I Prolegomena
I.I The Dawn?
I.II Paganism: doctrine, names and symbols
I.III Traditionalism
II Time and Initiation
II.I Golden Age
II.II Silver and Bronze Ages
II.III The Profane
II.IV The Heroes
II.V Iron Age
II.VI Ontology of Estates
II.VII Pagan Initiation
II.VIII The Problem of Contr-initiation
II.IX Triumph of Titans
III Paganism and Moderrn
III.I Dharma and Due
III.II Modern and Estates
III.III Constructs of Modern
III.IV Postmodern
III.V The Horizonts of Contr-initiation
III.VI Is the Destiny of Europe are Destiny of the World?
IV About Modern Pagan Experience
IV.I Authentic and alien
IV.II The Modern Experience
IV.III Simulacres and sects
IV.IV Compromisses
V Paganism and Creationism
V.I Nuances of Creationism
V.II Judaism
V.III Christianity
V.IV Islam
V.V Relation to Creationism
VI Sex and Sexuality
VI.I The Metaphysics of Sex
VI.II Postsexuality: Inversion and Parody
VI.III Eros in Modern Paganism
VII Political measurement of paganism
VII.I Preliminary considerations
VII.II Tribe or Empire?
VII.III Liberalism and the rejection of democracy
VII.IV Race, Nation and their myths
VII.V Ethnocentrism
VII.VI “Left”Paganism
VII.VII Primitivism
VII.VIII Antiglobalism
VII.IX Conclusions from the preceding chapters
VIII The Right Hand and Left Hand Paths
VIII.I Looking into the Abyss
VIII.II Left Path
VIII.III Darkness and Shadow
VIII.IV People gone to the Forest
VIII.V Roads on which no one goes
IX Conclusion
X Applications
Summary
Selected bibliography