…hunting the fnords…: Surreptitiously cast a verbal spell in a busy street
Links
I Am Complex
Xaos – Chaos Mægick: My weekend
Xaos – Chaos Mægick: My weekend
xaos:
I’m awaiting the post. I forget exactly what’s coming to me, but knowing me (as I do) it’s probably computer hardware, books and / or a handmade incense burner I’ve ordered.
I’m shopping for net curtains. I need curtain rails as well, sometime. I kinda need plates and bowls too, after I…
Noam Chomsky Quotes: Noam Chomsky, Crisis and Hope: Theirs and Ours
Noam Chomsky Quotes: Noam Chomsky, Crisis and Hope: Theirs and Ours
There are also deeper problems inherent in market inefficiencies. One of these, now belatedly recognized to be among the roots of the financial crisis, is the under-pricing of systemic risk: if you and I make a transaction, we factor in the cost to us, but not to others….
Fantastical Lore: Coyote
Origin: Native American
Type: Trickster
Known for his cunning and trickery, Coyote is featured in many tales. In one story, Giants are killing and eating humans. Coyote decides to teach them a lesson, and persuades one of them to build a sweat lodge, promising that taking a bath in…
Some reflections on Independence Day 07-04
Xaos – Chaos Mægick: I must be old here
Xaos – Chaos Mægick: I must be old here
xaos:
I notice some tumblr blogs, and the questions they receive through the ask system go something like this:
Anon or fairynamed asks: ‘Your blog is really dark; how can you be a good person if your photos look so satanic?’
The purveyor of said dark satanic imagery then answers: ‘I’m into nature…
You and me both buddy. I’m kinda glad I don’t get a bunch of inane questions. 41 And on tumblr….
(courier5): apokalyptein/eskhatos
(courier5): apokalyptein/eskhatos
the concept of a(n) (end)point in time after which everything is different.
the singularity.
any apocalypse.
the revolution.
y2k.
2012.
presents vast issues when kept literal and external.
the only productive way to work with the thing is to internalize it.
the end of the world is really…
On Paradise: Jung on God
Being raised Christian, and having long left behind the dogma and fundamentalism of that particular philosophy, I have spent much time trying to figure out my own beliefs.
For a while I decided that Christianity and religion were inherently destructive and useless, before I came to terms with, and found meaning in, the pain it caused me. Its a strange thing finding meaning and truth in something that hurt you – I feel that although religion gave me a lot of issues and hang-ups and confusion, it also gave me a certain philosophic and spiritual structure which I would not sacrifice.
I then settled on the perspective of ‘each to his or her own’; if Christ compensates you for some sort of psychological need – a comfort blanket or sense of wonder for example – then so be it. Perhaps it is useful. ?
Recently, though, I’ve come across a book called “Answer To Job” by the extremely influential 20th century psychologist Carl Jung. In this book he explores God as an evolving moral personality who, in the Old Testament, is largely unconscious of himself and acts without self-examination. Jung argues that although he was omniscient, he rarely consulted this supreme knowledge as he was incapable of self reflection. Hence the contradiction in the Bible of him being omniscient yet constantly surprised by humanity’s disobedience. Jung then goes on to argue that eventually, the need arose for God to be self reflective, hence bringing himself into the world as a human – Christ.
This is a ridiculously short summary; if you’re interested, go read the book. It is much more profound than anything I could write in a blog.
The point I’m trying to make is that, I can feel my philosophy on religion shifting yet again. This is a new perspective, one I’ve never come across, which posits God as a culturally psychological necessity. Is God necessary for humanity? I’m starting to wonder if he is…
Anyway,
Below is an excerpt from another of Jung’s books, “Memories, Dreams, Reflections”. It puts into words an intuition that I’ve never been able to shake, despite trying to mire myself in rational thinking… I just can’t help being an agnostic.
“If the Creator were conscious of Himself, He would not need conscious creatures; nor is it probable that the extremely indirect methods of creation, which squander millions of years upon the development of countless species and creatures, are the outcome of purposeful intention.
Natural history tells us of a haphazard and casual transformation of species over hundreds of millions of years of devouring and being devoured. The biological and political history of man is an elaborate repetition of the same thing.
But the history of the mind offers a different picture. Here the miracle of reflecting consciousness intervenes — the second cosmogony [ed. note: what Teilhard de Chardin called the origin of the “noosphere,” the layer of “mind”]. The importance of consciousness is so great that one cannot help suspecting the element of meaning to be concealed somewhere within all the monstrous, apparently senseless biological turmoil, and that the road to its manifestation was ultimately found on the level of warm-blooded vertebrates possessed of a differentiated brain — found as if by chance, unintended and unforeseen, and yet somehow sensed, felt and groped for out of some dark urge.”
Xaos – Chaos Mægick: Pre-Abramelin Operation: Day 5 of 20
Xaos – Chaos Mægick: Pre-Abramelin Operation: Day 5 of 20
xaos:
My preparations for the Operation are fully underway, and perfectly comprehensive. I’m not just going to swear the Oath and see what happens, no, I’m building a solid foundation for success.
I’m reading Jason Augustus Newcomb, Georg Dehn and, of course, Sam Mathers.
I’m preparing myself with…