Thursday, 24 December 2020

Some Maxims and Missiles of Rivarol

A few “maxims and missiles,” or “pensées et paradoxes,” by the Comte de Rivarol, translated from Rivarol: avec une notice et une portrait (Paris: Mercure de France, 1906), pp. 351–9. For something similar, see “Selections from Vauvenargues” (this blog, 17 September 2020) and “Steps upon the Sand,” Azure Bell (20 October 2020).


Men are not as wicked as you say. Twenty years it took you to write a bad book; and but a moment it took them to forget it.

“You spoke a lot with some rather annoying men.” “I spoke for fear of listening.”

Wednesday, 18 November 2020

Golo Mann on the Conservative Revolution in Germany

Golo Mann’s discussion of the Conservative Revolution in The History of Germany since 1789 (Penguin, 1985) begins with Oswald Spengler, whose positions (anti-Hohenzollern, socialist, anti-progressive, militarist), mark the beginning of a novel movement, “overthrowing conventional ways of thinking in politics.” For Mann, the C.R. is “confused,” a “strange combination of words,” and yet somehow, perfectly simple: Conservative Revolutionists “rejected not certain aspects of the Republic but the whole of it, and the whole present; they [] wanted to ask completely new questions and offer completely new ideas” (p. 620).

Their temperament was unsuited to parliamentarism or the new international order, though suited to poetry and the formation of groupuscules (pp. 620–1). Mann provides a perfect, lapidary, aphoristic précis of “the conservative-revolutionary attitude” (Mohler): “They wanted a new Reich without party squabbles, a Reich of the young and of masculine virtues, a great, proud gathering around a camp-fire instead of the capital Berlin. They expected much more from the modern state than it can give them at the best of times” (p. 621). Here we have their anti-parliamentarism, the spirit of the Freikorps (“the Ideas of 1914”), the bündisch spirit. And of course “the best of times,” measured by “quality of life,” which strikes them as the coming of the Last Man: see Leo Strauss on “German Nihilism” Interpretation, 26.3 (spring, 1999), specifically p. 360.

Saturday, 14 November 2020

Kondylis on Conservatism with Notes on Conservative Revolution

Notes on Panagiotis Kondylis, “Conservatism as a Historical Phenomenon.” This is to my knowledge the only substantial excerpt from Kondylis’ Konservativismus (Stuttgart, 1986) available in English. The translation is by “C.F.” from “Ὁ συντηρητισμὸς ὡς ἱστορικὸ φαινόμενο,” Λεβιάθαν, 15 (1994), pp. 51–67, and remains unpublished, but discoverable in PDF format online. Page references below are to that PDF. I have altered the translation very slightly in some places.

Kondylis aims to understand conservatism not as a “historical” or “anthropological constant,” but as a “concrete historical phenomenon” bound to, and thus coterminous with, a time and a place (pp. 1–2). But even such historicist scholarship often takes too narrow a view, according to which conservatism is a reaction against, and thus “derivative” of, the Revolution, or, at best, against Enlightenment rationalism (pp. 2–3).

Thursday, 12 November 2020

Stefan Breuer, Panagiotis Kondylis and the Question of “Conservative Revolution”

Alain de Benoist, “Intervista sulla rivoluzione conservatrice,” Terra Insubre (2007):

Stefan Breuer disputed that one can speak of “conservatism” or of “neo-conservatism” when it comes to the Conservative Revolution. He depended for this purpose upon the works of Panagiotis Kondylis, who, in a large work published in 1986, declared that conservatism, entering into an irreversible decline in the second half of the nineteenth century, was unable to rejuvenate itself in Germany on account of its historical links with the Ancien Régime. For Kondylis, the progressive elimination of the nobility, the caste that sustained historical conservatism, doomed political conservatism, which could not survive on its own, except by accommodating liberalism, or by “aestheticizing” certain of its foundations.

Thursday, 17 September 2020

Selections from Vauvenargues

Clarity beautifies deep thoughts.

There are no errors that, rendered clearly, would not erase themselves.

That a thought is too feeble to bear simple expression is the sign to reject it.

Courage is better armed against disgrace than reason.

Reason and liberty are incompatible with weakness.

War is not as onerous as servitude.

Thursday, 13 August 2020

“Conservative Revolution” in England—a Sketch

“Conservative Revolution” is a phrase unfamiliar to English politics (as self-identification) or to English scholarship (as well-defined category in the history of political thought).

C.R. in Germany originated as a self-identification (Dietz [b], n. 33 to chap. 1, pp. 215–6) tied up in a self-perception of “German uniqueness” (Sonderweg) (Mohler [b], part 2). That C.R. in Germany is as disputed—from without, in scholarship—as the nation’s “special path” (Klemperer) is a sign of the category’s potency.

Since C.R., rather than a narrowly- and contingently-delimited movement or ideology, is an “attitude” (Mohler [b], p. 229)—a setting oneself against “the Ideas of 1789” on the one hand, and the timidity of mere conservatism on the other—it ought to obtain, in potency if not in act, beyond Germany’s borders.

Dugin explores C.R. in Russia; Veneziani in Italy. Mohler (a) makes some suggestions re. France.

The possibility of C.R. in England was suggested first by Hoeres, then by Dietz (a). Hoeres suggests T. E. Hulme as a figure significantly analogous to German Conservative Revolutionists. Dietz (a) suggests that “neoconservative” Conservative Party circles around Douglas Jerrold and Charles Petrie might constitute an analogue to the Jungkonservativen (see Mohler [b], part 5.2).

Dietz revises his position slightly in (b), detailing “Neo-Tory” goings-on in and around the Conservative Party between the Wars. “Neo-Toryism,” in Dietz’s outline, is regrettably unknown by English politics (as self-identification) and scholarship (as well-defined and potent category). His analogies are worth developing; but he leaves valid analogies unmade. I’ll just sketch both here.

Tuesday, 30 June 2020

Raymond Aron, “Maurrassism and Gaullism” (1964)


“Maurrassisme et gaullisme,” Le Figaro (17 December 1964). Draft translation, 2020. A brief, journalistic piece; but interesting, certainly to those concerned with de Gaulle, and perhaps to those concerned with Aron, too.

French original:


PDF of this version:


Monday, 25 May 2020

Claudio Mutti, Interview with Aurel Cioran


Interview conducted 3 August 1995, Sibiu. Note that Emil Cioran had died on 20 June that year. Italian original, Origini 13 (February 1996). This translation made from the French version in Nouvelles de Synergies Européennes 22 (August–September 1996). Cioran offers interesting reflections on his brother’s relationship with religion, youth, and involvements with Nae Ionescu and the Legionary movement.

French version:



PDF of this translation:


Tuesday, 19 May 2020

Carlos Caballero, “Mystics and Conquerors: Cioran and the History of Spain” (1988)

Provisional translation of “Mystiques et Conquérants: Cioran et l’histoire d’Espagne,” Punto y Coma 10 (1988). The present translation was made from Nicole Bruhwiler’s French version in Orientations 13 (1991) as it appears at http://www.archiveseroe.eu/. Quotations from Cioran are my own translations, and will therefore differ from Richard Howard’s authoritative versions. I have not located every quotation, and have left Caballero’s citations untouched.

PDF of this version:


Original:



Sunday, 19 April 2020

Interesting Copies of Kant’s First Critique and Leibniz’s Discourse


A few weeks before I first went up to university, I was given a haul of old philosophy books by a relative of a family friend. Among them were two very tired volumes full of arachnidan annotations and odd scraps of paper (something I tend to consider a plus).

First, Leibniz, George R. Montgomery (transl.), Discourse on Metaphysics, etc. (Chicago: Open Court, 1931), with the front cover fallen off but still present; second, Kant, Norman Kemp Smith (transl.), Critique of Pure Reason (London: Macmillan, 1929), with the front cover fallen off and left who knows where. The latter is a first edition of Kemp Smith’s notable translation, and so a very nice thing, but in a bad state.

Friday, 17 April 2020

R. L. Nettleship’s Uncollected Works


Excepting translations from German, letters to Thring and Bosanquet published in volumes of selected letters of those men, and edited volumes of Green’s works, the publications of Richard Lewis Nettleship not included in the two-volume Remains are, I think, as follows.



Infinite cheers to archive.org for the facsimiles! If there’s anything I’ve left out, please do say.

New Acquisition: R. L. Nettleship, Philosophical Remains (1901)

Under this universal house-arrest, couriers scamper hither and yon to sustain the rest of us, who work—or not—from home. Which means that, while bookshops are closed, I was still able to order Richard Lewis Nettleship’s Philosophical Remains (second ed., London: Macmillan, 1901), which arrived, despite warnings of delay from Amazon, in only three days. Thanks very much to Savery Books of Brighton.


Saturday, 11 April 2020

“Philosophistisiren” with Novalis, Pater, Nettleship


Novalis, in one of his Logologische Fragmente:

Philosophistisiren ist dephlegmatisiren—vivificiren.

Two translations thereof, with their context. First by Walter Pater in his conclusion to The Renaissance:

The service of philosophy, of speculative culture, towards the human spirit is to rouse, to startle it into sharp and eager observation. Every moment some form grows perfect in hand or face; some tone on the hills or the sea is choicer than the rest; some mood of passion or insight or intellectual excitement is irresistibly real and attractive for us,—for that moment only. Not the fruit of experience, but experience itself, is the end.

And second by Richard Lewis Nettleship in “The Value of Theory,” one of his Lectures on Logic (cf. Philosophical Remains, second ed. [London: Macmillan, 1901], p. 128):

To philosophise is to get rid of one’s phlegm, to acquire a vivid consciousness of some aspect of reality. This is the value of theory or thinking; but thinking which is not also producing, thinking which leaves experience what it was before, has no value.

To philosophise is to dephlegmatise—to vivify. What would this be in blue-eyed English? The phlegmatic are peaceable, equanimous. To “get rid of one’s phlegm,” then, is to rouse oneself to—passion? But that’s bastard Latin. Perhaps:

To lust after wisdom is to stir up strife in one’s heart, to grow newly alive.

Tuesday, 7 April 2020

Section 18 of Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy


(I just found this little note I wrote in May 2019, when I was at university studying Nietzsche. B.T. 18 struck me as a germinal microcosm of much of F.N.’s mature philosophy—including his ideas on cultural-historical cycles, underplayed in Nietzsche scholarship, but a special interest of mine.)

“Voracious” creators fuel their activity with illusion, one of the three principal kinds, which correspond to types of society, themselves fuelled (?) by that type of illusion:

Kind: Illusion: Society
Apolline: Veil of beauty: Hellenic
Dionysiac: Undercurrent of “eternal life”: Indian
Socratic: Knowledge as salvation: Alexandrian

At the end of this Socratic cycle, we are in a time of Alexandrianism. Such a society requires a slave-caste to survive: the properly Socratic element is a flower of the culture, a luxury, and consequently fragile. Cf. F.N.’s essay “on the Greek State.”

There is a danger from below in the form of this slave caste grown discontent; and in this is the germ of his insights into resentment become fertile. This class “learn[s] to consider its existence an injustice,” the mere rhetoric of human rights (e.g.) having ceased to “console.”

There is a danger from above: elite disillusionment; critical philosophy; “the blight that lies dormant in the womb of theoretical culture.” The Alexandrian fears the consequences of his form of life and lacks his former confidence. No longer wanting “anything whole,” he doesn’t plunge but dithers on the shore: “at bottom a librarian or a corrector of proofs,” impotent.

But there is also a way onward and upward: a new “tragic man” of “proud audacity” who would live tragically, wean himself off the “art[s] of metaphysical consolation” and train himself for “seriousness and terror.”

Wednesday, 1 April 2020

Aleksandr Dugin, “Evola’s Conservative Revolution in Metaphysics” (1994)


My provisional translation of Dugin’s 1994 address to the Fondazione Julius Evola. These fifteen pithy theses expose the bare bones of Dugin’s reading of Evola. Dugin’s political preoccupations at the time are present in the emphasis on Evola’s “metaphysical leftism” and the possibility of an at once spiritual and political “third way” (as in terza posizione, etc.). Printed in Orion 9 (1994) in Italian. This translation was made from a French version in Nouvelles de Synergies Européennes 6 (1994).

Of Dugin’s trip to the West, the editor of N.S.E. reports that

In June of this year, Aleksandr Dugin visited France, Spain and Italy. Accosted by the police at the moment of his landing in Paris, Aleksandr Dugin was interrogated for three hours by the boorish rozzers, and was made to hand over issues of his journal, Elementy (so that he was subjected to censorship!), thereby depriving a number of official French institutions (the Centre national de la recherche scientifique, etc.), who had requested review copies, of these texts! Does the police have the right to prohibit researchers from accessing documentation? In Italy, he was received triumphantly at the Institute of International Relations in Milan, by General Jean at the Italian Ministry of National Defence, and by numerous cultural organisations. Our readers will appreciate the difference between a country governed by regular politicians, and a country governed by uncultured thugs, by boors and by scoundrels.

Thursday, 12 March 2020

Armin Mohler, “Zeev Sternhell, New Historiographer of Fascism” (1986)


My translation of Armin Mohler’s “Zeev Sternhell, nouvel historiographe du fascisme,” from Généalogie du fascisme français (Geneva: Idhuna, 1986). Mohler gives an excellent review to Sternhell’s study of the birth of fascism out of French socialism and nationalism. Mohler finds in Sternhell a kindred spirit. Of particular interest is the “conceptual rhyme” between Sorel’s account of myth and Sternhell’s account (per Mohler) of historical realities.

French original:


PDF of this translation:


Wednesday, 11 March 2020

Evola and Italian Philosophy, 1925–49: Three Biographical and Bibliographical Essays


The following essays all appeared in Vouloir 119–121 (1996), the supplement to the revue Orientations, edited by Robert Steuckers. They centre on Julius Evola’s relations with the two major figures of Italian philosophy in the interwar period.

In “Evola, ultime tabou?” (pp. 1–3), Gianfranco de Turris asks if the rehabilitation enjoyed by such philosophers as Giovanni Gentile, previously denounced as Fascist, might be afforded to Evola. He briefly sketches the case in his favour: unlike the marginal crank of post-War imagination, Evola seems to have maintained relations with such figures of the first rank as Gentile and Benedetto Croce. In “Gentile/Evola: une liaison ami/ennemi…” (pp. 3–5) Stefano Arcella examines Evola’s fertile collaboration with Gentile and Ugo Spirito on the Enciclopedia Italiana. And in “Quand Benedetto Croce ‘sponsorisait’ Evola” (pp. 5–7) Alessandro Barbera investigates the Croce connection, looking in some detail at the correspondence between Evola, Croce, and the publisher Laterza.

French originals:


PDF of this translation:


Monday, 9 March 2020

Armin Mohler, “Homage to Oswald Spengler” (1982)


My translation of Mohler’s “Hommage à Oswald Spengler,” Orientations 1 (1982). Mohler presents Spengler as aligned with the Conservative Revolution, emphasising his Nietzschean aspects, and placing him in a tradition of implicitly anti-Platonist and “nominalist” thought (in Mohler’s special sense of the term).

French original:


PDF of this translation:


Guillaume Faye, “Finishing with Western Civilisation” (1980)


My translation of Faye’s “Pour en finir avec la civilisation occidentale,” Éléments 34 (1980). This text distinguishes and advocates Europe (or Hesperia) over-against “the Western system.” The nouvelle droite-period Faye (before 1987), whom we see at work here, is quite different from the post-hiatus Faye (1998–2019) known to the Anglophone world. Note the apparently positive assessment of political Islam (p. 5) and the opposition to the identitarianism with which he came to be associated (pp. 6–7).

French original:


PDF of this translation:


Related texts on rival strains in European thought and deed:



Saturday, 7 March 2020

Dominique Venner, “Julius Evola: Philosophy and Direct Action” (2008)


My translation of Dominique Venner’s short editorial, “Evola: Philosophie et action directe,” Nouvelle Revue d’Histoire 37 (2008). By 2008, Venner was known as an historian; but signs of a sympathy born of youthful activism (in French analogues of the Italian movements he describes) remain. The text is still a good introductory overview.

But the following texts go into greater depth:

Mark Sedgwick, Against the Modern World (Oxford: O.U.P., 2004), prologue, pp. 11–2; parts II.5, III.9 and IV.11.

Franco Ferraresi, “Les références théorico-doctrinales de la droite radicale en Italie,” Mots 12 (March 1986), pp. 7–27.

—, “Julius Evola: Tradition, Reaction and the Radical Right,” European Journal of Sociology 28, 1 (1987), pp. 107–51.

French original:


PDF of this version:


Thursday, 27 February 2020

Avison’s Analogies between Music and Painting


Part I, section II of Charles Avison’s Essay on Musical Expression (London: Lockyer Davis, 1775) treats of “the Analogies between Music and Painting.” The principles of painting are more widely understood than those of musical composition; so analogies with the former can provide a way into the latter (pp. 18–9).


1


“They are both founded in geometry, and have proportion for their subject.” “[V]ibrations of musical strings […] are as capable of mensuration, as any of those visible objects about which painting is conversant” (p. 19). Both the represented object of painting and the rendered structure of music are formal, i.e. mathematisable. Both are abstract, and variously realisable.


2


The “excellence” of a painting: “design, colouring, and expression” (ibid.). A lot has been made of the first two categories over the years: witness the disegnocolorito controversy in Renaissance painting. Avison seems to mean the represented form and the pigments used to represent it. One could generalise these to the divisions of the surface, and all the qualities of the divided—hue, intensity and value (light–dark and warm–cold).

Thursday, 13 February 2020

A. W. Dow on Appreciation

We know from Plato (Republic, 601d–2a) that the “quality, beauty and fitness” (transl. Lee, 1974 [1955]) of an object, or its “excellence or beauty or rightness” (transl. Cornford, 1941)—or, better, its “excellence or virtue”—depends upon its use. Thus, an object’s user, having gained the most thorough acquaintance with it, best knows its use. Its manufacturer, wishing to make a good (“virtuous”) object, should consult its user; thereby, he comes to believe rightly about the object and its virtues.

Knowledge by acquaintance is proper to the user qua user, and (true) belief to the manufacturer qua manufacturer.

Nicolas Poussin provided the following definition of painting in a 1665 letter to the Sieur de Chambray:

C’est une Imitation faicte auec lignes et couleurs en quelque superficie de tout ce qui se voit dessoubs le Soleil, sa fin est la Délectation [Correspondance (Paris: Jean Schemit, 1911), p. 462].

Painting’s “end,” purpose, or use is delectation. Its user is the art lover, who delights in it. if a painter wishes to make a good painting, he must consult the art lover, its user. This inner dilettante, “inner critic,” or assimilation by maker-as-such of user-as-such—is, according to Arthur Wesley Dow, “the divine gift APPRECIATION” (Composition [New York: Doubleday, 1913], p.128).


Friday, 17 January 2020

Armin Mohler, “Before History: Some Unsystematic Remarks” (1975)


My translation, rather provisional, of Armin Mohler’s “Devant l’histoire: quelques remarques non-systématiques,” Nouvelle École 27–28 (1975). These few brief theses bear the marks of Mohler’s “nominalism,” his term for his rejection of the “eternally valid” in politics, and of his anti-systematic thought. If you have any critical comments on this translation in particular (but any of my efforts), please do say. These are in part an exercise for me; I'm eager to improve.

The French original can be found at


And a PDF of this translation at


Regarding “nominalism” from Nietzsche to Mohler to Alain de Benoist:


Interview with Armin Mohler (1994)


My translation of an interview with Armin Mohler in Éléments 80 (1994). Of particular interest to the history ideas must be his comments on the applicability of the category “conservative revolution” to France. Mohler’s best known work is his history of the Conservative Revolution in Germany, recently translated into English by F. R. Devlin (2018), which began as a doctoral dissertation in 1949 supervised by Karl Jaspers, and went through many editions over the years.

The French original is available at


And a PDF of this version at


Monday, 13 January 2020

Guillaume Faye, “The Clash of World-conceptions” (1993)


My translation of Guillaume Faye’s “Le choc des conceptions du monde,” Vouloir 97–100 (January–March 1993). Faye was a political scientist associated for a time with Alain de Benoist and the semi-legendary nouvelle droite. As this interesting essay shows, Nietzsche’s and Heidegger’s rereadings of the philosophical tradition made a great impression on his thought.

The original French text is available at Archives EROE:


A PDF of this version is available here:


Wednesday, 8 January 2020

Herrschafts-Gebilde, Schemes of Sovereignty, Structures of Domination


On the Genealogy of Morals, II 17. Nietzsche’s original, 1887:

Ihr Werk ist ein instinktives Formen-schaffen, Formen-aufdrücken, es sind die unfreiwilligsten, unbewusstesten Künstler, die es giebt:—in Kürze steht etwas Neues da, wo sie erscheinen, ein Herrschafts-Gebilde, das lebt, in dem Theile und Funktionen abgegrenzt und bezüglich gemacht sind, in dem Nichts überhaupt Platz findet, dem nicht erst ein „Sinn“ in Hinsicht auf das Ganze eingelegt ist.

Transl. Horace B. Samuel, 1913:

Their work is an instinctive creating and impressing of forms, they are the most involuntary, unconscious artists that there are:—their appearance produces instantaneously a scheme of sovereignty which is live, in which the functions are partitioned and apportioned, in which above all no part is received or finds a place, until pregnant with a “meaning” in regard to the whole.

And transl. Carol Diethe, 1994:

What they do is to create and imprint forms instinctively, they are the most involuntary, unconscious artists there are:—where they appear, soon something new arises, a structure of domination that lives, in which parts and functions are differentiated and related to one another, in which there is absolutely no room for anything that does not first acquire “meaning” with regard to the whole.

Keith Ansell-Pearson, Nietzsche and Political Thought, p. 98, offers “complex of mastery.” Others include “ruling structure” and “domination-formation.”

“[T]he German word Herrschafts-Gebilde,” explains Franz Graf zu Solms-Laubach, “‘forms of domination,’ means both abstract as well as concrete forms of domination” (Nietzsche and Early German and Austrian Sociology [2007], p. 26).

“Structure of domination,” to the modern ear, has a moralistic, condemnatory overtone. Samuel’s “sovereignty” captures more of the rich resonances of the original “Herrschaft.” “Mastery” would do it better, though: Herrschaft and mastery suggests also the craft and virtù of the master or dominus.

Maudemarie Clark in Nietzsche on Ethics and Politics (Oxford, 2015): “As the result of brutish, forcible interaction, the interaction among these primitive humans is no longer simply brute and forced: it has become political” (p. 279). “To the extent that there is a ‘whole,’ there is a foothold for judgments that can be made about […] what is just or fair” (ibid.).

And re. the emergence of unity, Nietzsche, quoted in Ansell-Pearson, p. 97:

All unity is only as organisation and interplay unity: not otherwise than how a human community is a unity: so, opposite of atomistic anarchy; therewith a complex of rule, which signifies One, but is not one.

Tuesday, 7 January 2020

Old posts on Nietzsche, mostly

Thematic index of posts from an ole blarg with an embarrassing name. Quotes and notes.


Posts on Nietzsche


F.N.'s story of the origin of the state is a version of the Männerbünde myth so popular with conservative revolutionaries.

http://unterrified.blogspot.com/2019/04/nietzsche-on-origin-of-state.html

F.N. was a pan-Europeanist.

http://unterrified.blogspot.com/2019/03/nietzsche-our-belief-in-virilising-of.html


On Nietzsche and Cioran


Cioran treats the Nietzschean theme of "the problem of Europe" in Écartèlement. The real pessimist, says Evola in Cavalcare, sees even will-to-power as vanitas. Cioran was a real pessimist. For him, Nietzsche's thirst for politics in the Grand Style is symptomatic; but no less so for Nietzsche is a pessimism like Cioran's.

http://unterrified.blogspot.com/2019/03/the-problem-of-europe-in-emil-cioran.html

Polish aristocrat, Piedmontese dandy, Swiss professor or aphorist alla francese, but German? Never!

http://unterrified.blogspot.com/2019/06/cioran-on-style-why-nietzsche-is-not.html


Miscellanea


How unconscious are the artists of the state?

http://unterrified.blogspot.com/2019/04/susan-sontag-on-aestheticised-politics.html

Continuity between Nietzsche, the conservative revolution and the nouvelle driote.

http://unterrified.blogspot.com/2019/04/the-nominalism-of-mohler-and-de-benoist.html

A bit of Cyril Connolly.

http://unterrified.blogspot.com/2019/03/connollys-last-comment.html

Some speculative Nordicist anthropology.

http://unterrified.blogspot.com/2019/04/grnbech-on-teutons.html