Dionysus, Christ, and the Death of God, Volume 1
The Great Mediations of the Classical World
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This magisterial reflection on the history and destiny of the West compares Greco-Roman civilization and the Judeo-Christian tradition in order to understand what both unites and divides them. Mediation, understood as a collective, symbolic experience, gives society unity and meaning, putting human beings in contact with a universal object known as the world or reality. But unity has a price: the very force that enables peaceful coexistence also makes us prone to conflict. As a result, in order to find a common point of convergence—of at-one-ment—someone must be sacrificed. Sacrifice, then, is the historical pillar of mediation. It was endorsed in a cosmic-religious sense in antiquity and rejected for ethical reasons in modernity, where the Judeo-Christian tradition plays an intermediate role in condemning sacrificial violence as such, while accepting sacrifice as a voluntary act offered to save other human beings. Today, as we face the collapse of all shared mediations, this intermediating solution offers a way out of our moral and cultural plight.
Contents Preface: The Black Sun of Europe Gnosiological Introduction: A Disregarded Philosophical Tradition Mystery Cults and Tragedy 1. The Labyrinth of Mythology 2. Orphism and the Eleusinian Mysteries 3. In the Heart of the Labyrinth: Euripides’s Cretans and Its Philosophical Meaning 4. Sacrificial and Erotic Metamorphoses in the Bacchae 5. The Hieros Gamos of Wet and Dry 6. Sapiential Reflections in the Bacchae 7. The Power and Failure of Divine Mediation 8. The Birth of Tragedy, the End of Classical Greece Intermezzo: The Toys of Dionysus; Comparison of Civilizations in the Hellenistic and Roman Periods 9. Judaism and Christianity in the Greco-Roman World 10. The Comparative Question between Judaism and Christianity Notes Bibliography Index