TLH 2 Stu4
TLH 2 Stu4
78
Riding the Tiger: Evola and Dignity in the Age of Modernity 79
II. Dignity
the actor and the part): it is presence to that which he is, not coalescence
with that which he is. Moreover, a kind of antinomy is brought to light:
in order to be truly such, the person needs a reference to something more
than personal. When this reference is absent, the person transforms itself
into an ‘individual’, and individualism and subjectivism come to play…
It would be better to define the situation in question as that of being in
which the supra-individual principle—the Self, transcendence—
remains conscious, and gives to the developing ‘part’ (the person) the
objective perfection corresponding to a given function and a given
meaning” (Evola, 2003, pp. 109, 110).
The concept of dignity is something that we attribute exclusively to
human beings. As discussed above, it stems from the human capacity for
self-consciousness and practical reason. However, dignity is not a given.
It is related to one’s capacity to know oneself, improve oneself, and
overcome oneself. It is achieved by employing one’s capacities of self-
consciousness and reason. It is achieved by identifying one’s “part” (the
person), and in doing so, relating oneself to the supra-individual
principle and participating in the absolute.
Dignity is a concept that is independent of other people. It is defined
by control over oneself. It stems from inner, personal acquaintance with
oneself, with authenticity and integrity. We attribute it exclusively to
human beings, yet not everybody qualifies by default. A person that fails
to identify her main tendency fails to identify one’s part, and thus fails
to be authentic and fails to participate in the supra-individual principle.
Such a person is a mere individual. It cannot be true to oneself for it does
not know what it means to be oneself. Similarly, if the central tendency
of an individual is of an exclusively sensual character, if the “part”
consists solely of the avoidance of pain and the pursuit of pleasure, this
“role” ceases to resemble the one of a human being. It starts to resemble
more the one of an animal, for it negates precisely that what is human –
self-consciousness, practical reason, and the “power to supersede”.
Riding the Tiger: Evola and Dignity in the Age of Modernity 85
REFERENCES
Evola, J. (2003). Ride the Tiger: A Survival Manual for the Aristocrats of
the Soul. Vermont: Inner Traditions Rochester.
Machiavelli, N. (2003). The Prince. London: Penguin Books Ltd.