Summary
Julius Evola's Revolt Against the Modern World contrasts the spiritual, hierarchical Traditional world—characterized by the doctrine of two natures (metaphysical being vs. physical becoming), divine kingship, castes, rites, and initiation—with the decadent modern world in the Kali Yuga, advocating revolt through reconnection to transcendent principles.Wikipedia, Inner Traditions
Project Relevance
Deeply connects to initiation (rites, spiritual discipline), mystery traditions (esoteric symbolism, polar forces), esotericism (doctrine of two natures, transcendent knowledge), consciousness (awakening beyond material flux), and hidden knowledge/power (spiritual virility, royal glory as supernatural intellect linking transcendent to temporal power).Wikipedia, PDF summary
Key Themes
Key concepts: Kali Yuga (dark age decay), doctrine of two natures, divine kingship/empire, initiation/rites, spiritual caste system, greater holy war (inner transcendence), polar symbolism. Links to mystery schools (rites, Hermetic influences), Western canon (Grail myths, imperial regality), Eastern traditions (Hindu cycles, Tantra/Buddhism), with warrior/esoteric ethos relevant to Russian esotericism; no direct AI genealogy or US intelligence ties noted.Wikipedia, Simon & Schuster
Scholarly Reputation
Evola's most influential work in Traditionalist school, impacting Mircea Eliade and Nouvelle Droite; highly controversial due to far-right, esoteric, anti-modern, racist, antisemitic elements—marginal in mainstream academia but canonical in radical right circles.Wikipedia, Wikipedia Evola