To win the world, man must have an end beyond the world, and adhere to that end until he considers the secondary world, devoid of true reality.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → The human experience of pain is objectively inevitable in life in the world, because in it man must born, fall ill and die.
- → In addition, pain has a significant subjective factor, the difference between what you want and what happens, a difference on which man can gradually intervene.
- → If the main purpose of man is within the world, this titanic work is overbearing or passive, always a failure.
- → To win the world, man must have an end beyond the world, and adhere to that end until he considers the secondary world, devoid of true reality.
- → Then man knows God, himself and the world.
- → This path leads man to his real fullness, to minimize the world and any harmful conditioning.
- → The world is empty, uncertain, unreal, it's not your homeland, it has only a brief deceptive experience in common with you.
- → The world imposes considerable limits and illusions on you, which you must experience and which one day will appear to you for what they are, little, nothing, a game compared to what I give you.
- → This world proclaims and makes us experience the temporariness and precariousness of everything, in the false perspective of the final victory of pure nothingness, of total annihilation.
Relative arguments