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SOCIAL TRANSCENDENTALISM
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 239

SOCIAL TRANSCENDENTALISM

This project brings the ideological philosophy of Social Transcendentalism more or less systematically into the open for the first time, and does so from a variety of genre perspectives - essays, dialogues, aphorisms and maxims - with a view to examining and propounding the ideology in question from as many different philosophical angles as possible. As suggested by the title, the end is transcendental, but the means are socialistic (which is not the same as socialism, since transcendentalism remains the fulcrum and therefore determines the form of what is less than transcendent), and therefore aimed at taking the masses of a specific type of society to an entirely new ideological destination by dint of the fact that the impetus for this stems not from below (as in socialism) but from above, in relation to a kind of messianic resolve affiliated with all things transcendental.

The Road to Social Transcendentallism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 910

The Road to Social Transcendentallism

Here, at length, is a loose quartet of books comprising author John O'[Loughlin's collected multigenre philosophical writings, all of which originally date from the early 1980s and embrace, besides essays and disalogues (rather antithetically), what he calls aphorisms and maxims, whether or not also dubbed 'notational', thereby combining all such genres on a more collectivized basis than was originally the case, and with reference to what gradually developed into the ideological philosophy of Social Transcendentalism, as discussed more comprehensively as one proceeds along the metaphorical 'road' through each of the individual books of this substantive volume towards its culmination and effective philosophical apotheosis.

The Centre of Truth
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 138

The Centre of Truth

A revised and reformatted philosophical weblog project from 2009 by John O'Loughlin of Centretruths ... with material largely culled from anoox.com. A significant step beyond his last such collection, 'The Quest for Truth'.

Terminological Dictionary
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 87

Terminological Dictionary

This is John O'Loughlin's first and, to-date, only attempt at writing a dictionary, in which the terminology follows alphabetically in chronological spelling order, and, needless to say, it's in conjunction with the ideological philosophy of Social Transcendentalism that such a project was initially launched, with, it would appear, an acceptable degree of structural and thematic credibility to warrant such a seemingly portentous title - one, however, that must rank amongst the author's best philosophical works for its exacting comprehensiveness and daring originality. The cover shows an upended CND-type emblem with masculine and feminine signs, as though to signify a 'supercross' appropriate, for the author, to Social Transcendentalism, and therefore conceived as the logical successor to the so-called 'true cross' of Roman Catholicism.

DEISTIC DELIVERANCE
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 135

DEISTIC DELIVERANCE

DEISTIC DELIVERANCE (Via The Ideological Philosophy of Social Transcendentalism)is yet another of John O'Loughlin's volumes of cyclically aphoristic philosophy (theosophy?) in which, with the aid of spiralling cycles, he has striven to grant a certain political definition to the philosophy in question, making it more than just a theory of life, but a vehicle whereby life can be changed for the better and people become liberated from their mortal chains and, no less importantly, from those who would avail of them for ungodly purposes.

BRINGING THE JUDGEMENT
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 126

BRINGING THE JUDGEMENT

BRINGING THE JUDGEMENT is one of those 'abstract' volumes of cyclic philosophy which are all about cycles and numbers rather than title headings, and in this case we have some twenty-five cycles plus an appendix which deal with a variety of Social Transcendentalist concerns and postulates, including an examination of the dichotomy, relative to gender, between objectivity and subjectivity, and of how these operate within the basic elemental structures already outlined in previous books by the author.

STAIRWAY TO JUDGEMENT
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 74

STAIRWAY TO JUDGEMENT

Subtitled 'The Way to the Eternal Life of Social Theocratic Truth', STAIRWAY TO JUDGEMENT extends beyond 'Radical Progress' (2003) in its comprehensively exacting approach to axial relativity and the differences which characterize each approach to civilization, and shows just how careful one must be in defining what appertains to 'the world' and/or 'the people', if one isn't to fall between two stools or, in this case, axes, to the detriment of truth.

The Apocalypso Quartet
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 252

The Apocalypso Quartet

Besides the book entitled 'Apocalypso - The New Revelation', this project also includes 'At the Crossroads of Axial Divergence', 'Opti-mystic Projections' and 'Unflattering Conclusions', all of which do further justice to the ideological philosophy of Social Transcendentalism and its Social Theocratic antipathy to Social Democracy.

Between Truth and Illusion
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 129

Between Truth and Illusion

Mr O'Loughlin's first exercise in philosophy, dating from 1977, takes as its starting-point an analysis of the inter-relativity of dualities and expands, via a series of aphoristic essays and dramatic lessons, towards a dialogue climax in which the two - inevitably! - characters discuss the implications of a dualistic philosophy both as it impacts on theory and practice. Although the author didn't realize it at the time, truth and illusion are a lot closer together than may at first appear to be the case, even if one doesn't necessarily have to get between them!

Collected Philosophical Essays
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 314

Collected Philosophical Essays

As John O'Loughlin's mature works became increasingly aphoristic and hence, to his mind, increasingly metaphysical, with what he would regard as truth effectively eclipsing the fumblingly discursive nature of essays and, indeed, knowledge generally, he totally abandoned both the essays (as here) and the dialogues (published in a separate collective volume), together with such early aphoristic material that at least had the merit, so far as he was concerned, of anchoring him in a more genuine approach to philosophy than could ever be found in works of a philosophical nature diluted by prose and, hence, by a discursive want of both logic and system unworthy, in his estimation, of true philosop...