By Michael O'Meara | 6 Comments |
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Race as Destiny
Author’s Note: The following excerpt is from a longer, footnoted article titled “Freedom’s Racial Imperative: A Heideggerian Argument for the Self-Assertion of Peoples of European Descent” that appeared in the fall 2006 issue of The Occidental Quarterly. Minor changes have been made for the sake of this format. Thanks to Dave Cooper for the idea.
Since the Cold War’s end, Heidegger has been the target of an on-going campaign of stigmatization and quarantine, for it’s now clear that he was not only an ardent supporter of the National Revolution of 1933, but a convinced (though idiosyncratic) National Socialist.
Surprisingly, though, the inquisitors deconstructing the suspect forces animating Heidegger’s thought stress that there’s “no spoor of biological racism” (George Steiner) in his published works.
It is, in fact, a matter of record that Heidegger opposed what Julius Evola and Francis Parker Yockey, along with Leon Trotsky, called the “zoological materialism” associated with “Nazi racism.”
Like the Italian and American prophets of Europe’s imperium, Heidegger believed the philistine, positivist, even liberal modernist character of so-called “scientific racism” was symptomatic of all the Conservative Revolution of the 1920s (of which National Socialism was an offshoot) had fought against.
Is it contradictory, then, to argue that the Heideggerian concept of freedom has a racial imperative?
Against a good deal of contemporary commentary, it must be insisted that Heidegger’s “anti-biologism” was not that of a nationalist indifferent to race, but rather that of one who subsumed the nation’s spiritual and demographic aspects within a single notion of being — a notion that may have privileged the former at the latter’s expense, but nevertheless one that presupposed the spirit’s manifestation within a specific biocultural community or Volk.
Emphasizing the history, destiny, and line of descent that makes a people a nation, the nationalism latent in Heidegger’s thought is reminiscent of what Walker Connor calls “nationalism in its pristine sense,” in that it designates “a people who believe they are ancestrally [i.e., biologically] related.”
Though a man’s body is subjectable to a purely biological analysis, Heidegger argues that it is never simply biological, but “something essentially other than an animal organism.”
This “other” belongs to man’s Dasein [i.e., to his quality as a situated expression of Being in a particular world at a particular moment in time] and thus has “a fundamentally different way of Being to that of nature.”
“Living, our body bodies forth as a wave in the stream of chaos — it is what comes to know, grasp, and take over the world.”
Biology in this way enters history and becomes historically significant.
Man’s body as such is not equivalent to a plant or animal organism, but part of man’s being-in-the-world, situated in that web of meanings, relationships, and histories which make up his world and which no science can successfully or adequately reduce to an empirical representation or valuation.
For the anti-scientistic Heidegger, the essence of a nation (or Volk) lies not in genetics, but in the destiny born of its collective experience of Being and time — or what in Contributions to Philosophy
he describes as that belongingness to a god who commands a people to go beyond itself to become the being inscribed in its destiny.
A people’s essence lies thus less in its organic manifestations (life) than in the being that makes it what it is (living): It lies in the being that forges blood and spirit into an identity defined by a specific destiny.
A purely biological construal, by contrast, reduces a “race” of men to one of Descartes’ abstract, becomingless objects — to something understandable factually or empirically, as if human races were analogous to those of the lower life forms.
Heidegger doesn’t say so explicitly, but the turn of his thought suggests that though a people’s blood may be basic to its biological formation, its determinants as a people, even genetically, reside elsewhere, outside of biology, in that Being whose inexplicable force molds a body of kindred human beings into a destining entity.
To contemporize a bit, one might say that for Heidegger man’s biological constitution (heredity) disposes him to certain cultural and other potentialities, but the latter are never mere offshoots of nature.
History, he argues, is not biology and culture is not applied zoology — except to a scientistic consciousness oblivious to all that distinguishes man from animal.

Edward Burne-Jones, "The Dream of Lancelot"
An analogy here might help. One wouldn’t claim the essence of Breker’s The Torchbearer or Burne-Jones’ Dream of Lancelot is the material from which it was sculpted or painted.
The essence of the German Volk — or any of Europe’s nations — is likewise not the DNA constituent of its genotype.
Instead, it is the spirit animating it, making it a people with a history, an origin, and a destiny.
In compelling it to experience the world in a way all its own, this spirit is not the cultural superstructure familiar to the anthropologist or sociologist, but something akin to “the power that comes from preserving at the most profound level the forces that are rooted in the soil and blood of a Volk, the power to arouse most inwardly and to shake most extensively the Volk’s existence.”
It is this spirit that nourishes the soul of a people and infuses its blood with a will to destiny.
Heidegger’s ontological defense of European man may therefore reject the scientific racism of bourgeois materialism, with its abstract, deracinated concept of human being, but he’s hardly indifferent to Europe’s racial heritage, for though emphasizing a Volk’s spiritual or destining character, he also sees that this entails a specific bodily expression of being.
In the historical world of European man, human biology and human being are indeed one, with the biological, the ontic, subsumed to the ontological realm of self-assertion — like the material subsumed in the artist’s vision.
Together, they comprise the Dasein of man and Volk, the blood and heritage of a people. For like the “and” in Being and Time, the “and” in “blood and heritage” is not additive but unitary. The two differ as terms, standing for different things, but there’s no heritage outside a specific blood group and no blood group without a heritage.
“Everything merely ‘organic’ is foreign to the law of history, as foreign as what is ‘logical’ in reason.”

Arno Breker, "The Great Torchbearer"
Human biology is consequently more ontological than zoological, more a product of Being than a facet of nature.
This is evident in such terms as “descent,” “lineage,” “heritage” — along with related notions of “breeding,” “upbringing,” “development,” “education,” “refinement,” and “culture” — terms evoking not animal instinct or even human consciousness, but rather a specific biocultural transmission of existence.
A people, in this Heideggerian sense, is not an autonomous, self-contained, ahistorical biological object, it’s not even specifically a gene pool, but a way of Being whose origin, history, and particular self-understanding is essential to what it is — even physiologically.
In order not to be misunderstood, let me stress that I’m not challenging the importance or even the primordiality of race as a zoological category, but rather subordinating our understanding of a race’s destining identity to philosophy’s larger ontological appreciation of its significance.
What Heidegger calls the “naturalist conception of human being” (i.e., the purely biological understanding of human race) has been integral to both liberal modernity and the history of the white man’s decline.
The roots of this conception are admittedly ancient. Aristotle was the first to see man as a special kind of animal — the rational animal (zoon logikon). With the 18th-century Enlightenment and the advent of liberal modernity, when “reason attained its full metaphysical rank,” this “humanist” concept became hegemonic, introducing an era which confused man, a being-outside-himself, with something “present-at-hand” (i.e., with the decontextualized substance of a quantifying science indifferent to a being’s specific qualities).

Arno Breker, "Torchbearer"
As Being in this scientistic conceptualization withdraws from human being, the latter is depleted, reduced to a one-dimensional ontology fit for an animal that moves about on all fours — not for an upright assertion of Being capable of producing Homer, the Greek temples, or the invincible Hoplites.
It’s pertinent here to point out that “scientific racism,” especially its Darwinian distillation, originated as an offshoot of liberal thought and that the zoological “metaphysics” of this racism (in understanding human existence at the animal level) played a not insignificant role in getting us into the predicament that threatens us today.
In this sense, it seems hardly coincidental that the liberals’ understanding of the “highest animal” excludes any understanding that humans differ from animals not just in their reason or consciousness, but in their caring for the Being of their being.
Relatedly, natural science, the inspiration for scientific racism, treats the body abstractly, objectifying, decontextualizing, and uprooting it from human being — for the sake of abstraction and objectification.
Against the naturalist conception, Heidegger holds that the human body is not simply a vehicle of drives and instincts, but something linked to the human assertion of Being.
Science may have the power to manipulate the world’s physical properties, but for Heidegger it ignores man’s “peculiar transposedness into the encompassing contextual ring of living beings.” It consequently misses what is most distinct and essential to him.
Accordingly, the Dasein of a Volk, like that of an individual, is not manifested in biology (at least not directly), but rather in the decisions it makes and the goals it sets for itself.
How it exists in the world in which it is thrown, how it appropriates the past it is bequeathed, the possibilities it pursues as it approaches the future, the call of destiny it heeds, the death it inevitably faces — these are what make a Volk what it is.
There is, moreover, nothing arbitrary or subjective in this. Dasein is not only being-there, but being-with (Mitsein). For the most radical individualization of Dasein is always situated within a larger collective context — of history and culture, to be sure, but also of kin, community, and Volk.
“Each man,” Heidegger writes, “is in each instance in dialogue with his forebears and perhaps even more, and in a more hidden manner, with those who come after him.”
Because an individual’s fate, like a nation’s destiny, is shaped by its specific heritage, individual Dasein is invariably a co-happening with a community or people, even if it should rebel against the dominant social trends or disavow its beliefs.
Unlike the quantitative, atomizing impulse of liberal modernity, which separates “I” from “we” and treats the former as if it were a monadic ego shorn of the history and heritage situating and defining it as a distinct way of Being, Heidegger’s approach dissolves individual boundaries.
The individualization of an individual consequently becomes a co-historicizing with a people.
Though potentially a force for conformity, Mitsein is a necessary condition for Dasein’s authentic realization.
Man and nation, Dasein and Mitsein, it follows, are free only to the degree they open themselves to what is inherent in their common heritage — to what constitutes the history of their related experience of Being — to what forms their destiny.
If a Volk exists as a Volk, then blood group, history, and destiny are one, for ontologically they constitute a single, encompassing experience of time and Being.
In this sense, a people’s essence transcends the purely “organic,” as it asserts its Dasein as a distinct destiny.
Otherwise, it ceases “to be” in any meaningful sense.


“Man and nation, Dasein and Mitsein, it follows, are free only to the degree they open themselves to what is inherent in their common heritage”
Ok. So, what is inherent in our common heritage?
What is our common heritage?
And who are “We” anyway?
“Whites”?
“Europeans”?
“European-Americans”?
TOQ Readers?
In short, what Volk are you talking about?
These seem to be very pertinent questions. Perhaps they’ll produce some interesting answers.
Here’s a good one.
“individual Dasein is invariably a co-happening with a community or people, even if it should rebel against the dominant social trends or disavow its beliefs.”
Now that’s more like it.
Dedalus,
The Volk here is Heidegger’s Volk, the Germans.
We Americans are not much of a people — especially now.
White nationalists, I believe, will be the first to found the American Nation, as they struggle for a homeland in North America (which was also what George Washington and his cabal did).
It helps then to know how a people — especially a truly great people like the Germans — lives out a marvelous destiny, full of beauty, thought, and courage — by enowning that which comes with its blood-felt expression of being.
Maybe the remnants of European America will turn again to Magna Europa — to encourage it to seize its destiny by throwing off the Yankee yoke, just as we will seize our destiny by enowning the cultural-genetic heritage we have received from our Patrie, Europa.
I was amazed to read these lines from the author of this article:
“…that belongingness to a god who commands a people to go beyond itself to become the being inscribed in its destiny.”
and:
It is this spirit that nourishes the soul of a people and infuses its blood with a will to destiny.
I have to confess that i have never read Heidegger, but reading this article makes me think I have come to the same ideas about man and his relation to animals, about destiny which defines a people, and the concept of meaning itself which cannot be detected with science because science isolates variables and meaning comes from collections of variables seen at once. This even relates to the fuel-for-intelligence commentary I made in the previous article advocating creative bottom-up revolutionary methods. Meaning and destiny, doing what is right based on these, are the fuel! This stuff that Heidegger talks about is the fuel for civilizations, for a people and their destiny. An impetus for great works. Pyramids are built on this stuff.
I used to say to my professors in grad school that there was no “spot” in the brain for any function, because every spot is defined by the other spots it is connected to. By itself, it is meaningless. The same argument can be made for every neuron, or every gene for that matter. Heidegger seems to be making that argument about the individual in his volk. I used to talk about these things with B.F. Skinner and Noam Chomsky in relation to language, and with the late Francis Crick about meaning in relationship to consciousness. Being a brain researcher investigating things like “dopamine in the ventrolateral striatum modulates the reward value of intracranial self-stimulation” (my masters project), I could see that aspects of our psychology and experience could not be explained by the very science I and other people were doing. There was something more there… I think Heidegger was grappling with this same basic theme echoed everywhere (I call such echoing themes the “logos echo” in my book).
I think the very existence of these echoing forms tells us something about the way the universe is structured. The way knowledge is gained and exists, and how we are able to perceive meaning itself — that confluence of specifics transcending space and time which give rise to something greater than the sum of its parts. I think this is what Heidegger is talking about when he says the individual vs “destiny”.
In my book “The Textbook of the Universe: The Genetic Ascent to God” I say things about the destiny of all life that echo these themes — viewing life itself as one great chain of being through time. If you look at it this way, you can clearly and unequivocally see that the white race is the figurehead and epitome of all life on Earth. Our destiny is different than any other organism that has existed that we know of. Our invention of science, and the rise of religion and the perennial philosophies before that, come from the exact same wellspring of motivation in us toward timeless truth — bringing things together through space and time to distill higher meaning from them. You can even look at evolution as consisting of this basic process — and survival in the long-term totally based on the ability of a group to do this. I go into detail about that in my book, but getting back to the article the following quote captures the grand theme echoing through everything from linguistic meaning to brains, to religion, etc.:
“Dasein is not only being-there, but being-with (Mitsein).” Meaning arises from the bringing together of events into contexts — even when it comes to people and their race. The fuel for the journey to destiny for our unique race comes from that destiny glimpsed through a glass darkly, and the obligation to the ancestors that died bringing that great destiny into the world. It is the birth of god, of ultimate meaning into the universe. These are weighty issues, relating to the very purpose of life itself. The stylish anti-racism of today is a withered dark-hearted gollum going after our throats compared to the path of light and truth epitomized in our race-destiny. It is a creeping death from a bite of a deadly snake…
We are the only race on Earth reverbrating with that destiny. We are in motion, we are in transition. We are full of the energy of creation because a new species is in the process of being born in us. Every new species was initially only a little different, it was enough though — it was on the path to a new destiny. Later as changes accumulated, the new species emerged like a sculptors ideal emerges from a stone. We can see where we are headed as a people, our ancestors could see it and wrote legends about it, allegories. We have pulled the sword from the stone as a PEOPLE — to put King Arthur in context… We have slain the dragon. We are in motion. Every other race is in a holding pattern, not in motion compared to us. They have had slight other changes which are sending them down different paths, toward different destinies unlike ours. They made their choices and the genes follow in a cycle that eventually becomes unstoppable once it has progressed enough. The presence of ideals and destiny — the knowledge of them — is our fuel. We have opened a new corridor to the future — we can see and feel it taking shape. Looking at our invention of science and freedom is evidence of our path and destiny as a people. But being freshly born onto this path in this world makes us vulnerable to those not sharing our path. Above all, WE need to be separated from other races or they could easily destroy our destiny.
We must not be stopped by those who do not share this destiny, and we must do what is necessary to move toward this destiny — this is the basis of all true morality for us in this universe. This is our source of life — the presence of our ideals, destiny, and path — and our knowledge of it. It is who we are, and it is our soul. What needs protecting more than this delicate cathedral, this torch of truth and light of all life?
Steven,
In reading through your posts on this site, including one in response to my own “Macroevolution-Microevolution” essay, I detect certain commonalities in your thought with the Cosmotheism of William Pierce. However, you’ve never explicitly mentioned Cosmotheism, making me wonder whether your ideas were developed independently or whether you distinguish them in some important sense from its tenets.
Are you familiar with Pierce’s Cosmotheism? Is it similar in some ways to your own thought?
I’ve read several of Pierce’s Cosmotheism essays. They may not be available online. Only excerpts were available the last time I looked. Several Pierce essays about it were posted on the no longer extant National Vanguard website. After it went down, a mirror of the site existed for awhile, then disappeared, but recently reappeared again.
Pierce’s 1970s talk, “Our Cause” is available online in audio format, and is quite interesting. My recollection is that it is Cosmotheist-themed. Prof. Robert Griffin also wrote about Cosmotheism in his biography of Pierce.
I am not a Cosmotheist myself, but loosely oriented toward agnosticism (not atheism)/deism/Zoroastrianism (dualism).
Zoroastrianism in particular strongly appeals to me. From the first time I dipped into it years ago I have regarded it the most Aryan of religions, much more so than paganism or historic (not present day Judeo- or social gospel) Christianity. Interestingly, it incorporates a genetic component, via paternal ancestry. Since it pre-dates Judaism, I have often wondered whether the founders of Judaism didn’t copy this and certain other elements (with alterations, of course) of the faith from Zoroastrians, with whom they were in close contact in ancient Persia. I honestly do not think Zoroastrians copied anything from Judaism.
Although I’d had several Heidegger articles, focused on different aspects, in a folder of his own for some time, it wasn’t until the last few days that I printed them out, adding the Majority Rights and TOQ threads entitled respectively “Heidegger and the Nazis, the concrete and the spirit” and “Heidegger the ‘Nazi’.”
http://majorityrights.com/index.php/weblog/comments/heidegger_and_the_nazis_the_concrete_and_the_spirit/ and
http://www.toqonline.com/2010/02/heidegger-the-nazi-part-1/
After all that reading–difficult since it was new to me–this present article, Race as Destiny, was for me a perfect zeroing in and summing up of the most important theme in Heidegger’s writings. One of the things I realized as I finished reading is that I’ve changed my perspective on our potential movement and my place in it. Something else that I read during the past few days (redeemed only by worthwhile comments from CC and Neoboudica) was the TOO article on the use of the word “Whites” to describe ourselves, and that also contributed to my thinking.
The problem of what to call ourselves has existed since as long as I’ve been around this movement. In the beginning, I knew primarily that I was anti-Jewish, having discerned their intentional, collective, self-benefitting behavior. Becoming familiar with racial considerations, I rejected Nordicism, even though I’m entirely Nordic, on grounds that it excluded good people, good Whites, and deprived us of their numbers.
What I see is that my passion has always been very particularly connected with things German; that’s what stirs my blood. When I think of our “movement,” I wonder if, rather than marching en masse behind a large “White” banner, we should not be carrying separate flags – an Alliance of separate but related groups.
In my imagination, following the lead of the Freestaters who packed up and moved to New Hampshire with a goal of forming a voting bloc in their own interests (and, I forgot, Israel), rather than shipping Blacks and/or Mexicans back to their homelands, I see us rallying America’s Germanics (for example) to return to their homeland to attempt to win control back from the enemies now in charge.
Andrew Hamilton,
Yes my views are very similar to Pierce’s Cosmotheist views. I came to my ideas independently as a result of distilling my general studies, thinking about meaning and the brain against the panorama of evolution, and as a consequence of the phenomena of religion and the perennial philosophy of mankind. I also read a lot on the history of mysticism, and the early origins of science which were also often quite mystical — such as the pythagoreans and the alchemists. That is not at all strange to me, because the deep inner motivation and longing which powers science and religion is the same thing. I consider even the “Epic of Gigamesh” — the oldest writing of mankind — to be an expression of both the deep raw science and religious impulses of mankind, cosmotheist in many important ways. What is written in the Epic of Gigamesh is the core principle of the march of life through billions of years. It is also the core impetus to science. It is also the motivation of religions. The “flower of immortality”. I think anyone who is truly concerned unselfishly with truth and the future of mankind, and motivated to think about them objectively, would be basically cosmotheist in outlook. I had no idea what I was thinking was even called “cosmotheist” until I read Dr. Pierce’s stuff on the topic. I first heard his Cosmotheism speech from the 70′s on tape, and it was a religious almost mystical experience for me to find a kindred soul out there. There is hope in that. I think The basic Cosmotheist-oriented ideas are extremely important, and echo the most basic path of all life. I could write for a long time just on that.
When I heard and read that William Pierce also espoused something similar to what I (and others — see “Beyondism” by Raymond Cattell, for example) had come to via a different route, it was a revelation–one of those amazing experiences where you read something and the person is also thinking and seeing what is most important and arriving at a similar place. To me it helped signify that I (and he) were on the right path. Our science uses this litmus to discern truth — with peer review and repeatability in experiments. “reinventing the wheel” may be bad for corporations where time is money, but in science, education, and discerning truth it is everything. It is like many researchers all looking for the ultimate theory of everything in physics… and agreeing that it must have certain features. They can all see what those features might be when the science gets to a certain point. Another instance of this is E.O. WIlson’s book “Consilience”. That book captured what I had been saying, travelling around the world to say, in very eloquent form. Definitely another kindred spirit there. Anyone who reads my book would see that. The first time I wrote to Francis Crick about meaning as a concept that could model the nature of consciousness and what to look for in the brain (I am a brain scientist), he wrote me back saying that I would be amused to know that he had written “meaning” in large letters on the blackboard behind his desk shortly before receiving my letter and article on the topic. He had been thinking about the same sorts of things… Truth can be arrived at by many routes. It is supported from many angles — that to me is part of the definition of truth. William Pierce was unquestionably a great man, but I wish he would have pushed cosmotheism more. To me, it should have been the main thrust and focus of his entire organization. Everything else naturally follows from that. These things are why I KNOW it is VITAL to preserve the white race.
My ideas are different than Dr. Pierce’s on several levels though, maybe only because I developed them more in my book — one of which is the core idea that evolution should be viewed as information-based. Truth-based to be more specific (accurate information / timeless truths and principles by which the universe operates). Always there is truth, and then there is our faltering attempts to interpret truth through the tiny aperture of our consciousness. The manifestations of this core upward life impulse toward the abstract “godhood” Dr. Pierce talks about are many, but one thing is absolutely for sure — there is universal truth and universal morality which we have imperfectly reflected in our natural biological urges (fairness and child-care impulses, for example) which can be diverted, and perverted.. and also imperfectly reflected in our laws and theories of existence. The great principles of evolution can help us perfect these things, by showing us the main laws of life built into the universe — not unlike some great teaching machine of a hypothetical god-like BF skinner with matter and space-time as his tool kit.
To me, the universe is a great textbook to be read — written in the hand of the logos, the creator itself. We need to get it right, and we are now reading it with our science. It is a vast book of truth, laws, timeless principles. By reading it, we attain the flower of immortality. That flower is the purpose and destiny of life. I truly believe some form of cosmotheism is the future of all religion. I think Dr.Pierces other works have overshadowed his aborted attempts at starting a new religion. He was denied tax-exempt staus for the Cosmotheist religion and then he basically dropped the ball after that. However, his more practical writings on race and the Jewish question after that are quite inspired and definitely make up for that. To me, Dr. Pierce IS a religious figure. I would assume everyone here knows something about Dr. Pierce and his cosmotheist writings etc. if they don’t, they need to.
I have also often said that I feel the Jewish “religion” was mostly patched together from other traditions and legends as a sort of cover story to help them overcome resistance and help their group strategy as a people. The ancient Babyloniam flood myths are one example too. You mention others. I really do think there is something to that, and the evidence supports that. The Jewish religion is a sort of Frankenstein monster that way.