For centuries, Baal has been reduced to a symbol of corruption, sacrifice, and absolute evil. But what if that image was not the origin—only the final mask?
Long before becoming a demon in the Western imagination, Baal embodied something more primordial: a conception of power that allowed both Good and Evil to coexist within the same cosmic structure—a force neither moral nor immoral, but necessary.
Somewhere in the shaping of language and the birth of writing, that original idea was altered. Reframed. Restricted. Removed from common understanding and embedded within systems of meaning that continue to govern how the West thinks, judges, and defines reality.
Through historical inquiry, linguistic analysis, and philosophical provocation, this book advances a radical possibility:
What if the West did not defeat Baal—but lost access to him?
And what if the exclusion of “evil” from conscious integration has weakened, rather than purified, modern civilization?
Readers are warned.
This journey requires the suspension of moral reflexes and the abandonment of inherited categories.
No baggage is allowed on board.
format_list_numbered Summary
They Live
Enantiosemy
Synchronicity
Numismatics or Namismatics?
The Meaning of Meaning
Primordial Terms
Socio-Temporal Terms
Family Terms
Immunologisms
Let Us Speak of Baal
Babel
Beelzebub and Belphegor
Holocaust
Six Million Jews
Totem and Taboo
Possible ≈ Impossible
Con-Fusion
Bestial Adoration
Holy Spirit
Captivus Diaboli
A Split but Dominant Civilization
Good vs Evil
Baal Is Alive, Well, and Asking for You
Let the Family Become a Tribe Again
Instruments
Social Modeling
Freemasonry
Plot and Matrix
Devil and Tao
And God?
Conclusion
article_person Author
Living between East and West, he examines Western civilization from an external vantage point, focusing on the deep structures of language, power, and metaphysics that shape modern consciousness.
His work explores how primordial ideas evolve into moral systems, and how semantic architecture influences collective thought across generations.
Baal – The Case for Evil continues his inquiry into the hidden foundations of Western intellectual history.