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The Perennial Philosophy Series
The Sermon of All Creation: Christians on Nature
Interview with Frithjof Schuon - on Art
How can we understand Native American traditions?
Paul Goble's World: Native Americans' relationship to all created beings
Insights into the early Christian Desert Fathers and Mothers
A Definition of the Perennial Philosophy
Spiritual Masters - East & West Series
Books about Buddhism
The Universal Spirit of Islam: Keys for Interfaith Understanding
Slideshows
  Interview with Frithjof Schuon - on Primordiality Back to the List of Slideshows
    
slide 2 of 4

This is taken from a transcript of a 1995 interview with the eminent
Perennialist thinker and writer Frithjof Schuon (1907-1998).

The following is a continuation of Frithjof Schuon's response to the following question:


Question: Your book The Feathered Sun reveals your interest in the American Indians. May I ask you what the stimulus of this interest or affinity is?

Frithjof Schuon (response continued): What makes the value of a man is neither his mundane culture nor his practical or inventive intelligence, but his attitude in the face of the Absolute; and he who has the sense of the Absolute never forgets the relationship between man and virgin Nature, because Nature is our origin, our natural homeland and a most transparent Message of God. For the Arab historian Ibn Khaldun, the very condition of a realistic civilization is the equilibrium between Bedouins and city dwellers, which means between nomads and sedentaries; between the healthy children of Nature and the representatives of elaborated cultural values.
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