The Foundry is a Philologic endeavor, a collection of independent imprints, at the intersection of primary-source translation and philosophical reconstruction, sketching the history of ideas through an Ad Fontes approach. Named after the enigmatic Pre-Socratic philosopher plucked out of obscurity by Schopenhauer, dramatized by Nietzsche and venerated by Heidegger, the Foundry likewise rekindles historically obscure philosophers, focusing on manuscripts that represent critical junctures in ideological history, particularly those original works that have been poorly translated, misinterpreted, out of publications, fallen out of modern discourse, or simply have no translations and are lost to time. The Foundry focuses on scholarly research into pivotal works with the aim of preserving and illuminating the complex lineages of philosophical thought. This philological-ideological undertaking spanning historical linguistics, textual criticism and source criticism aims to map the complex lineages of thought that shape our intellectual inheritance. In turn, this makes accessible the tracing of the genealogy of ideas, enabling a return to a primary source study. Here, as Jung warns, we “earn the wisdom” we hold by engaging directly with primacy sources and cut through the gatekeeping of the centuries.