness and calamity, good and evil, even victory
and defeat, looking neither at the 'I' nor at the 'you', overcoming love as well as hatred and any other pair of opposites.
This man sets himself free from the individual condition ; in the supranatural certainty of a borderline intensity, here 'life'
is reversed into a 'more-than-life' and the contact with a state of light and power is achieved, which surpasses, dominates
and carries off everything that is of a merely human or material order, giving way to actions, excitements and visions which
would be impossible otherwise. We may summarise this as : heroic state, magic state, state of the Master of the Law. By transposition
: warlike caste - warlike-magic and warlike traditions - finally : royal and imperial traditions.
In contemplation the metaphysical state, rather than by the means of
assertion and liberation of action, is achieved by rejecting action. In the higher forms it resembles the fire of an intellectual
catharsis. The bond of individuation dissolves in knowledge, in universality, in a vision of an eternal kind. It is the impulse
towards the One. It is the path of the mystic identifications whose direction is opposed to that which leads towards form
and differentiation. To summarise : ascetic (in a specific sense) and sacerdotal state. By transposition : sacerdotal caste,
mediator and bearer of the sacred - sacerdotal, hieratic-sapiental and religious-pontifical (the king-priest) traditions.
It should be noted that these two forms of tradition are to be considered
as distinct not insofar as that each of them would be based on a term which the other would be deprived of, but, rather, insofar
as that each of them has both but in a different hierarchical order. As a matter of fact, the heroic path and the magic path
involve 'asceticism', yet according to action, achieved as a way of being of action. Conversely, high contemplation is realisation
and as such entails the element 'action', which, however, remains here dependent on pure knowledge, interest in the universal
and pure transcendence. In the same way, on the concrete and historical plane a tradition of a warlike kind can certainly
admit sacerdotal castes, but subordinated to the royal and warlike castes, that is to say that it is characterised by
a synthesis of what is sacred and what is royal which is determined by the predominance of the active and sovereign aspect
of the force from above. The opposite occurs in the other case : for example, here the warlike caste is given the role of
defending the sacerdotal caste and of being its secular arm.
The spirit of both traditions having been briefly and approximatively
indicated, we offer a few suggestions as to what 'Western Tradition' may mean.
The modern world and Christianity
First of all, it must be borne in mind that it is not possible to speak
in any way of 'Tradition' in the West if one identifies the West with the 'modern world', that is, with the civilisation which
has developed in Europe from the century of the Renaissance onwards with the ideologies of the French revolution and the advent
of science and technology.
Such civilisation, in fact, systematically destroyed the premise of any
tradition, whatever type it may be, and, thus, the contact with the metaphysical reality and the hierarchical coordination
of the activities and the ways of living based on the principles which are related to this reality. The 'modern world' is
characterised by a development along purely material, practical and industrial lines, in which what is at work is completely
human and social forces, and, moreover, by the fact that forces once turned towards transcendence, towards what in man goes
beyond man, so as to at least counterbalance purely material and temporal interests, instead stir, incite and foment what
has a practical, political and merely human character, so as to make every higher point of reference vanish.
What opposes the modern world to any traditional civilisation, what is
at the root of all its crises and precludes it from healing is not so much its being a body without spirit as its being a
body which has reduced the spirit to being its instrument. This is why it is meaningless to refer in any way to a 'Western
Tradition' if it is the modern West that we have in mind. The modern West and antitradition are the same thing. The fact is
nonetheless that there were still in Europe, at least until a certain period, centres in possession of esoteric knowledge,
that is, of the occult tradition. However, even though those centres had a genuine Western character, they did not exert a
direct influence on the formation of the overall civilisation, when it comes to tradition in the broad sense. The modern West
has constructed itself by breaking from any influence of that kind. If anything, it is 'counter-initiation' (1) which has
played this role of influence.
In the second place, it is a matter of not granting to the religion which
has come to prevail in the West either the character of a true, complete tradition, or of a 'Western Tradition'. In support
of the second point, Pietro Negri has already made some interesting observations (2). On the whole, what follows must be borne
in mind.
No doubt, Christianity, and especially Catholicism, had for centuries
the power to organise the various races in the West according to its unique corpus of doctrines and faiths. However, it is
questionable whether this corpus retained within itself any higher elements of a truly metaphysical character and whether
the organisation which is usually indicated generically as 'Christian civilisation' was ever 'traditional' in the complete
sense of which we have spoken. We must distinguish very clearly between religion
as a devotional, emotional and popular fact accompanied by theologising philosophy, dogma and apologetics, on the one hand,
and spirituality as metaphysical realisation by means of regular initiation, on the other. Faith, hope, charity, the 'need
of the soul', the 'fear of God' and all elements of that kind by themselves do not lead by an inch beyond what is merely human,
nor have they had anything to do with true spirituality, either with a heroic spirituality or a tradition of sacred knowledge.
But it is precisely a body of elements of that kind which, in fact, makes
up the substance of the Christian tradition, in which it takes the place of spirituality, and this results in the frequent
and contaminating humanisation of the divine. That, in spite of this, in rites and symbols taken to a large extent from previous
or different traditions, the consciousness of the most profound meaning of which is however almost always non-existent,
the Christian tradition still retains traces of a metaphysical teaching - this is too little for a real and operative traditional
'orthodoxy', as opposed to a merely formal one.
The human, devotional plane, or rather the plane of theological speculation
onto which these traditional traces have been transposed and within which they have been preserved, is not a plane on which
they can be completely validated. And it is Catholicism itself which gives the confirmation of this : with the harsh loathing
it has always nursed for any attempt to complete on esoteric lines its doctrines - from some 'non-orthodox' branches of the
Greek Patristic Age and that of the Gnostics to that of the Templars and of various Christian Hermeticists, and to today.
Nowadays, Catholicism worries much more about 'getting sorted out' with 'modern thought' than about gaining height in any
way through elements of esoteric character.
Experientially, leaving aside the merely charismatic or sacramental
life, whose significance we will speak of on another occasion, in Christianity everything comes down to the climactic achievements
of some mystics, who do not form any tradition, any continuity or chain and do not have any determining, standard-setting,
regular or direct relation with the centre of orthodoxy. Moreover, Christianity
cannot claim, with respect to the West, the character of a native tradition, congenital to its races, as is the case for,
for instance, Brahmanism for Hindus, Islam for the Arabs, or the whole Far-Eastern tradition. Christianity asserted itself
in the West on the ruins of a previous Western tradition, which had its achieved heroic and sacred traditional character ;
with that former world it has maintained only a very relative and apparent continuity, in spite of everything it has borrowed
and has sought to absorb and ratify.
A great part has been played within Christianity by influences that are
in no way Western or even, more broadly, Aryan: influences deriving either from Judaism or from the devious substratum of
pre-Aryan and anti-Aryan Mediterranean spirituality. In some cases, these influences are limited to the superficial, to the
most popular and sentimental aspects of Christianity. In other cases, however, they corrode the essence. The doctrine of Original
Sin, the exacerbated dualism, the very concept of 'Redemption', the anti-Olympian root theme of the god who suffers, dies
and rises again, all this shows the presence of external influences, neither Aryan, nor Western, in Christianity and in Catholicism
itself (3).
This is why we think that, in regard to the 'modern world' and to the
'Christian world', it would be risky to speak, in general, of a 'Western tradition'.
The Real Western Tradition
This is no longer the case, however, if we return to the ancient
Aryo-Mediterranean and Roman world. We find here, albeit interspersed with forces from various other traditions, traces of
a formative force and of a spirituality to which the true face of the West can be specifically attributed. This force and
this spirituality refer to a tradition of an essentially heroic type. If, from the principle, already indicated, which defines
a warlike tradition we deduce its expression on the plane of conditioned events, we find forms and ideas which characterise
precisely the Western civilisation and spirit. On the most external plane,
the law of action actually finds _expression in the style of races of navigators, conquerors, colonisers - in the Homeric
and Roman epic world : a free, liberated, heroic world, devoid of uncertainties, of any idea of an 'infinite' in the romantic
sense, constituted of simple forces and elementary purities : the Doric style, the Roman virtus, the monumental element, the
solar ideal of the Imperium, the type of the Augustus.
Further, action requires objects, limits, boundaries : it implies form,
difference, individuation. While within a sacerdotal tradition form is almost always only symbol, concealment of a mysterious,
ineffable, incorporeal spirituality, in the opposite tradition the form almost always gains importance and value. Here the
physical and the metaphysical, the material and the immaterial, the corporeal and the incorporeal coincide in the balance
of two coessential terms, in very distinct and intensively individuated types and forms. In fact, here we find the classico-Aryan
cult of form, strength, corporeal perfection, of beauty itself as expressions of spirituality ; here is a natural overcoming
of the dualisms of Levantine character ; here is the anti-romantic doctrine, and, therefore, everything that is 'infinite'
is seen as an abstract potentiality, an imperfection and the finite, on the contrary, is seen as a value, recognising in it
the limit of a force which has managed to give a form, a law, an achieved individuality to itself. The particular value assumed
by law refers, partly, to the same order of ideas.
The eye which stops at form and at limit sees harmony and number. Hence,
from the time of Mediterranean antiquity, in Greece and in Rome, we see the blossoming of sacred sciences based on number
and harmony ; a heritage perhaps esoteric, within which precedents in Chaldea, but, more immediately, Egyptian contributions
of archaic Atlantico-Western origin, assume a very special development. If, compared with such sciences, the quantitative
method of the modern exact sciences (which were formed almost exclusively in the West) represents a degenerative deviation,
yet it is a degeneration which starts from the same stock. Something similar could even be said of Western rationalism, which
started in Greece : the passion for the concept in the sense of distinct, definite, precise notion, which means this and nothing
else, in the sense of notion which measures (mens could derive from mensurare, and a similar derivation can be supposed for
ratio) is something specifically Western, which equally reveals the law of action, which, asserting itself, implies limit,
difference.
When it prevails over contemplation, action thus moves in a definite
world, constituted of forms, governed by a law of difference and, therefore, of plurality too : many forces, many consciousnesses,
many types, distinct and unmistakable, almost 'Microcosms within the Macrocosm', since each of them contains and resolves
in its own being the amorphous cosmic possibility. What is thus particularly significant for the Western Tradition is the
Aristotelian vision of the world, which is characterised by the fact that, in a being, it considers what is 'universal' as
less real, more abstract, incomplete (steresis - privation (of being)) ; the particular, on the contrary, it considers to
be what has value, what is desirable, what is more than real, the fulfillment or end (telos) of a being. The Aristotelian
doctrine of the sunolon is that, specifically classic, doctrine of the idea or of the 'engendering force' which is really
real when it actualises itself, individuates itself, asserts itself as power and life of a form, in an indissoluble unity.
Naturally, this should not lead us to attribute to the Western vision
of the world a mere pluralism or individualism. There is still a unity, the world is not pure plurality, but rather cosmos,
uni-verse, divine order. However, in a warlike tradition, this unity does not have the exclusivist emphasis that the opposite
tradition, the ascetic-contemplative one, grants it. Whence, too, the sense of polytheism of the pre-Christian Western world,
considerably different from the Oriental one : it is focused, above all, on the concrete and individuated form of the divine
powers at work in things, in heroes, in completed types as living works of art, within this clear and harmonious cosmos whose
beauty the poets would sing and whose hidden laws and secret analogies the initiates would penetrate.
What is also typical is the importance that, especially in the ancient
Roman world, the notion of numen had. The ancient Roman-occidental man was inclined to conceive any divinity not so much as
deus but rather as numen, that is, as a force, a power, which was defined essentially through its action. Moreover, he would
differentiate himself from the Greek spirit by the emphasis he would put on the political and historical element. While, in
Greece, the contemplative tendency saw to it that the divine world was conceived of as a sort of atemporal supraworld and,
so to speak, as absolute space, Rome strained to grasp this world in its manifestation in time, in history, in the state,
in the actions and creations of men, without however diminishing its august character in any manner thereby. The Roman, much
more than the Jew, had the sense of a sacred history. The Roman conception of the state, of law and of the Imperium was based
essentially on this historical sense, active and sacred at the same time. The warlike and political caste in Rome typically
held a sacred dignity.
Many traces of the 'heroic truth' were found in the West on the plane
of initiatic myth too. Among the origin myths opposed to that, also present in the archaic Mediterranean, of the 'fall', there
is that of the 'heroes' and of the sons greater than their fathers, who dominated the Mothers and reconquered the realm of
the killed father.
This mysterious knowledge, which sometimes appears as that of the
'immaterial race of those without king', passed into certain initiatic currents, in the symbols of which new references to
the active, creative spirit are not lacking.' We will limit ourselves to indicating
the symbolism of building and to recalling how in Hermetism it is spoken of not as much as a knowledge but rather as an art,
which was generally called ars regia. Its formula : 'corporealise the spirit, spiritualise the body', reconfirms the anti-mystical
and anti-ecstatic classico-occidental ideal. The red and the gold, and not the white, mark here the supreme fulfillment. In
the Graal tradition the warlike theme and the Regnum motif reappear, as they will continue to do in secret centres until the
period of the later Rosicrucianism. More generally, we must note the persistence in the very Western Middle Ages of the symbol
of magic, which, instead of exhausting itself on the lower plane of a mere science of psychic powers, was closely linked
to a particular interpretation of the Initiatic ideal. And if, as pointed out, the development of positive sciences is a characteristic
of the West, it is based on the tendency to an active knowledge and to a clarity which, even though it fell to a lower level
and exerted itself only in a material and physical field, is nonetheless significant as a component of the Western spiritual
attitude.
Christianity, whose external, non-Western and non-Aryan aspects have
already been pointed out by us, is a maimed and truncated tradition of the hieratic-sacerdotal type which has managed to prevail
over a tradition of the heroic type which predominated in the most ancient Mediterranean and, in general, Aryo-Western world.
But Christianity achieved this supremacy only insofar it adapted many
forms peculiar to traditions different from it, especially that of Rome. It was more Roman Catholicism than Christianity which
won in the West and, in its turn, Catholicism had its golden age in the feudal, knightly and crusading Middle Ages ; and,
until it decayed into mere spurious forms, the active and conquering contribution found expression in the proselytising, missionary
and supremacist instinct that Christianity displayed, from its beginnings to Protestantism and Calvinism.
The tradition to which the event in Palestine gave birth has thus
the character of an ambiguous and almost contradictory thing. However, it is precisely to this contradictoriness that
Christianity owes its force ; it has given to it, until lately, the means to control races congenitally inspired by a warlike
tradition, such as the Western one, before their complete secularisation and terrestrialisation. If Christianity is a counterfeiting of a tradition of a really sacred, ascetico- metaphysical, Brahmanic
type, the 'modern world', which from one day to the next is undermining what remains of the Western religion, represents in
its turn, in many respects, a teratological counterfeiting of a tradition of a warlike type.
It is therefore clear that, if it had been at all possible to rebuild
a 'tradition' in the West, it could only essentially have been done via forces of a heroico-initiatic character, on the basis
of a vision of the world of a more or less magical type (in the special sense that is always given here to this word).
Any attempt at a traditional Restoration along other lines in the West
would meet quite definite difficulties and would lack any point of application. If this body of barbarian grandeur that the
West has built with its civilisation reacted against any soul, that is to say, against any supernatural element intended to
recapture it, to hold it up and to lead it, this reaction would be particularly vigorous if the soul were different from that
of the warlike and active races whose degenerated heir the West is.
Clarifications
Just as the West is mainly stamped by the tradition of action,
the East is mainly stamped with the tradition of contemplation. We say 'mainly' because the East too has known heroic and
imperial cycles, and, for instance, it is difficult to find elsewhere such advanced motifs of transcendent justification as
in the Bhagavad-Gita. In addition, the example of imperial and warlike Japan, in which, until the collapse of 1945, the ascetic
formation of life played a great part, not to mention the frankly esotericist Zen schools, must not be forgotten. Further, for those who understand the
tradition in which action prevails over contemplation equally with the one in which we have the opposite relation, as two
paths both possible and competent to reach something which is beyond both action and contemplation, independent, as it is,
of any particular conditionality, there is no contradiction between the two. These people will abstain from judging either
tradition, they will limit themselves to understanding them and realising the truths, the perspectives and the principles
that must be asserted, once, according to one's own nature, one adheres to one tradition or the other.
There is on the other hand an opposition between them and those who insist
on the 'orthodoxy' and supremacy of one of the two traditions, condemning the other as a deviation and an error. This would
merely produce the effect of a mental limitation. Yet we must eliminate any cause of misunderstanding by underlining that
the supremacy of action in the tradition which corresponds to it has nothing to do with the usurpation of temporal power,
since action always amounts here to a means of liberation and has always as its point of reference something transcendent
and supersensible.
Ancient royalty can give us points of reference in this connection. Others
can be given by oriental traditions, for instance by the Hindu one, when it speaks of Rajarshi, those who used to be simultaneously
clairvoyants and keepers of the tradition of 'solar' knowledge, or when, in the Upanishads, we see figures of Kshatriya (warriors)
competing in sacred knowledge with the representatives of the Brahmanic caste. Besides, we must recall the forms of unity
of the two powers which appeared in ancient Rome and reappeared, here and there, as residues, in the Middle Ages.
What can be called the primordial tradition is anterior and superior
to the bipartition we have discussed. The active path and the contemplative path, let us repeat, are approximations to this
supreme unity. When it comes to analogy, despite some people's views, the active and warlike path, as explained here, has
at least as much dignity as the other, because, fundamentally, it comprises both principles joined in the supreme synthesis,
which is not simply light and liberation, but light and liberation joined in power with the basic principle of any manifestation
and determination and with sovereignty.
On that basis, it would be appropriate to mention something to which
we may come back later: the idea that the warlike-royal tradition leads normally and legitimately only to the 'Lesser Mysteries'.
This is an arbitrary limitation deriving from an abstract doctrinal scheme, which becomes completely absurd when, rather than
speaking of 'Lesser Mysteries' and 'Greater Mysteries' as degrees in the same development but as attaining a transcendent
character only in the latter, they speak of the duality of the lunar, Demetrian or telluric mysteries on the one hand, and
the solar or Ouranic mysteries on the other ; since, according to a better founded doctrine, the 'Lesser Mysteries' can be
associated with the former of these, it is obvious that there is a contradiction between them and the tradition of royalty,
except in a few cases of evident degeneration.
In any case, we have now set forth succinctly the general principles
on the basis of which the problem of the duality of traditions can be understood, before turning to what follows from it in
the study of the metaphysic of history.
Ea
(*)The texts published in a series of booklets under the name of "Ur",
from 1927 to 1928, and "Krur", in 1929, were compiled and published in 1955 and 1956 in three volumes by Bocca as 'Introduzione
alla Magia quale Scienza dell'Io' ('Introduction to Magic as Science of the Self'), then, again in three volumes, by Edizioni
Mediterranee in 1971, by Tilopa in 1980 and 1981 and by Fratelli Melita Editori in 1987. The latter of these, to quote
the publisher, "can be considered as an updated edition of that collective work. Compared to the original, it differs in (the
exclusion of) texts which have in the meantime been republished verbatim or in further developed form elsewhere by their respective
authors, and in that certain monographs have been substituted for others of the same general nature, following a principle
of greater coordination, completeness and essentiality, but in the same spirit as the original edition, which followed the
criterion of organic and chronological progression". The currently available edition in English, 'Introduction to Magic, Rituals
and Practical Techniques for the Magus' (Inner Traditions, 2001) contains only approximately one-third of the original texts,
but not 'Sull'"Azione" e la "Contemplazione" e la Tradizione occidentale".
(1) Pietro Negri : "Della tradizione occidentale" ('Introduzione alla
Magia quale Scienza dell'Io', Fratelli Melita Editori, vol II p. 58) - 'About the Western Tradition'.
(2) Arvo : "Sulla contro-iniziazione" ('Introduzione alla Magia
quale Scienza dell'Io', Fratelli Melita Editori, vol. I p. 268) - 'On the Counter-Initiation', 'Introduction to Magic', Inner
Traditions, 2001)
(3) It must also be noted that, while almost all the greater regular
traditions had as their 'sacred language', that of the races in which they formed, this is not the case for the Christian-Catholic
tradition, which, in this respect too, appears to be hybrid : its sacred language is Latin, the ancient language of Rome,
while the Old and New Testaments, which are the basis of this tradition, were originally written in Hebrew, Aramaic and Coptic.
Copyright © 2003 Thompkins &
Cariou
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