Details, Explanation and Meaning About René Guénon

René Guénon Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

René Guénon (aka Sheikh 'Abd Al Wahid Yahya) (1886-1950) was a French-born author, philosopher, and social critic of the early 20th century. Founder of the Traditionalist School.

Born in Blois, France into a Catholic household, Guénon excelled as a youth in mathematics and philosophy. Dissatisfied with the status quo of modern society, he moved to Paris in 1907 and became deeply involved in a series of underground cultural movements, including occultism, Gnosticism, and an unorthodox sect of Hinduism. At the same time, he exposed himself to Islam, Christianity. He was at this time critical of Buddhism as a "Hindu heresy", but later accepted its validity when evidence of its essential orthodoxy was presented to him by Ananda Coomaraswamy.

Guénon began writing in the 1920s, after World War I, the war which was believed to end all wars. Western civilization was overwhelmed with a sense of relief and euphoria. Guénon, seeing this as delusion, criticized the society of his day as being disorganized and reckless. "It is as if an organism with its head cut off were to go on living," he wrote in 1924. Guénon's main criticism of despiritualized Western culture was its self-proud lack of recognition of a greater power which maintained a higher order than that of man.

Shortly after beginning his writing career, Guénon studied Sufism, despite a growing anti-religion prejudice in the country. Guénon believed in a universal objective spiritual truth, or religio perennis, of a supreme God and a hierarchy of spirits, which could be expressed in the terms of any religion. Guénon also believed that if this truth was presented properly, even the anti-religious intellectuals of his day would accept it. He wrote Introduction to the Study of Hindu Doctrines in 1921 in an attempt to begin expressing this truth.

Guénon left Paris in 1930 and moved to Cairo, Egypt, where he would remain for the rest of his life, living as a Sufi. Having offended the Paris intellectuals whom he considered his peers, especially with two books denouncing Occultism, he feared being attacked by his enemies via magic or spiritual energy, and lived primarily incognito.

Guenon was a Sufi Muslim since 1912, having chosen the name Abd al-Wahid Yahya. Guénon championed the validity of other religions as vehicles of the one same Truth, though designed for the acceptance of different cultures. Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam were among those with which he concerned himself most, in terms of rectifying their values as distortions of (but ultimately soundly based upon) the universal Truth.

Guénon wrote a compendium of universal spiritual symbols, Fundamental Symbols: The Universal Language of Sacred Science, which was published in 1962. It attempted to illustrate common meanings and interpretations of images, concepts, and symbolisms among major religions, again tying them all back into the truth explained by Hinduism.

Guénon did not believe in purely personal exposition and did not write or contribute to a biography.

Table of contents
1 Bibliography
2 See also
3 External links

Bibliography

Books written by René Guénon:
  • East and West (1924)
  • The Crisis of the Modern World
  • Insights into Islamic Esoterism & Taoism
  • Perspectives on Initiation
  • The Symbolism of the Cross
  • Man & His Becoming According to the Vedanta
  • The Reign of Quantity: And the Signs of the Times

See also

External links


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