Friday, February 01, 2013

What best expresses the immediate language of the Will?


When life is seen as activated in the first place by the material Will-To-Godhood, or Tirips, and then shaped by natural evolution, it is religion more than art (Schopenhauer and early Nietzsche) or sex (Freud) that expresses what Nietzsche called the “immediate language of the Will.” This view of religion is the “suprahistorical” view which Nietzsche related to tragic art.

Religion is the profound simplification of the world more than art, bringing unity in the diversity of all the fields. In the holy mission of evolving to Godhood, as well as in the tragic view of art, the individual is consecrated to something higher than himself, which can help to free us from the anxieties of death and time. Religion corresponds to this extraordinary need, while sex and art can aid in this profound mission.

The religious-art creation of a Mass of Joy is needed, relating to the Outward Path of material evolution to Godhood, while we can retain the Mass of Sacrifice of the Inward Path, in which we reach the Father Within or God Within of traditional Christianity, which is seen as a mirror or virtual experience of attaining ascending levels of outward Godhood in material-super-material evolution.

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