B for Baphomet
Size: 210mm x 297mm
Material:Charcoal pen
Baphomet is an imagined pagan deity, revived in the 19th century as a figure of occultism and Satanism. Often mistaken for Satan, it represents the duality of male and female, as well as Heaven and Hell or night and day signified by the raising of one arm and the downward gesture of the other. It can be taken in fact, to represent any of the major harmonious dichotomies of the cosmos. It first appeared in 11th and 12th century Latin and Provençal as a corruption of “Mahomet”, the Latinisation of “Muhammad”, but later it appeared as a term for a pagan idol in trial transcripts of the Inquisitionof the Knights Templar in the early 14th century. The name first came into popular English-speaking consciousness in the 19th century, with debate and speculation on the reasons for the suppression of the Templars.Since 1855, the name Baphomet has been associated with a “Sabbatic Goat” image drawn by Eliphas Lévi.
Month: July 2012
The greatest mania of all is passion: and I am a natural slave to passion: the balance between my brain and my soul and my body is as wild and delicate as the skin of a Ming vase.
I like to piss off any group that takes itself a little bit too seriously.
…hunting the fnords…: Working “Within the System”
…hunting the fnords…: Working “Within the System”
If you beat them at their own game, you’ve lost.
So … you’re in a band, with a really important message, and you want to get it out to as many people as possible—so you’re trying to get really popular and sell lots and lots of records. Or perhaps you’re a political…
more from eswynn
The Russian mystic Gurdjieff claimed that we all contain multiple personalities. Many researchers in psychology and neuroscience now share that startling view. as Gurdjieff indicated, the “I” who toils at a job does not seem the same “I” who makes love with joy and passion, and the third “I” who occasionally gets angry for no evident reason seems a third personality, etc. There does not appear anything metaphysical about this; it even appears, measurably, on electroencephalograms. Dr. Frank Putnam of the National Institute of Health found that extreme cases of multiple personality – the only ones that orthodox psychiatry recognizes – show quite distinct brain waves for each “personality” almost as if the researchers had taken the electrodes off of one subject and attached them to another. (O’Regan. op. cit.)
I am Legion