Tagged: Martin Heidegger

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Beyond the Horizon: Plotinus on Eternity and Time

Kali Tribune's Department for Philosophy in conjunction with Laboratory of Broken Mics and Fractured English proudly presents an interpretative reading of Ennead III, 7. "On Eternity and Time" by Plotinus. The purpose of our inquiry is to demonstrate a peculiarities of the method of what we call "traditional metaphysics".

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Nothing on the Horizon: Introductory Passages of Heidegger’s “Being and Time”

KT's Department for Sanitary Measures in Modern Philosophy commences the reading of passages of introductory section of Martin Heidegger's "Being and Time". As Heidegger is often mentioned on these pages - and in quite negative light - we are obliged to provide some insights based on his own words. This video can serve as a companion piece for everybody lacking formal education in contemporary philosophy and following standard KT critiques of modern and postmodern intellectual deviations, where Heidegger's name, strangely enough, often seems to pop up.

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Prolegomena to Any Future Satanism: Order of the Nine Angles and Supremacy of the Fringe pt.3

In the third and final episode of our series on Order of the Nine Angles we conclude an analysis with outlining its political doctrine. Perhaps we'll leave the occultism leaning reader disappointed, but as it turns out it is all indeed about politics. Satanic for sure, but politics non the less.

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Prolegomena to Any Future Satanism: Order of the Nine Angles and Supremacy of the Fringe pt. 2

The second part of the analysis of LHP system focuses on metaphysical principles of the Order of the Nine Angles and peculiar emergence of Martin Heidegger's notions in some of the core writings of this hyper-modern Satanist organization. The affinity is by no means accidental, because, after all, there's only one Modernity and only one Satan.

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Against the Modern World: As If Only Heidegger Can Save Us Now

Kali Tribune proudly presents an article by premier Croatian, and in our opinion, European, philosopher of post-WW II period, Marijan Cipra (Marian Tsipra) almost nobody knows nothing about both in Croatia and Europe. This 1986. article deconstructs Heidegger's phenomenological mess and proceeds to proclaim the need of the negation of  a negation - a rebellion against the modern world, whose notable intellectual nusproduct is Heideggerian philosophy.