A group dedicated to learning, teaching, transmitting the dark side of the force. We wish to reach apotheosis and acquire infinite power in the world, and whatever is required to grant that inner, personal, and political power. Our main books of inspiration is The Way of the Sith, and The Way of the Sith Part 2: World Mastery by Edwin Ferreira and The Grand Book of the Sith, as well as fictional works.

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Add media Report RSS The Way of the Sith - The Overman Subsection 1 (view original)
The Way of the Sith - The Overman Subsection 1
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Thesithcode.com

1. “The power to make a law for oneself, the ‘power to refuse and not to act when one is pressed to affirmation by a prodigious force and an enormous tension.’”

2. "The natural and free asceticism to test its own strength by gauging the power of a will according to the degree of resistance, pain, and torment that it can bear in order to turn them to its own advantage."

3. Evola next speaks of the "principle of not being at the whim of ones passions, but of not obeying them, [using them when necessary] and keeping them on a leash.” Then he quotes Nietzsche: “greatness of character does not consist in not having such passions: one must have them to the greatest degree, but held under control, and moreover doing this with simplicity, not feeling any particular satisfaction thereby.”

4. Nietzsche writes, “the superior man is distinguished from the inferior by his intrepidity, by his defiance of unhappiness.”

5. Evola quotes Nietzsche as saying “it is a sign of regression when pleasure begins to be considered as the highest principle.” The superior man is also abiding by the aspiration of; “The responding with incredulity to those who point the way to happiness,”

6. According to Evola, the superior man claims the right (quoting Nietzsche) “To claim the right to exceptional acts as attempts at victory over oneself and as acts of freedom . . . to assure oneself, with a sort of asceticism, a preponderance and a certitude of one’s own strength of will.”

7. The superior man affirms the freedom which includes “keeping the distance which separates us, being indifferent to difficulties, hardships, privations, even to life itself.”