Description
“There is, yes, there is eternal justice”, proclaims Theofilos Kairis before his death in prison. With the tragic optimism of his speech he justifies the existential inertia of the life of the persecuted who experienced during his worldly course, transcends the spatio-temporalities of irrationality, clarifies the darkness of fanaticism and turns his anxious soul towards the essence of the world, towards the superstructure of some God, source of goodness and morale. With unwavering belief in the innate psychic forces that conceptually constitute his full spirituality philosophical psychology and push rational and free beings towards the primary meaning and the transcendent purpose of their existence, he erases the teleology of the universal being. Human beings are ontologically non-existent if they do not approach the absolute truth with their cognitive powers, if they do not strive with their souls for the supreme holiness, if with their morality they do not approach Godliness. They exist only for the glory of God.”