Summary
Volume III of Julius Evola's Introduction to Magic, compiled from UR Group writings, explores esoteric practices for realizing the "Absolute Individual"—an immortal, divine state—drawing from alchemy, Hermetism, Tantra, Taoism, Buddhism, Vedanta, and Western pagan mysteries through initiatic rituals and wisdom, emphasizing active spiritual development over superstition.
Project Relevance
Deeply connects to initiation and mystery traditions via UR Group's practical magic; esotericism in synthesizing Western (Grail, alchemy) and Eastern (Tantra, Vedanta) paths; consciousness through cycles of waking/subconscious/supraconscious states; hidden knowledge as power in alchemical transformation and "Absolute Individual" realization.
Key Themes
Absolute Individual realization; Grail legend as imperial mystery; alchemical philosophy (Gerhard Dorn); modern vs. Eastern initiation; consciousness cycles; sacred Roman tradition—aligning with mystery schools, Western/Eastern canons; limited direct ties to AI genealogy, Russian esotericism, or US intelligence/occult.
Scholarly Reputation
Influential in Traditionalist and esoteric circles as a practical initiatic manual, praised for depth by occult scholars like Joscelyn Godwin; controversial due to Evola's far-right associations, marginal in mainstream academia but canonical in occult studies.