King
of the World
By René
Guénon
Pub Date: 10/01
Publisher: Sophia Perennis
Binding: Paper, 110pp.
Status: Available 10/01
ISBN: 0900588543
Our Price 10% off $18.95
Related Books: Prophets,
Saints, Sages, and Teachers
Related Audio/Video: Martin Lings, Frithjof
Schuon and Rene Guenon
Editorial
Note
East
and West, first published in 1924, was the fourth of a series of
books that cleared the ground for Guénon’s later writings. His first
book, Introduction to the Study of the Hindu Doctrines (1921),
was an exposition of metaphysics as transmitted in the Hindu tradition,
and served to establish his specific use of important terms such as ‘esoterism’,
‘tradition’, and ‘orthodoxy’. He next set about writing two
extensive volumes critiquing what he called ‘pseudo-esoteric’
groups. The first of these, Theosophy: History of a
Pseudo-Religion (1921), is an exposé of Madame Blavatsky’s
Theosophical Society; the second, The Spiritist Fallacy (1923),
examines the current of nineteenth-century spiritism that set the stage
for many occult movements that appeared toward the end of that century.
Guénon’s application of traditional metaphysics to the special case
of pseudo-esoteric groups was then broadened in the present book to the
general question of East and West as conservators and transmitters of
traditional wisdom in the modern age. The titles of its two parts,
‘Western Illusions’ and ‘How the Differences Might be Bridged’,
describe perfectly the book’s intention. Later books, especially The
Crisis of the Modern World and its magisterial sequel, The Reign
of Quantity and the Signs of the Times, further extended Guénon’s
penetrating critique of the modern world.