The Mazeppist
A Transgressive Transcendentalist manifesto.
About Me
- Name: Sidi Hamid Benengeli
- Location: Dar ul-Fikr, Colorado, United States
Part Irish, part Dervish, ecstatic humanist, critical Modernist, transgressive Transcendentalist.
Tuesday, June 27, 2023
Sunday, June 25, 2023
Thursday, June 22, 2023
Wednesday, June 21, 2023
Self-Reliance
Where paths diverge and, in late Spring, the female cottonwood trees blanket the hard-packed soil with a layer of fluffy goose down, I find my Emersonian mosque and witness, yet again, "the resolution of all into the ever-blessed ONE. Self-existence is the attribute of the Supreme Cause, and it constitutes the measure of good by the degree in which it enters into all lower forms."
Saturday, June 17, 2023
Wednesday, June 14, 2023
Monday, June 12, 2023
Saturday, June 03, 2023
Plato and Platonisms
The trick with Plato is that one must learn to love him without becoming too smitten. The Cambridge Platonists and Paul Elmer More are examples of the latter problem. Hoping against hope that Plato could make Christianity intellectually respectable again, they could not find the golden mean.
Edmund Wilson's deft sketch of More's "Greek Tradition" project in his essay "Mr. More and the Mithraic Bull" catches More at tea in Princeton expressing this fond hope--but not as hope; rather, as a settled conviction.
Yet, Wilson--the old fox--knew better. He knew that Plato had once made Christianity respectable (a fact which probably would have surprised Plato himself), but that the magic had worn off due, in part, to the corrosives set loose by Plato's disciple, Aristotle.
The latter knew his Plato only too well and, once Christians became acquainted with the Stagirite, there was no turning back.
Wilson knew that and, in addition, he knew that More knew it too.
Paul Elmer More, "with his lifelong consecration to that great world of culture and thought which he had succeeded in making real to others but which he could never quite rejoin himself."