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Land of Zion and the Fountainhead of Fire
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- Nombre de pages212
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-6957-6474-7
- EAN9783695764747
- Date de parution29/04/2026
- Protection num.Digital Watermarking
- Taille652 Ko
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurBoD - Books on Demand
Résumé
Here, the intellectual history of the world is touched because it retraces the old lines along which humanity, again and again, searching, stumbling, rebelling, or yielding, tries to find its way. From the first mythical images through metaphysical systems, theological orders, the Enlightenment, and into the modern darkness of indifference. In this sense, it presents itself as a hermeneutic exploration and at the same time as a contribution to human ontology: it asks what, at the deepest level, constitutes the human being in their existence and interpretation.
Between remembering and forgetting there gapes a rift that cannot be closed. In the end, the question remains: is remembering a rescue or a curse? Is forgetting a betrayal or a necessity? Two approaches that move the human being at the core, like two voices in an endless night. Remembering carries the weight of the past, yet that weight can grind the soul down. Forgetting grants lightness, but often at the price of truth.
This tension is not merely a historical problem, but an existential drama. It determines how we love, how we mourn, how we act. It traces humanity itself, like an invisible scar inscribed into our existence from birth.
Between remembering and forgetting there gapes a rift that cannot be closed. In the end, the question remains: is remembering a rescue or a curse? Is forgetting a betrayal or a necessity? Two approaches that move the human being at the core, like two voices in an endless night. Remembering carries the weight of the past, yet that weight can grind the soul down. Forgetting grants lightness, but often at the price of truth.
This tension is not merely a historical problem, but an existential drama. It determines how we love, how we mourn, how we act. It traces humanity itself, like an invisible scar inscribed into our existence from birth.














