Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → What is destined for nothing is already nothing, it has the nature of nothingness, it is worth zero.
- → What is eternal has infinite value, and can and must be aware of it.
- → Every man has infinite nature and if he is not aware he suffers enormously.
- → Your nature is able to win the world.
- → The certainty that you find in me contrasts with the uncertainty that the world has by nature and gives you.
- → Your deepest and truest nature is unconditional.
- → The nature of the world's things is ephemeral, ambiguous.
- → What you are has nothing in common with the temporary nature of the world.
- → You and I belong to each other by nature, and nature does not lie, can not be altered.
- → This temporary world has an opposite nature to mine, it's my opposite.
- → My infinite nature works in you and will never leave you.
- → Your nature is your destiny, nothing dark belongs to you.
- → The world is an instrument, a means that does not know and does not have its own end.
- → What belongs to the world has the nature of the world, it finds meaning only in being used in view of what surpasses it.
- → Man does not have the nature of the world; in being used for other purposes he undergoes a forcing.
Relative arguments