The Mazeppist

A Transgressive Transcendentalist manifesto.

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Location: Dar ul-Fikr, Colorado, United States

Part Irish, part Dervish, ecstatic humanist, critical Modernist, transgressive Transcendentalist.

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

An Essay On Man


 

Sunday, November 27, 2022

Old Cairo


 

Saturday, November 26, 2022

Franklin Lewis: Rumi's Poetic Theology of Love

Wednesday, November 23, 2022

Existenzphilosophie

 

"My real Self is always a future possibility. It is realized ever anew in each successive decision, whether active or receptive."  ~ Rudolf Bultmann, Primitive Christianity, 166-167.

Tuesday, November 22, 2022

Aufgabe


 

Thursday, November 17, 2022

Cult of the Dead

 

This a study of the centrality of saints and martyrdom to the history of Christianity. Along the way, Kyle Smith discusses the role of saints’ relics as sites of holiness—without resorting to an Eliadean reification of “the sacred.” More about the book can be found here.

Sunday, November 13, 2022

Agon

                             

                                                                Mazzucchelli, 1610.
 

Saturday, November 12, 2022

Neon


 

Friday, November 11, 2022

Mehdi Mokhtari


 

Thursday, November 10, 2022

Night


                                                             W. A. Bouguereau

Wednesday, November 02, 2022

By the Strong Light of the Canonical


 It was Harold Bloom who discerned in Freud a "profound Jewishness" which he identified as Freud's "consuming passion for interpretation, a passion that led him into the wilderness of his frontier concepts."

If a consuming passion for interpretation is what makes for a "profound Jewishness," then few among us have been more "Jewish" than Nietzsche!

Bloom continued: 

"The psychical representative of the drive not in the individual consciousness but in human history, allegorically or ironically considered, is the image of a wandering exile, propelled onward in time by all the vicissitudes of injustice and outwardness"--as opposed to the "inwardness" of the compulsive hermeneut--"all the bodily oppressiveness that is inflicted upon the representatives of interpretation itself"--the Freuds, the Nietzsches, the Spinozas, yes, but also the countless wearers of the suf--as they make their way along the frontiers between mind and body, known and unknown, past and future, illuminated only flickeringly by the strong light of the canonical, as our ancestors learned to call it, the light of the perfection that destroys" (Ruin the Sacred Truths, 166).