Alain de Benoist

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Απριλίου 10, 2026

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Απριλίου 10, 2026

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"When it comes to specifying the values particular to paganism, people have generally listed features such as these: an eminently aristocratic conception of the human individual; an ethics founded on honor (ā€œshameā€ rather than ā€œsinā€); an heroic attitude toward life’s challenges; the exaltation and sacralization of the world, beauty, the body, strength, health; the rejection of any ā€œworlds beyondā€; the inseparability of morality and aesthetics; and so on. From this perspective, the highest value is undoubtedly not a form of ā€œjusticeā€ whose purpose is essentially interpreted as flattening the social order in the name of equality, but everything that can allow a man to surpass himself. To paganism, it is pure absurdity to consider the results of the workings of life’s basic framework as unjust. In the pagan ethic of honor, the classic antithesis noble vs. base, courageous vs. cowardly, honorable vs. dishonorable, beautiful vs. deformed, sick vs. healthy, and so forth, replace the antithesis operative in a morality based on the concept of sin: good vs. evil, humble vs. vainglorious, submissive vs. proud, weak vs. arrogant, modest vs. boastful, and so on. However, while all this appears to be accurate, the fundamental feature in my opinion is something else entirely. It lies in the denial of dualism."

- Alain de Benoist

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"Adam and Eve, placed in the garden of Eden, find themselves forbidden to eat of ā€œthe tree of the knowledge of good and evilā€ (Genesis 2:17). Catholic theologians believe this ā€œknowledgeā€ forbidden by Elohim-Yahweh is neither omniscience nor moral discernment, but the ability to decide what is good or evil. Jewish theology is more subtle. The ā€œtreeā€ of the knowledge is interpreted as the representation of a world where good and evil ā€œare in a combined state,ā€ where there is no absolute Good and Evil. In other words, the ā€œtreeā€ is a foreshadowing of the real world we live in, a world where nothing is absolutely clear cut, where moral imperatives are tied to human values, and where everything of any greatness and importance always takes place beyond good and evil. Furthermore, in the Hebrew tradition ā€œto eatā€ means ā€œto assimilate.ā€ To eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil is therefore to personally enter this real world where human initiative ā€œcombinesā€ good and evil. Adam’s transgression, from which all the others are derived, is clearly ā€œthat of autonomy,ā€ accordingly, as emphasized by Eisenberg and Abecassis, this would be ā€œthe desire to conduct his own history alone in according to his own desire and his own word or law."

- Alain de Benoist

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