×
Create a new article
Write your page title here:
We currently have 3,189 articles on s23. Type your article name above or create one of the articles listed here!



    s23
    3,189Articles

    Chaos Magick: Difference between revisions

    imported>mutante
    mNo edit summary
    imported>mutante
    mNo edit summary
    (No difference)

    Revision as of 16:01, 30 January 2005

    http://www.beyondweird.com/occult/orchaos.html

    Well magic, like some of the great religious messages is essentially simple, but is prey to the process whereby simple ideas become extremely complicated beliefs which can lead you further and further away from doing any magic at all. Weave back through time to æsomewhere in the paleolithic eraÆ to find a tribal shaman sitting on a rock gaping at the visions revealed by a soggy piece of toadstool. Fast-forwards a few millenia and youÆll find a æMagical SystemÆ that comprises of several hundred- thousand words, obscure diagrams and appendices which will probably state at some point, that drugs are a no-no. The birth of Chaos magic came about in the late 70Æs, at about the time that punk rock was spitting out at the music industry and Chaos Science was beginning to be taken seriously by mathematicians, economists, and physicists. The two ænamesÆ most associated with the birth of Chaos magic are PeteCarroll and RaySherwin, though there were others lurking in the background, such as the Stoke Newington Sorcero (SNS)rs who later became entwined with the first stirrings of the Punk movement.

    Some of Pete CarrollÆs early writings on Chaos was published in The NewEquinox, published by Ray Sherwin, in which the first adverts proclaiming the advent of the Illuminates of Thanater os (IOT) magical order appeared. Interestingly enough, there is no mention of the term æchaosÆ in the earliest versions of IOT material.

    Ray SherwinÆs Morton Press then issued Pete CarrollÆLibers Null , and SherwinÆ sown The Book of Results , which expounded the very practical method of æSigilisationÆ as developed by AustinOsmanSpare, which has become one of the core techniques associated with Chaos magic. The early growth of Chaos magic was characterised by a loose network of informal groups who came together to experiment with the possibilities of the new current. With the demise of The New Equinox, the æchaos kidsÆ reported their results and heresies in the pages of Chris BrayÆs new magazine, The Lamp of Thoth. The early Chaos books were joined by two tapes æThe Chaos ConceptÆ which discussed the basics of Chaos magic, and æThe ChaochamberÆ, a science-fiction pathworking which combined elements of Star Trek, Michael Moorcock, and H.G. Wells. Chris BrayÆs æSorceror Æs ApprenticeÆ Press then re-released, Liber Null, The Book of Results, as well as two new books, Pete CarrollÆPsychonauts , and Ray SherwinÆs The Theatre of magic. These, together with articles from the growing Chaos corpus in the LOT, drew more people into experimenting with the new approach. Thanks to the efforts of Ralph Tegtmeier, the Chaos approach was also receiving attention in continental Europe. The basic message of Chaos magic is that, what is fundamental to magic is the actual doing of it - that like sex, no amount of theorising and intellectualisation can substitute for the actual experience. Pete CarrollÆs Liber Null, therefore, presented the bare bones of the magical techniques which can be employed to bring about change in oneÆ s circumstances. Liber Null concentrated on techniques, saying that the actual methods of magic are basically shared by the different systems, despite the dif fering symbols, beliefs and dogmas. What symbol systems you wish to employ is a matter of choice, and that the webs of belief which surround them are means to an end, rather than ends in themselves (more of which later).

    http://www.beyondweird.com/occult/orchaos.html

    Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.
    Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.