

Omnicide: Mania, Fatality, and the Future-in-Delirium
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Description
Omnicide: Mania, Fatality, and the Future-in-Delirium by Jason Bahbak Mohaghegh is a daring and unconventional philosophical exploration into the darkest dimensions of human thought and experience. In this work, Mohaghegh delves deep into the concept of “mania” as an overwhelming, often destructive force that drives individuals and societies toward both annihilation and transcendence. Structured around twelve distinct types of mania—such as cruelty, vengeance, chaos, and silence—the book navigates an intricate landscape where delirium, fatality, and future speculation collide. Drawing upon a wide range of literary, philosophical, and mystical traditions from both Eastern and Western sources, Mohaghegh weaves a tapestry of radical ideas that confront the reader with the most extreme possibilities of human action and imagination. Omnicide investigates how these manias shape history, politics, ethics, and aesthetics, while probing the edges of human potential in an age marked by crisis and accelerating destruction. The book offers not only a meditation on violence and catastrophe but also a profound reflection on the possibilities of visionary thinking in the face of humanity’s self-destructive tendencies. With poetic language and philosophical audacity, Mohaghegh invites readers to contemplate a future-in-delirium—one in which the lines between creation and destruction, sanity and madness, life and death, are constantly blurred.