Title: Race and Death: The Supra-Terrestrial Destiny of Personality
Tags:
#Traditionalism #Race #AryanIdeals #SpiritualHeredity #TelluricRace #Dharma #Devayana #Pitryana #DoubleHeredity #Supernatural- Race Beyond Biology: Race is not merely a biological or earthly entity but transcends into the spiritual and supernatural realms. It is a mistake to limit race to a purely materialistic or historical framework, as this denies the higher, supra-terrestrial destiny of the individual.
- Telluric vs. Aryan Ideals: The "telluric" conception of race, which confines it to earthly survival and bloodline continuity, is a limited and inferior perspective. It aligns with the "way of the South" (pitryana), opposed to the Aryan "divine way of the North" (devayana), which seeks supernatural perfection.
- Double Heredity: Personality is shaped by both horizontal (biological) and vertical (spiritual) heredity. True race is not reducible to mere biological inheritance but is a manifestation of a higher, transcendent principle.
- Personality and Race: While race provides the material for personality's expression, personality itself is not bound by race. It can transcend racial limitations, achieving a supernatural state of perfection beyond earthly constraints.
- Aryan Law and Duty: Ancient Aryan traditions emphasize the fulfillment of earthly duties (dharma), including procreation and active life, as a prerequisite for spiritual liberation. The firstborn, as the "son of duty," symbolizes this obligation to race and lineage.
- Vertical Procreation: True duty extends beyond horizontal procreation (earthly descendants) to vertical procreation (spiritual ascent). This upward direction aligns with the Aryan ideal of supernatural fulfillment.
- Active and Contemplative Life: Aryan law prescribes a balance between active life (fulfilling earthly duties) and contemplative life (asceticism and spiritual pursuit). This dual path ensures both racial continuity and spiritual transcendence.
- Death as Accomplishment: For those who achieve the summit of personality, death becomes a telos—a fulfillment and a gateway to a new, supernatural birth. This contrasts with the dissolution of mediocre beings into the collective vitality of race.
- Mediocrity and Dissolution: Those who fail to fulfill their earthly and spiritual duties are destined to dissolve into the collective, terrestrial substance of race, surviving only in a relative sense through their descendants.
- Supreme Aryan Ideal: The highest Aryan teaching affirms the supernatural end of personality as the ultimate driving force. This ideal elevates race to its highest potential, beyond which lies spiritual liberation and transcendence.
RACE AND DEATH.
We now pause to clarify, based on the preceding explanations, the limits of personality as it pertains to race. From a traditional perspective, it is unacceptable to view race as merely a biological, historical, or earthly entity, and to claim that it is the ultimate end of all beings belonging to it—that there is nothing superior to race, that race is the source of all value, and that the idea of a supra-terrestrial destiny for the individual is illusory and harmful: "to remain true to the earth and the race." This conception, which we have critiqued before, is particularly suited to a telluric race, as only such a race could consider such limited horizons as absolute. This telluric vision also aligns with the "neo-pagan" racist belief that the only conceivable immortality is survival through blood and earthly descent.
While such positions today often carry practical and political weight, aiming to consolidate racial unity and focus individual spiritual energies on temporal and historical duties, it is important to note that ancient Aryan civilizations achieved greatness without relying on these myths. Instead, they recognized higher truths. The telluric conception of race aligns with the pitryana, the "way of the South," which stands in opposition to the devayana, the "divine way of the North," which embodies the highest Aryan ideal.
This ideal is also connected to the theory of "double heredity." Personality is not confined to historical-biological or horizontal heredity; it is a principle that, while manifesting through race, transcends it. Recognizing race does not diminish personality; rather, race provides the living, articulated matter for personality's specific expression and action. This relationship is dynamic, as individuals also influence race and heredity, shaping the substance in which they manifest. This interplay leads to inter-racial differentiation and varying degrees of purity and completion among types, a topic we will revisit in the context of social influences.
When a supreme equilibrium is achieved—balancing the tripartite components of true race—personality reaches a summit on the horizontal, earthly plane. Beyond this, personality is "free" and can pursue supernatural perfection. This aligns with the ancient Aryan conception, also reflected in medieval Western ideas, where the Dharma prescribes adherence to earthly laws—race, caste, etc.—until complete adequacy is achieved. This includes ensuring offspring, as life received at birth must be passed on before death. After fulfilling these duties, one may retire to an ascetic-contemplative life. The Iranian-Aryan adage emphasizes that true duty involves not only horizontal procreation but also vertical ascent.
In Western religion, these ideas have been muddled, with a sharp divide between active and contemplative life, often neglecting traditional solutions where the supra-mundane law complements the mundane. More harmful, however, are the telluric racial ideas, which, if taken seriously, would distort the traditional Aryan teachings. According to these teachings, the supernatural end and dignity of personality serve as the driving force for creative expression within the framework of race, elevating race to a limit beyond which personality transcends, making death an accomplishment (telos) and a new birth—the third birth of Indo-Aryan doctrine.
Only those who fail to fulfill their earthly duties—mediocre beings—may be thought to have no afterlife, dissolving back into the collective vitality of race and surviving only in a relative sense through blood and heredity, passing on their unfulfilled tasks to others.
Metaphysical part:
In the context of a living tradition, castes represented the natural "place" where analogous wills and vocations converged on the earthly plane. Hereditary transmission, regular and closed, forged homogeneous groups sharing organic, vitalistic, and even psychic proclivities, enabling individuals to develop their prenatal dispositions within human existence. The caste did not "give" the individual their nature; rather, it provided the opportunity to recognize or remember their inherent nature and prenatal will, while also offering an occult heritage tied to blood, allowing for harmonious realization. The caste's characteristics, functions, and duties served as guidelines for the regular development of one's potential within an organic social system. In higher castes, initiation awakened supernatural influences, completing this process. The ius of the individual—those inherent rights and prerogatives tied to traditional articulations—ensured harmony between transcendental will and human heredity, allowing each person to find a social condition aligned with their nature and deepest attitudes, protected from confusion and prevarication.
When personality is not fixated on the ephemeral principle of human individuality, which leaves only a "shadow" at death, this becomes natural and evident. Achievements in life hold no higher meaning if they fail to actualize the prenatal will tied to one's birth—a will that cannot be easily altered by temporary, arbitrary decisions. Understanding this reveals the necessity of castes. Modern man, recognizing only the empirical self that begins at birth and ends at death, loses contact with the forces behind his birth and the nonhuman element within him, which exists beyond birth and death. This element, the "place" for what may be realized beyond death, provides an incomparable sense of security. Once this rhythm is broken, disorderly, inorganic activities dominate, driven by temporal motivations, passions, and vanity. "Culture" ceases to be a means of actualizing one's being through commitment and faithfulness, becoming instead a locus for "self-actualization" rooted in the shifting sands of the empirical self. Equality and the right to be anything one chooses are championed, with no acknowledgment of deeper differences tied to nature and inner dignity. Physical heredity, now incomprehensible, is endured or enjoyed as fate's caprice, while personality, blood traits, and social vocation grow discordant, leading to inner and outer conflicts. Legal and ethical perspectives promote leveling, equal rights, and a uniform social morality, disregarding individual natures and dignities. The "overcoming" of castes and traditional orders signifies this destruction. Modern man enjoys boundless "freedom," but his illusions and restlessness know no limits.
The freedom of traditional man was different. It lay not in discarding but in rejoining the deeper vein of his will, tied to the mystery of his existential "form." Birth and the physical element reflect the resultant of forces at work in one's birth—the direction of the stronger force. Minor inclinations, swept away, may correspond to talents and tendencies distinct from one's organic preformation and caste duties. Such contradictions were exceptions in a caste-regulated society but become predominant in societies without castes, where no law gathers or shapes talents for specific functions. This leads to existential and psychic chaos, condemning most to disharmony and social tension. Traditional man, though possessing a margin of indetermination, used it to emphasize self-knowledge and self-realization, eliminating this margin through inner transformation. Discovering and willing the "dominating" trait of one's form and caste, transforming it into an ethical imperative, and actualizing it ritually through faithfulness, freed one from earthly ties—instincts, hedonism, and material concerns. This view underpins the caste system's stability and closeness.
