Noomakhia

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* Book: NOOMAKHIA: Wars of the Mind. Alexander Dugin. Academic Project (28 vol Russian edition),

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/menu/noomakhia-wars-of-the-mind/


Description

From the publisher:

"Noomakhia: Wars of the Mind is the ongoing magnum opus of the “most dangerous philosopher in the world”, Alexander Dugin (1962-). Soon to enter its final, 28th volume in Russian, Noomakhia is shaping up to be one of the 21st century’s most ambitious and complex contributions to numerous fields and schools of thought. Beyond a series of innovative Noological studies in the history of Civilizations, and beyond an original culmination of many of the author’s previous ideas and works, Noomakhia aims to inaugurate a new philosophical paradigm, based on the radical deconstruction of the universalism of Western Modernity and the daring reconstruction of a pluriversal model of the variations of the Logoi which structure human cultures. Noomakhia strives to initiate a new anthropology, to establish a new discourse on the history and structures of the Noomachy (“War of the Mind”) that conditions the diversity of human civilizations, and to contribute to an inter-continental Dialogue of Civilizations."

(https://eurasianist-archive.com/menu/noomakhia-wars-of-the-mind/)


2.

"Noomakhia is the struggle in the sphere of the ideal. The author presents humanity as an ensemble of civilizational paradigms which hold continuous dialogue (whether agreement, struggle, understanding, solidarity, or opposition) between one another over the course of all of world history. The panorama of modern humanity presents a diversity of philosophical Logoi, types of rationalities, and mythological matrices – from the European (bringing together Western European and Eastern European components), the Russian, American, Semitic, Iranian, and Indian to the Chinese, Japanese, African and Oceanic (Polynesian). In deconstructing his reflections on the studied material, the author insists that deconstruction should also be accomplished with respect to the observatory point itself."

(https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/04/22/noomakhia-the-three-logoi-apollo-dionysus-and-cybele/)


Directory

Vol. 1: The Three Logoi – Apollo, Dionysus, and Cybele

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2014)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/04/22/noomakhia-the-three-logoi-apollo-dionysus-and-cybele/

"The first book of the Noomakhia cycle, The Three Logoi: Apollo, Dionysus, and Cybele, is dedicated to studying the question of the multiplicity of the Logoi and philosophical and mytho-symbolic paradigms which define the structures of different civilizations. This book represents the philosophical and methodological introduction to the Noomakhia cycle; it describes the models of the three Logoi – of Apollo, Dionysus, and Cybele – which, in the author’s opinion, lie at the heart of diverse philosophical, religious, scientific, and political systems. From this angle, the author examines in detail the philosophy of Plato, the Neoplatonists (Plotinus and Proclus), Aristotle’s doctrine of categories, Christian Gnosticism, Hermetism, and various forms of materialist and nominalist worldviews.”

Contents

Introduction: The Aims and Tasks of Noomakhia [1]

Chapter 1: Deconstructing the “Contemporal Moment”: New Horizons in the History of Philosophy [2]

Chapter 2: The Three Logoi: An Introduction to the Triadic Methodology [3]

Chapter 3: Plato: Death, Love, and the Soul

Chapter 4: Aristotle Uncomprehended: The Experience of Phenomenological Reading

Chapter 5: Plotinus: The Radical Challenge of Solar Philosophy

Chapter 6: Valentinus the Gnostic: Sophia and the Structures of the Feminine Logos

Chapter 7: Proclus: The Absolute Philosophy of the Sun

Chapter 8: Hermetism

Chapter 9: Cybele

Chapter 10: Noomakhia and its Vertical Topography


Vol. 2: Geosophy: Horizons and Civilizations

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2017).

“A philosophical-methodological introduction and companion to the Greater Noomakhia cycle”

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/03/13/noomachy-geosophy-horizons-and-civilizations/


Contents

Part I: The Basic Concepts of Geosophy

Chapter 1: The Horizons of Cultures: The Geography of Logoi [4]

Chapter 2: Deconstructing Eurocentrism

Chapter 3: Defining Civilizations

Chapter 4: The Topography of Geosophy


Part II: Theories of Civilizations: Criteria, Concepts, Correspondences

Chapter 5: Proclus

Chapter 6: Joachim de Flore

Chapter 7: Giambattista Vico

Chapter 8: Johann Gottfried Herder

Chapter 9: Friedrich von Schelling

Chapter 10: Georg Hegel

Chapter 11: Nikolai Yakovlevich Danilevsky

Chapter 12: Johann Bachofen

Chapter 13: Friedrich Ratzel

Chapter 14: Halford Mackinder

Chapter 15: Carl Schmitt

Chapter 16: Robert Graebner and Wilhelm Schmidt

Chapter 17: Moritz Lazarus, Wilhelm Wundt, and Alfred Vierkandt

Chapter 18: Franz Boas

Chapter 19: Oswald Spengler

Chapter 20: Richard Thurnwald

Chapter 21: Leo Frobenius

Chapter 22: Herman Wirth

Chapter 23: Marija Gimbutas

Chapter 24: Robert Graves

Chapter 25: Károly Kerényi

Chapter 26: Sigmund Freud

Chapter 27: Carl Gustav Jung

Chapter 28: Johan Huizinga

Chapter 29: René Guénon

Chapter 30: Julius Evola

Chapter 31: Mircea Eliade

Chapter 32: Ioan Culianu

Chapter 33: Georges Dumézil

Chapter 34: Pitirim Sorokin

Chapter 35: Gilbert Durand

Chapter 36: Nikolai Trubetzkoy

Chapter 37: Petr Savitsky

Chapter 38: Lev Gumilev

Chapter 39: Arnold Toynbee

Chapter 40: Fernand Braudel

Chapter 41: Samuel Huntington

Chapter 42: A Common Nomenclature of Basic Terminologies


Part III: Pluriversum: Geosophy and its Zones

Chapter 43: A Nomenclature of Horizons and the Plans of Greater Noomakhia

Chapter 44: The Logos of Europe: A History of Rise and Fall

Chapter 45: The Semitic Horizon

Chapter 46: The Horizons of the Two Americas

Chapter 47: The Eurasian Horizon

Chapter 48: The Iranian Logos

Chapter 49: The Indian Logos

Chapter 50: Chinese Civilization

Chapter 51: Japan and its Logos

Chapter 52: African Horizons

Chapter 53: The Horizons of the Pacific


Vol. 3: The Logos of Turan – The Indo-European Ideology of the Verticle

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2017)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/04/22/noomakhia-the-logos-of-turan-the-indo-european-vertical-ideology/

With this volumes starts ...

I. The Logos of Eurasia 

Contents

Introduction: Turan as an Idea [5]


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)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/04/25/noomakhia-the-horizons-and-civilizations-of-eurasia-the-indo-european-legacy-and-the-traces-of-the-great-mother/


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


Vol. 5: The Iranian Logos: The War of Light and the Culture of Awaiting

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2016)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/05/27/the-iranian-logos-the-war-of-light-and-the-culture-of-awaiting/


With this volumes starts ...

II. The Indo-European Logos of Asia 


Contents

Introduction: Iran in Expectation of (the End of) Light


Part I: Ancient Iran: The Solar Sources of the World Empire

Chapter 1: The Indo-Europeans

Chapter 2: The Indo-European Element

Chapter 3: Ancient Persian Noology

Chapter 4: The Zoroastrian Historial: Three World Epochs

Chapter 5: Aryan Man

Chapter 6: The Battle for Khvarenah


Part II: The Second Kingdom and its Echoes

Chapter 7: The Idea of Empire

Chapter 8: The Achaemenis: The Creation of Empire

Chapter 9: Iran and Judaism

Chapter 10: Iran and Hellenism

Chapter 11: Sassanid Iran

Chapter 12: The Explicit Logos of Iran


Part III: Islamic Iran

Chapter 13: The First Stage of Islamization and the Iranian Rendition

Chapter 14: The Iranian Factor in the Abassid Caliphate

Chapter 15: Al-Falasifa and the Meeting of Persians and Greeks


Part IV: The Persians and at–Tasawwuf

Chapter 16: Inner Islam and the Persians

Chapter 17: The Sufi Apotheosis of Love

Chapter 18: The Ausdruck Stage in the History of Sufism


PART V: Iran and Shia

Chapter 19: The Foundations of Shi’ism

Chapter 20: The Dual-Leveled Topography of Shi’ism: Nubuvvat and Valayat

Chapter 21: The Seveners: The Open and Secret Empires

Chapter 22: The Fallen Logos of Isma’ilism

Chapter 23: ʿIshraq: Shahab Yahya Suhrawardi


Part VI: After the Abbasids

Chapter 24: The Post-Abbasid Historial of Iran

Chapter 25: The Philosophy of Iranian Existentialism


Part VII: Iran in Modernity

Chapter 26: Shi’ite Iran under the Qajar Dynasty

Chapter 27: The Darkness of the West and the Shi’ite Revolution of Light


Conclusion: Global Iran

Vol. 6: Great India – Civilization of the Absolute

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2017)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/04/23/noomakhia-great-india-civilization-of-the-absolute/


Contents

Introduction: The Indo-Europeans of the Eastern Limits


Part I: Vedic Civilization

Chapter 1: Approaches to Understanding India

Chapter 2: India’s Pre-History

Chapter 3: The Indo-European Ecumene

Chapter 4: Indian Titanomachy

Chapter 5: Varna: Castes of the Great Subject

Chapter 6: Vedic Religion

Chapter 7: The Structure of the Sruti

Chapter 8: The Logos of the Upanishads

Chapter 9: The Religion of Dasa

Chapter 10: The Indian Structure


PART II: The Indian Historial

Chapter 11: Vertical history

Chapter 12: The Conventional History of India

Chapter 13: The Logos of the Sramana: Jainism and Buddhism

Chapter 14: The Mahajamapadas, the Maurya Empire, and Nastika

Chapter 15: The Bhagavad Gita and the Metaphysics of Vishnuism

Chapter 16: Sankhya: The Philosophy of Parkriti and the Awakening of the Snake

Chapter 17: Adi Shakti: Woman vs. Mother

Chapter 18: Brahmasutra: Counter-Strike of the Vedanta


PART III: India in the Middle Ages

Chapter 19: The Structures of the Medieval Historial

Chapter 20: Tantra

Chapter 21: The Three Crowned Kings

Chapter 22: Gondwana: Central and South India in the Middle Ages

Chapter 23: Advaita Vedanta

Chapter 24: Anti-Advaita


PART IV: Buddhism: Mahayana – The Indian Philosophy of the New Beginning

Chapter 25: The Transformation of Buddhist Metaphysics

Chapter 26: Madhyamaka: How to Philosophize by Emptiness

Chapter 27: Yogachara

Chapter 28: Tathagatagarbha: Non-Duality on the Counter-Attack

Chapter 29: Vajrayana: Sin Transformed


PART V: The Post-Middle-Ages: Islam and India

Chapter 30: After the Middle Ages

Chapter 31: From the Ghaznavids to the Delhi Sultanate

Chapter 32: The Great Moghuls and the Transcendental Unity of the Traditions of Akbar

Chapter 33: The States of North-West India


PART VI: Towards Modernity: From Colonization to Independence

Chapter 34: The European Colonization of India

Chapter 35: Reformed Hinduism

Chapter 36: Fundamentalists and the Politics of Swaraj

Chapter 37: Sanatana Dharma: True Hinduism

Chapter 38: Modern India: Post-Colonial Legitimacy and Deep De-Colonization

Conclusion


Vol. 7: The Hellenic Logos: The Valley of Truth (2016)

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2016)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/04/26/noomakhia-the-hellenic-logos-the-valley-of-truth/


With this volumes starts:

III. The Logos of Europe


Contents

Preface: The Semantics of Greece


Part I: The Titanomakhia of the Hellenes: Gods and History

Chapter 1: The Ethno-Titanomakhia of the Mediterranean

Chapter 2: The Great Battles of the Eternal Beginning

Chapter 3: Cosmo-Hellenism: Gods and Meanings

Chapter 4: The Heroes: Destiny or Fate?

Chapter 5: The Alphabet of the Gods

Chapter 6: Greece’s Periods


Part II: The Withdrawal of the Gods and the Epiphany of Man

Chapter 7: The Poetic Anthropology of Ancient Greece

Chapter 8: The Archaic Era: The Polis

Chapter 9: The Split Logos of Orphism: Proto-Philosophy

Chapter 10: The Ionian School: The Invasion of Substance

Chapter 11: The Philosophy of Greater Greece: The Paths of the Sky

Chapter 12: The Light of Poetry: The Tragiographs and Lyrics of Archaic Hellas

Chapter 13: The Peloponnesian War: The Beginning of the Classical Era

Chapter 14: Platonism: The Philosophy of Divinity

Chapter 15: The Mission of the Abderites: Relativity and Atoms

Chapter 16: The Echo of the Steps of Dionysus: The Tragedy and Comedy of the Classical Era

Chapter 17: Aristotle: The Classical Philosophical Culmination

Chapter 18: The End of Hellas and the Eternal Hellenes


Vol. 8: The Byzantine Logos: Hellenism and Empire

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2016)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/06/23/noomakhia-the-byzantine-logos-hellenism-and-empire/


Contents

Introduction


Part I: Hellenism and Hellada

Chapter 1: Hellenism: Alexander the Great and His Legacy

Chapter 2: The Meta-Religion of Hellenism

Chapter 3: The Historians and Geographers of the Hellenistic Era

Chapter 4: The Philosophical Paradoxes of Hellenism

Chapter 5: Under the Authority of Rome


Part II: Christ and the Hellenes

Chapter 6: Christianity and Hellenism in the First Three Centuries: The Catacombs and Philosophy

Chapter 7: Byzantium as Rome

Chapter 8: The Pure Platonism of Hellenism: The Polytheists


Part III: Dogma, Councils, and the Division of Civilizations

Chapter 9: Christian Platonism in the 4th-5th Centuries

Chapter 10: Byzantium Becoming Greece: From Justinian to the Isaurian

Chapter 11: Byzantinism and the Empire of the Greeks

Chapter 12: The Final Configuration of Byzantinism as a Civilization and Spiritual Style

Chapter 13: The Decline of Byzantinism

Chapter 14: Byzantium’s Theological Finale

Chapter 15: Surveying the Byzantine Logos


Part IV: After Byzantium

Chapter 16: The Greeks in the Ottoman Period

Chapter 17: Megali Idea: Great Liberation

Chapter 18: Greece in the Modern Era


Vol. 9: The Latin Logos: The Sun and the Cross

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2016)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/06/05/the-latin-logos-the-sun-and-the-cross/

“The Latin Logos: The Sun and the Cross, continues Alexander Dugin’s Noomakhia cycle in describing another Western European space in its foundational, unique culturo-historical components – those of the Latin world of Italy, Spain, and Portugal. Having taken shape in antiquity and reached its apogee in the era of the rise of Rome, the Latin Logos became the pole of Western Christianity, determining both the culture of the European Middle Ages and the religious and geopolitical balance of European countries in Modernity as a stronghold of Catholicism, the Counter-Reformation, and conservatism.”


Contents

Foreword: The Latin Logos and the European Cross


Part I: Italy: The Imperial Mysteries of Rome

Chapter 1: Rome: The Scales and Contours of Civilization

Chapter 2: Roman Reality

Chapter 3: The Roman Mentality in the Context of Mediterranean and Indo-European Civilization(s)

Chapter 4: The Empire as an Idea

Chapter 5: Latin Philosophy: The Structure of the Hellenic Shadow

Chapter 6: Latin Poetry: Love or Empire?

Chapter 7: Christianity and Empire

Chapter 8: Catholic Rome

Chapter 9: Roman Neo-Platonism

Chapter 10: The Polities of Italy in the Middle Ages

Chapter 11: The Polities of Italy in the 11th-15th Centuries

Chapter 12: The Italian Metaphysics of Poverty and the Third Testament

Chapter 13: The Florentine Geniuses under the Authority of Amor

Chapter 14: The Florentine Logos of the Renaissance

Chapter 15: The Blossoming of Venice

Chapter 16: The Giants Awaken: Towards Modernity

Chapter 17: Political Modernity in Renaissance Italy

Chapter 18: The Counter-Reformation and the Semantics of Baroque

Chapter 19: Risorgimento and the New Italy

Chapter 20: The Ideological Origins of the 1920s: Hegel, Futurism, and Tradizione Romana

Chapter 21: Post-Fascism and Intellectual Currents in Modern Italy

Chapter 22: The Layers of the Italian Logos


Part II: Spain: The Eternal Middle Ages

Chapter 23: The Geosophy of Iberia

Chapter 24: Conquista and Reconquista

Chapter 25: Reconquista in the Sphere of Metaphysics

Chapter 26: The Un-Setting Sun of Castile

Chapter 27: Mysticism and Scholasticism in Renaissance Spain

Chapter 28: The Metaphysics of the Spanish Jesuits

Chapter 29: The ‘Golden Age’ and the Dawn of Knights

Chapter 30: The Political Historial of Spain in the 18th-20th Centuries: Spanish Archeomodernity

Chapter 31: The Spanish Dasein: The Devil and Dictatorship

Chapter 32: The Structure of the Spanish Historial

Chapter 33: Basque Civilization: Traces of the Great Mother’s Europe


Part III: Portugal: Towards the Fifth Empire

Chapter 34: From Lusitania to Portugal

Chapter 35: The Fifth Empire of Sea

Chapter 36: Portugal in Modernity

Chapter 37: Saudade

Chapter 38: The Noology of Portugal


Vol. 10: The Germanic Logos – Apophatic Man

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2015)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/04/26/noomakhia-the-germanic-logos-apophatic-man/


Contents

Preface


Part I: The Logos of Germania

Chapter 1: The Ancient Germanic Peoples and their Myths

Chapter 2: A Brief History of the Germanic States

Chapter 3: German Literature in the Middle Ages

Chapter 4: Medieval German Thought: The Mystics of the Rhine

Chapter 5: The Germanic Renaissance

Chapter 6: The Reformation in German History

Chapter 7: German Romanticism

Chapter 8: Germany’s Classical Age: The Triumph of Philosophy

Chapter 9: The Philosophy of Twilight

Chapter 10: The Conservative Revolution

Chapter 11: Germanic Expression: The Twilight of Man

Chapter 12: Martin Heidegger: Great Germany and the Fate of Europe

Chapter 13: The Three Logoi in the Europe of the ‘End Times’

Chapter 14: After the ‘End of History’


Part II: The Space of the Germanic World

Chapter 15: Austria: The Mission of the Habsburg Guardians

Chapter 16: Sweden, Norway, and Denmark: Scandinavia and its Spirits

Chapter 17: The Netherlands: The North, the Mother, and the Sea

Chapter 18: Switzerland: The European Equilibrium


Vol. 11: The French Logos: Orpheus and Melusine

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2015)

"A description of French identity and studies various aspects of the French and, more broadly, Celtic Dasein as manifest in mythology, history, philosophy, cultural, and mysticism.

Since the Middle Ages, France and Germany have acted as the two main poles of the dialectical formation of European civilization, thereby determining the historical, political, and cultural semantics of the most important processes in the history of Western Europe over the past half millennium. In studying the structures of the French Logos, the author arrives at the conclusion that this Logos’ main components are the two fundamental figures (Gestalts) of the Singer of the Sanctified, Orpheus, and the semi-female dragon, Melusine. According to the author, the paradigm of Modernity, in its mythological and cultural roots, can be traced back to the Gestalt of Melusine.”

Contents

Foreword: The French Pair of Gestalts

Chapter 1: The Celtic Logos in the Ancient World

Chapter 2: The Civilization of Orpheus

Chapter 3: The State of France in the Middle Ages

Chapter 4: The French Logos in the Middle Ages: Scholastics, Sects, and Hermetism

Chapter 5: France towards Modernity

Chapter 6: Victorious Modernity

Chapter 7: The Literature of Social Materialism

Chapter 8: Seasons in Hell

Chapter 9: 20th Century France: In the Direction of Darkness

Chapter 10: French Philosophy in the 20th Century: Impulse and Loneliness

Chapter 11: Sociology as a Revolution

Chapter 12: The Culture of Night

Chapter 13: Traditionalism: The French Alternative to Modernity

Chapter 14: Structuralism: the Autonomy of the Sign

Chapter 15: Post-Modernity

Chapter 16: The New Right


Vol. 12: England or Britain? The Maritime Mission and Positive Subject

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2015).

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/03/28/noomakhia-england-or-britain-the-maritime-mission-and-positive-subject/


Contents

Introduction: England – The Homeland of the “Modern World”


Part I: England or Britain?

Chapter 1: From Britain to England: Ethnoi and States

Chapter 2: Anglo-Britain in the Middle Ages: Two Churches

Chapter 3: The Norman Invasion and the House of Plantagenet: The Franco-English Epoch

Chapter 4: English Theology

Chapter 5: Knights, Damsels, and Fairies in the Anglo-British Lai

Chapter 6: The Reformation

Chapter 7: English Thought at the Foundation of the Paradigm of Modernity: Locke’s Heartland

Chapter 8: Dreams on the Eve of Modernity

Chapter 9; The Yates Paradigm

Chapter 10: Pax Britannica: The Mercantile-Maritime Empire

Chapter 11: In Love with the Mind and in Trust of Feelings

Chapter 12: The Romantics: Gods and Titans in the Meadows of Green England

Chapter 13: Liberalism: The Positive Individual Subject

Chapter 14: Realism and Irony

Chapter 15: The Subtle Charm of Decadence: Pre-Raphaelites, the Dandy, and Satanists

Chapter 16: The 20th Century: Historial and Empire

Chapter 17: English Positivity

Chapter 18: Imperialism, Tradition, and Utopia in English Literature

Chapter 19: The British Invasion

Chapter 20: Conclusion


Part II: The Celtic Pole

Chapter 21: The Celtic Pole of Anglo-British Civilization

Chapter 22: Wales: The Titanomachy of Trees

Chapter 23: Scotland: The Drowsy Titans

Chapter 24: Ireland


Vol. 13: The Civilizations of the New World: Pragmatic Dreams and Split Horizons

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2017)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/04/26/noomakhia-the-civilizations-of-the-new-world-pragmatic-dreams-and-split-horizons/


Contents

Part I: North American Civilization: The New Atlantis

Chapter 1: America in the Structure of the World

Chapter 2: Native American Horizons: Spirits and Animals

Chapter 3: The Sources of Anglo-Saxon America

Chapter 4: North American Civilization and its Foundations

Chapter 5: The Eschatological Perspectives of American Sects

Chapter 6: American Philosophy: Pragmatism

Chapter 7: The Literary Classics of the US: The Sea and Flesh of Homo Americanus

Chapter 8: The Poetry of Alternative Horizons

Chapter 9: American Liberalism

Chapter 10: Analytical Philosophy

Chapter 11: Cultural Anthropology

Chapter 12: 20th Century American Literature

Chapter 13: American Counter-Culture

Chapter 14: American Geopolitics: Globalization, Atlanticism, and Hegemony

Chapter 15: Critical Theories of Globalization: Deconstructing ‘Empire’

Chapter 16: The USA: The Civilization of Post-Modernity

Chapter 17: The Horizons of New France

Chapter 18: Russian America and Types of Colonization


Part II: The Logos of Ariel: Horizons of Latin America

Chapter 19: The Structure of the Latin American Space

Chapter 20: The Civilizations of Central America

Chapter 21: The Civilizations of South America

Chapter 22: Colonial Empires

Chapter 23: Decolonization

Chapter 24: Great Brazil

Chapter 25: Latin American Philosophy of Identity

Chapter 26: The Identity of Creole Dreams

Conclusion

Vol. 14: Eastern Europe: The Slavic Logos – Balkan Nav and Sarmatian Style (2018)

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2018)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/04/23/noomakhia-eastern-europe-the-slavic-logos/

With this volume starts:

Part IV: IV. Eastern Europe and Russia

"The space of Eastern Europe is a frontier between two civilizations – Western European and Russian. Precisely here ran the border between the nomadic, Indo-European, patriarchal civilizations of Turan and the matriarchal civilizations of Old Europe (which emerged in Anatolia and spread to the Balkans and Southern Europe), between the Catholic (Latin) Celto-Germanic West and the Russian-Orthodox East. The mosaic of this pivot region’s peoples and religions has never in history been geopolitically united, but this does not mean that the peoples of Eastern Europe cannot develop civilizational unity in the future and retrieve a cultural identity founded on the common Eastern European Dasein.

Since the fifth-sixth centuries A.D., the Slavic peoples have played a decisive role in the space of Eastern Europe. This volume of Noomakhia examines the Slavic horizon of Eastern Europe, which the author calls “Great Slaviania.” In question is not a concrete polity, but the inner unity of the Slavic Dasein, language, and ethno-sociological structure, constituted by the predominance of the settled agricultural population and the allogenic superstructure of a ruling warrior elite, the latter being an indirect trace of Sarmatian, Turanian, or Germanic influence. Alexander Dugin believes that, despite the powerful impact exerted on Slavic horizon of Eastern Europe by a number of non-Slavic peoples and powerful civilizational poles – such as Byzantium, Rome, Germany, France, England, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire – the mosaic of the West and South Slavic peoples, being the foci of mixed, self-sufficient cultures, can in the future form a multi-faceted and fully-fledged civilizational unity.“


Contents

PART I: The Civilization of the Goddess and the Peasant Ecumene of Europe

Chapter 1: Eastern Europe as a Geosophical Concept

Chapter 2: The Matriarchal Pole of Eastern Europe

Chapter 3: The Turanian Invasion


PART II: The Eastern European Nav

Chapter 4: The Worlds of Nav and the Gestalt of the Vampire

Chapter 5: The Witch, the Idiot, and the Languages of the Nocturne

Chapter 6: The Indo-European Element: The Homeland of Dionysus


PART III: The Proto-Slavs

Chapter 7: The Structures of Slavic Identity: The Paleo-European Mother and the Indo-European Father

Chapter 8: At the Dawn of Slavic History


PART IV: The South Slavs: Bulgarian Katechon and the Mission of the Bogomils

Chapter 9: The Bulgarian Historial

Chapter 10: The Parallel Historial of Bulgarian Identity

Chapter 11: Macedonia: Gospel of the Vampire

Chapter 12: The Structure of the Bulgarian Logos


PART V: Illyrian Civilization: Fiery Serbia and other South Slavs

Chapter 13: The Serbian Historial

Chapter 14: Bosnia: Bogomils and Islamization

Chapter 15: The Serbian Wail

Chapter 16: In Search of the Serbian Logos

Chapter 17: The Historial of the Croats

Chapter 18: The Croatian Logos: Pan-Slavism and/or Nationalism

Chapter 19: Slovenia

Chapter 20: Slovenian Style: Euro-Integration and Nihilism


PART VI: The West Slavs: The Moravo-Bohemian Logos

Chapter 21: The West Slavs in the Slavic World

Chapter 22: Sources and Flight of the Czech State

Chapter 23: The Czech Logos of the Hussites

Chapter 24: The Czechs and Modernity

Chapter 25: The Philosophy of the Czech Renaissance


PART VII: The Polish Horizon: Sarmatian Spirit and European Mission

Chapter 26: The North-West Slavs in Antiquity

Chapter 27: The Polish Historial

Chapter 28: Old Polish Religion

Chapter 29: Union, Partitions, Modernization, Freedom

Chapter 30: Polish Pride and the Polish Logos: The “Christ of Europe”

Chapter 31: Polish Terror

Chapter 32: The Polish Structure


Conclusion: On the Path Towards the Slavic Ereignis


Vol. 15: The Non-Slavic Horizons of Eastern Europe: The Song of the Vampire and the Voice of the Depths

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2018)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/07/31/noomakhia-the-non-slavic-horizons-of-eastern-europe-the-song-of-the-vampire-and-the-voice-of-the-depths/


Contents

Introduction: The Slavs and Non-Slavs in Eastern Europe


PART I: Great Baltica: The Lithuanian Logos and Unrealized Civilization

Chapter 1: The Proto-Balts

Chapter 2: On the Baltic Gods and Baltic People

Chapter 3: The Lithuanian Historial

Chapter 4: The Historial of Latvia

Chapter 5: Baltic Philosophy: Overcoming Subtle Chaos


PART II: Black Dacia: Mioritic Space and the Romanian Idea

Chapter 6: The Thracians and their Identity

Chapter 7: Images and Structures of Thracian Religion

Chapter 8: Thrace and Dacia: Polities and Conquests

Chapter 9: Dacia Unbowed

Chapter 10: The Gods of Dacia

Chapter 11: The Transylvanian Historial

Chapter 12: Walachia: The Orthodox Kingdom of Dracula

Chapter 13: Moldova and its Historial

Chapter 14: Romania in the 20th Century

Chapter 15: The Burning Bush of Romanian Thought

Chapter 16: The Romanian Absurd: The Dark Horizons of Decomposition


PART III: The Hungarians and the Scythian Idea

Chapter 17: The Magyars in Europe

Chapter 18: The Ancient Magyar Faith

Chapter 19: Medieval Hungary

Chapter 20: Hungary and Modernization

Chapter 21: The Hungarian Language and its Poetry

Chapter 22: In Anticipation of Hungarian Philosophy

Chapter 23: Black Hungary: In the Captivity of Melancholy


PART IV: From Illyria to Albania: Dragons and Warriors

Chapter 24: Albanian Antiquities

Chapter 25: Albanian Myths: Female and Male Dragons

Chapter 26: The Albanian Historial

Chapter 27: The Albanian Logos

Chapter 28: The Noology of the Albanian Eagle


PART V: The Jews of Eastern Europe: The Fiery Nihilism of Liberation

Chapter 29: Hypotheses on the Jewish Horizon of Eastern Europe

Chapter 30: The Spiritual Currents of Eastern European Jewry

Chapter 31: Eastern European Jews and Political Ideologies

Chapter 32: The Gestalts of Eastern European Jewry

Chapter 33: The Roma

Chapter 34: Gypsy Sacrality

Chapter 35: The Noology of Gypsy Identity


Vol. 16: The Russian Logos I – The Kingdom of Land: The Structure of Russian Identity

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2019)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/07/31/noomakhia-the-russian-logos-the-kingdom-of-land-the-structure-of-russian-identity/


Contents

PART I: The Russian Horizon

Chapter 1: On the Threshold of the Russian Logos

Chapter 2: Deducing the Russian Horizon and the Contours of Unique Identity (Samobytnost’)

Chapter 3: Russian Christianity and its Historial

Chapter 4: Russia and Europe: The Noology of Modernization

Chapter 5: The Russian Structure and the Russian Historial: A Preliminary Theory

Chapter 6: Russian Eleusis: The Peasant Historial and the Mystery of Grain


PART II: The Russian Mother

Chapter 7: Foundations: The Russian Mother

Chapter 8: The Idiot and the Snake: The Russian Nocturne

Chapter 9: The Feminine Gestalts in Folk Christianity


PART III: The Russian Father

Chapter 10: The Indo-European Verticle in Old Russian Religion

Chapter 11: The Patriarchal Gestalts in Folk Christianity


PART IV: The Morphology of the Russian Structure

Chapter 12: The Russian Space: Territory or Land?

Chapter 13: State Time and Peasant Eternity

Chapter 14: The Russian Subject and the Archetypes of Russian Gender


PART V: World, Existence, Being

Chapter 15: The Superposition of the Two Russian Worlds

Chapter 16: The Russian Telos: Being-towards-Death and Being-towards-Marriage

Chapter 17: Russian Phenomenology and Russian Being

Conclusion: Russian Identity and the Dialectic of the Russian Historial


Vol. 17: The Russian Logos II – The Russian Historial: The People and State in Search of the Subject

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2019)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2019/08/01/noomakhia-the-russian-logos-ii-the-russian-historial-the-people-and-state-in-search-of-the-subject/


Contents

PART I: Russian Origins and the Creation of the Derzhava

Chapter 1: Prelude to the Russian Historial: The Ancient Slavs

Chapter 2: The East Slavic Tribes and the Establishment of the State

Chapter 3: The Varangians: The Founding of the State

Chapter 4: Kievan Rus: The Golden Age


PART II: Differentials and Fragmentations

Chapter 5: The Poles of Rus: The Russian North

Chapter 6: The Russian East: The Origins of the Great Russians

Chapter 7: The Russian West: The Path to Eminence

Chapter 8: The Sources of White Rus

Chapter 9: Russian Balance: The Third Pole that Never Became Reality

Chapter 10: Kiev and the Kiev Region in the Era of Fragmentation

Chapter 11: The Russian Federation

Chapter 12: The Types of Russian Christianity in the Pre-Mongol Era


PART III: The Mongol Invasion, the Rise of Moscow, and the Decline of the Russian West

Chapter 13: The Mongol Period: The End as a Continuation and New Beginning

Chapter 14: Vladimir Rus in the Mongol Era

Chapter 15: Western Rus, Great Russia, Little Russia, and Belorussia: The Differentials of Russian Unity

Chapter 16: Russian Hesychasm and the First Heresies


PART IV: The Muscovite Kingdom: The Third Rome, Katechon, and the Schism

Chapter 17: The New Mission of Great Russia

Chapter 18: Ivan the Terrible: The Existential Eschatology of the First Russian Tsar

Chapter 19: The Time of Troubles and its Overcoming

Chapter 20: The Cossacks and the Birth of Ukraine

Chapter 21: The Schism: The Spiritual Tendencies of Rus in the Phase of Antagonism

Chapter 22: Moscow’s Final Accord


PART V: The Russian “Empire” and the Problem of the Antichrist: Peter and the Empresses

Chapter 23: The Discrepancy of the 18th Century

Chapter 24: The Structure of the 18th Century: The Curse of Archeomodernity


PART VI: The 19th Century: Towards Russian Identity

Chapter 25: The 19th Century Historial: The Beginning

Chapter 26: Alexander I: Political Eschatology and the Return of Katechon

Chapter 27: Russia in the “Golden Age” of Russian Culture: The Decembrists, Slavophiles, and Emancipation of the Peasantry

Chapter 28: Alexander II: Incomplete Emancipation

Chapter 29: Alexander III: Identity and Sovereignty

Chapter 30: The Late Slavophiles and Populists: The Dialectic of Archeomodernity

Chapter 31: The End of the Empire

Chapter 32: The Silver Age


PART VII: Soviet Rus

Chapter 33: The Catastrophe of the Russian Logos

Chapter 34: The Russian Church in the First Stage of Bolshevism

Chapter 35: Trotsky and Stalin: The Industrialization of Russia

Chapter 36: The Autumn of Sovietism

Chapter 37: The USSR: The Semantics of the End


PART VIII: After the End of Bolshevism

Chapter 38: The 1990s: The Catastrophe of Liberalism

Chapter 39: The 2000s: Towards an Unknown Goal (Correcting Liberalism)

Chapter 40: The Historial of the Russian Future


Vol. 18: The Russian Logos III – The Images of Russian Thought: The Solar Tsar, the Flash of Sophia, and Subterranean Rus’

(Moscow: Academic Project, 2020)

URL = https://eurasianist-archive.com/2020/02/09/noomakhia-the-images-of-russian-thought-the-solar-tsar-the-flash-of-sophia-and-subterranean-rus/


Contents

Introduction: Towards the Morphology of Russian Self-Consciousness


PART I: The Apollonian Logos: The State and Orthodoxy

Chapter 1: Forms of the Apollonian Logos

Chapter 2: Prince Vladimir and the Russian Logos

Chapter 3: The Pre-Mongol Ideology of the Era of Fragmentation

Chapter 4: The Russian State Logos in the Mongol Era

Chapter 5: The Eschatological Rise of the Muscovite Logos

Chapter 6: The Being-Towards-Death of Ivan the Terrible

Chapter 7: The Time of Troubles and the Beginning of the Romanovs

Chapter 8: The Schism

Chapter 9: The Philosophy of Silence

Chapter 10: The 18th Century: The Desacralization of the State and the Hesychastic Renaissance

Chapter 11: The 19th Century: The Conservative Pivot

Chapter 12: The Lyubomudry and the Slavophiles: The Premises of Russian Philosophy

Chapter 13: Apollo in the Silver Age

Chapter 14: Eschatological Monarchism

Chapter 15: Russian Orthodoxy in the 20th Century: Eschatology and the Theological Renaissance

Chapter 16: Eurasianism and Russian Traditionalism


PART II: The Logos of Dionysus: The Thought of the Russian People

Chapter 17: The Existential Philosophy of the Russian Peasantry

Chapter 18: The Phenomenological Foundations of Russian Folk Christianity

Chapter 19: Conceptualizing Land

Chapter 20: Pushkin’s Mission: The Language of Magical Tales and the Gestalt of the Small Man

Chapter 21: Gogol: The Paradisal Ontology of the Little-Russian Archaic

Chapter 22: Dostoevsky and the Slavophile Universe

Chapter 23: The Philosophical Prophet Vladimir Solovyev: The Paradoxes of the Sophian Logos

Chapter 24: Pavel Florensky: Sociology as the Formalization of the Logos of Dionysus

Chapter 25: Sophiology in Russia and Beyond

Chapter 26: The Silver Age: The Third Renaissance and the Third Testament

Chapter 27: The Women of the Russian Logos: Gnosticism and The Road to Calvary

Chapter 28: Passion for Holy Rus: Sophia and Her Double

Chapter 29: The Russian Antinomies of the Peasant Prophets

Chapter 30: The Peasant Subject in Russian Politics

Chapter 31: Dionysus Returns


PART III: The Russian Logos of the Great Mother

Chapter 32: Cybele in Russian Antiquity

Chapter 33: The Dialectic of the Titan as the Gestalt of Russian Archeomodernity

Chapter 34: The Demons of Russian Culture

Chapter 35: Reconstructed Materialism and Russian Cosmism

Chapter 36: The Silver Age in the Black Light of Land

Chapter 37: Prometheus the Proletarian

Chapter 38: Proletarian Mysticism

Chapter 39: The Subterranean Rus of Daniil Andreev

Chapter 40: The Truth of Cybele and the Awakening of the Radical Subject on Yuzhinsky Alleyway