George M. Young

George M. Young’s Followers (4)

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George M. Young



Average rating: 4.03 · 134 ratings · 20 reviews · 10 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Russian Cosmists: The E...

4.01 avg rating — 115 ratings — published 2012 — 6 editions
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Silver Age of Russian Culture

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4.20 avg rating — 10 ratings — published 1975 — 2 editions
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I cosmisti russi. Il futuri...

3.83 avg rating — 6 ratings
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Nikolai F. Fedorov: An Intr...

4.50 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 1979
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Esotericism, Religion, and ...

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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2010 — 3 editions
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Force Through Delicacy: The...

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0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 1998
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The Double Headed Goddess o...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2002 — 2 editions
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Goddess on the Cross

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Victorian England Portrait

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By George M. Young - Force ...

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More books by George M. Young…
Quotes by George M. Young  (?)
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“One of his favorite examples, repeated several times in the thousands of pages of his writings, is of American experiments to bring rain in time of drought by shooting cannons into the air: a simple reorientation of aim from horizontal to vertical, from weapons of destruction to instruments of salvation. And this simple but radical change in orientation, from horizontal to vertical, returns throughout his writings to symbolize the reorientation needed in every field of activity: from a horizontal “zoomorphic” culture of human animals to a vertical, fully human stance of broad rational perspective; from a Ptolemaic, earth-centered worldview to a Copernican, cosmos-centered worldview; from the horizontal position of a body lying in its grave to the vertical position of the monument and mourner standing over that grave; from the horizontality of the railroad track to the verticality of the air balloon now and the spaceship tomorrow.”
George M. Young, The Russian Cosmists: The Esoteric Futurism of Nikolai Federov and His Followers

“Through the decade of the 1880s and into the early 1890s, Tolstoy and Fedorov met many times, and Tolstoy frequently refers to him in his letters and notebooks. For Tolstoy these were years of spiritual unrest. Never a complacent person unaware of his own self-development, Tolstoy in the late 1870S and early 1880s was passing through a stage of especially intense spiritual torment and particularly ruthless self-examination. His earlier religious faith, never terribly strong, had collapsed utterly, and he was seeking a new faith to live by. That he could not live a life strictly consistent with his deeply felt (and widely publicized) principles had always troubled him, and now tormented him. He had turned against the ideal of family life that he had so memorably depicted in War and Peace, but he still lived as-and at times very much enjoyed being-a family man. Theoretically he had turned against his own social class and against all art that did not illustrate some simple moral truth-and yet his biographers give us a charming picture of Tolstoy at age fifty and his old aesthetic and ideological enemy Turgenev, age sixty, sitting at opposite ends of a child's teeter-totter, seesawing up and down as children from the neighborhood laugh and applaud. Even during his famous "peasant" phase, in which he allowed himself to be portrayed by the artist Repin à la moujik behind a plow, we learn from his wife's diary that under his peasant smock he always wore silk underwear.”
George M. Young, The Russian Cosmists: The Esoteric Futurism of Nikolai Fedorov and His Followers



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