Mention164668

Download triples
rdf:type qkg:Mention
so:text There is a necessary correspondence between the most advanced stages of a historical cycle and the most primitive. America is the final stage of modern Europe. Guénon called the United States "the far West", in the novel sense that the United States represents the reductio ad absurdum of the negative and the most senile aspects of Western civilization. What in Europe exist in diluted form are magnified and concentrated in the United States whereby they are revealed as the symptoms of disintegration and cultural and human regression. The American mentality can only be interpreted as an example of regression, which shows itself in the mental atrophy towards all higher interests and incomprehension of higher sensibility. The American mind has limited horizons, one conscribed to everything which is immediate and simplistic, with the inevitable consequence that everything is made banal, basic and leveled down until it is deprived of all spiritual life. Life itself in American terms is entirely mechanistic. The sense of "I" in America belongs entirely to the physical level of existence. The typical American neither has spiritual dilemmas nor complications: he is a "natural" joiner and conformist. (en)
so:isPartOf https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Julius_Evola
so:description Julius Evola (en)
so:description Civilta Americana (1945; 1983) (en)
qkg:hasContext qkg:Context80761
Property Object

Triples where Mention164668 is the object (without rdf:type)

qkg:Quotation154600 qkg:hasMention
Subject Property