
caveat: Guenon’s traditionalism is slanted in favor of abrahamic religion and, though having its value, should be read with discernment to sort out the confusion of Abrahamism/magianism. For criticism of Guenon see ‘Against Traditionalism’ and ‘Criticism of Rene Guenon’
Rene Guenon
“Since WW II, ‘channeling’ has largely replaced older styles of mediumship in the movement loosely known as the New Age. Yet the two are intimately related. As both historical chronicle and metaphysical critique, The Spiritist Fallacy, together with its companion volume, History of a Pseudo-Religion, is a valuable study of New Age origins. Guénon takes the ‘spirit manifestations’ of the Fox sisters in Hydesville, New York (in 1847) as his starting-point, but while accepting the reality of many such ‘manifestations’, denies that they represent the spirits of the departed. He sees them, rather, as fostering belief in a kind of rarefied materialism, as though the ‘spirit of the deceased’ were no more than an invisible, quasi-material body, and death no more than a ‘shedding’ of the physical body while the ‘spirit’ remains otherwise unchanged-a belief widespread today in popular culture.”
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