Logos of Eurasia
Detailed ToC of one part of Noomakhia, the multi-volume work of Alexander Dugin dedicated to civilizational history and analysis.
Vol. 3: The Logos of Turan – The Indo-European Ideology of the Verticle
(Moscow: Academic Project, 2017)
With this volumes starts ...
I. The Logos of Eurasia
Contents
Introduction: Turan as an Idea [1]
PART I: The Indo-European Logos
Chapter 1: Cultures, Peoples, and Languages
Chapter 2: Indo-European Structures
Chapter 3: The Indo-European Proto-Religion: Exclusive Patriarchy
Chapter 4: Dumézil and the Tripartite Ideology
Chapter 5: The Indo-European Foundations of Philosophy
Chapter 6: Marija Gimbutas and the Indo-European Historial
Chapter 7: The Indo-Europeans of the Polar Myth
PART II: The Indo-Europeans Leave the Homeland: The War of Interpretations in Ancient Anatolia
Chapter 8: The Hittites
Chapter 9: The Phrygians and the Descendants of the Hittites
Chapter 10: The Semantic War of Anatolian Horizons: Mutterrecht and Vaterrecht
PART III: The Indo-Europeans Unbroken: The Tocharians, Armenians, and Kurds
Chapter 11: The Tocharians and the “Turanian Language” Hypothesis
Chapter 12: The Armenians: Faithfulness to the Sun
Chapter 13: The Kurds: The Rustling Wings of the Peacock Angel
PART IV: Great Scythia and its Rays
Chapter 14: The Metaphysics of the Great Steppe
Chapter 15: The Scythians: Nomadic Might
Chapter 16: The Peoples of Turan of the Scythian Type
Chapter 17: Afghanistan/Pakistan: The Third Empire
Chapter 18: The Sarmatians: Empire of the Nart
Chapter 19: The Thracians and the Turanian Heritage
Chapter 20: The Germanic Peoples and the Steppe
Chapter 21: The Slavs and Balts in the Horizon of Turan
Conclusion: Turan and the Logos of Apollo in the Indo-European Ecumene
Vol 4: The Horizons and Civilizations of Eurasia – The Indo-European Legacy and the Traces of the Great Mother
(Moscow: Academic Project, 2017)
Contents
Part I: The Transmission of the Turanian Covenant: The Altaic Invasion
Chapter 1: The Altaic Pole
Chapter 2: The Huns: The Pivot of the Turanian Historial
Chapter 3: The Heirs to the Huns: The Bulgars, Sabirs, Avars, and Hungarians
Part II: The Turks in the Elements of Turan
Chapter 4: Sources
Chapter 5: The History of the Turkic Empire
Chapter 6: The End of the “Blue Turks” and the New Peoples
Chapter 7: The Second Empire
Chapter 8: The Religion of the Ancient Turks and Shamanism
Chapter 9: The Turks and Islam: The Sufi Logos
Chapter 10: Turkish Sufism: The Paths of Al-Hallaj
Chapter 11: The Ottoman Empire of the Source: The Ottoman Formula of Integration
Chapter 12: The Turano-Mediterranean Empire
Chapter 13: The Ottoman Empire and Europe (The Christian and post-Christian World)
Chapter 14: Modern Turkey
Part III: The Mongols
Chapter 15: The Ancient Mongols
Chapter 16: Genghis Khan: The World Emperor and Son of the Sky
Chapter 17: Mongol Religion
Chapter 18: The Great Powers of the Mongol-Sphere
Chapter 19: The Mongols after Empire
Chapter 20: The Mongol Logos and Buddhism
Part IV: Tibet
Chapter 21: Ancient Tibet
Chapter 22: The Era of Theocracy
Chapter 23: Bon: Ahura-Mazda in Tibet
Part V: The Manchus
Chapter 24: From the Mohe to the Jurchens
Chapter 25: Manchuria and the Qing Dynasty
Chapter 26: The People and Spirits of the Evenki Universe
Chapter 27: Tungusic-Manchurian Shamanism and its Noological Classification
Part VI: The Paleo-Asiatics
Chapter 28: The Paleo-Asiatic Peoples of Eurasia
Chapter 29: Paleo-Asiatic Religion: The Structures of the Northern Spirits
Part VII: The Great Mother and Her Raven
Chapter 31: The Uralic Group
Chapter 32: The Urals in Sacred Geography
Part VIII: The Horizons of the Caucasus
Chapter 33: The Cartography of the Caucasus
Chapter 34: The Georgians: Sakartvelo, the Light Country
Chapter 35: The Adyghe
Chapter 36: The Vainakh
Chapter 37: The Historials of the Peoples of Dagestan
Chapter 38: The Religion and Myths of the Eastern Caucasus
Chapter 39: The Noology of the Caucasus
Conclusion. The Turning Point of Noomakhia