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November 19, 2008

In the casino of the night recently with my boss the BrewLady Pivovarova. Orshcht bugging us with questions about the two-ness of value. You can't have your cake and eat it. But you can have the sun and it seems to go on being there...

We resolved to send Sun Ra's equations right after the first chapter of Das Capital. The sun itself don't fig white folks but it's a value that can't be exchanged. We'll have to try to build a new cosmos out of that I think - I want to have one of my very own to play in.

Keywords: Sun Ra twoness Marx

Posted by Ivan Kolodetsov | 2 comment(s)

September 12, 2008

It was a warm, sunny day in Krakow, July this year. I'd been in Krakow's market square, wandering along the stalls with paintings etc, when one of the drawings displayed on sale drew my attention. - It was a picture of an old Rabbi sitting next to big desk on which he spread a sheet with a glyph of the Tree of Life. Behind the Rabbi there is a window with a view of the city. The Rabbi holds a candle in his right hand. The picture emanates power, wisdom and beauty and is so different from the others... I asked the sales woman how much it is and then she told me a story about the picture and the Rabbi... 

-His name was Nathan Nata Spira. He was born around 1584 and died 20 July 1633. He moved to Krakow in his thirties when he was called to the rabbinate of the city. Nathan accepted the call but refused the salary. He was one of very first Rabbis studying practical Cabala in Poland, well known for his studies on Cabala as well as having a great memory and power. Nathan Spira was always studying at night, so the candle was lighting in the window of his office every night. One night people noticed there was no candle in his window, they knew he'd died.

-After his death people used to visit his grave and tell him their worries. The belief was that by telling him their worries in this way their problems would disappear or solve themselves. These day's there's nothing left of his grave. It is only known that he was buried within the grounds of a small Jewish graveyard in 'Kazimierz'- the Jewish district of Krakow.

The most amazing story about him is the one about his nephew.                                                                                                                       -Nathan had a nephew who really hated him. He regular visited Nathan only to argue and vent his bad feelings on the Rabbi. Once he came to rabbi's house, when Nathan was working in his office room. He instructed his wife and children, that he can not be disturbed during the work and studies. Nathan's wife tried to stop the furious nephew and explain her husband's will, but he didn't listen and rushed upstairs, to Nathan's office. He opened the door and fell dead on the floor as he saw Nathan talking to Arch Angel Michael. I think, this story is just lovely! :)

-I was very grateful to that lady for telling me all this. She also mentioned that the drawing I just bought possesses magical powers and it's a great protection against evil spirits, if put in a nice place somewhere in the home. I tried to search for more information about Nathan Spira, but there's very little on him, on the net. I only managed to find short note on http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com . There's a couple of people with this surname, but only one of them matches the date of death:

24. Nathan Nata Spira: Son of Solomon Spira and grandson of Nathan Nata Spira (No. 23); born about 1584; died July 20, 1633. In 1617 he was called to the rabbinate of Cracow, where, being well-to-do, he refused to accept a salary. He was gifted with an extraordinary memory, and devoted much time to the study of the Cabala. He wrote a cabalistic commentary on the prayer of Moses in Deut. iii. 24, and two prayers, under the title "Megalleh 'Amuḳḳot" (Cracow, 1637; Fürth, 1691). He published also novellæ to Alfasi's work which were printed with it (Amsterdam, 1720). Bibliography: Azulai, l.c. i. 148; De Rossi-Hamberger, l.c. p. 301; Steinschneider, l.c. col. 2049; Zunz, Monatstage, p. 41; Zedner, l.c. p. 610; I. M. Zunz, 'Ir ha-Ẓedeḳ, pp. 52, 176 (contains Spira's epitaph).

Keywords: Jewish Cabala

Posted by Lolita Perdurabo | 0 comment(s)

September 11, 2008

Glastonbury evokes images of the Holy Grail, the Arthurian Mythos, Sacred Mysteries and New Age Hippies. Well I'm pleased to say Jack Gale's talk finally burst that naive little bubble last night. Yes, the white lighters are there  (to the  disdain of the locals, carnate and discarnate), yes it has a Celtic heritage, and yes it is a centre of sacred mysteries, but at a deeper level the place is very dark indeed. And perhaps not surprisingly given its traditional ruler, Gwyn ap Nudd, Lord of the Underworld, King of the Fey and son of Nodens of the Abyss.

Jack Gale's talk was essentially a series of anecdotes and tales illustrating the nature of the Glass Isle, collected from people who have lived and practiced magic in the village, the Glastonians - or as today's crew are often known, the Glastofarians - as opposed (sometimes literally) to the Avalonians, local residents for whom the place is simply a unique Somerset village full of strange people.

Jack himself is a Glastonian, or was till chased from the village by the forces that reside there, forces he still deeply respects. The place he says is undefinable, a zone of chaos and dark mystery.

There were far too many fragmentary tales to recall but I shall relate those I found impressive and quote from my notes.

We began with a qoute from Geoffrey Ashe in Gandalf's Garden (1968)

"Most people who get close to Glastonbury seem to go mad, more or less. Sometimes with the higher madness which is wisdom; sometimes not. The professional scholars (with a few exceptions) get as unbalenced as anyone else; only they are cleverer at appearing sane. Whatever the thing is that has such potential effects, it is THERE, in Avalon, an authentic presence"

Jack then explained how this aspect of Glastonbury has been glossed over by those seeking to give the town a positive image, but the reality was always there. At the mundane level the place was reknowned for its conflicts and relationship breakdowns, a place were a simple disagreement could become a blood feud overnight, a flawed relationship disintegrate into emnity and a slight unbalence become psychosis. On the otherhand, though far rarer, a harmonious state became even more harmonious. The place intensifies these things.

Few writers had explored this aspect, one who has is Michael Howard, editor of the Cauldron, a few others have joined him, here are some unattributed quotes from the handout:

"There is an energy at work here that is extremely powerful, tangible and present. Deserving both grave respect and constant awareness. If it touches you it cannot be ignored. It shakes and pulls and reveals. It truely effects people in profoundly challenging and sometimes shockingly damaging ways. The oddest thing is that this energy seems to particularly effect those 'called here', while it seems to have little or no affect whatsoever on many of the long time locals". 

"Glastonbury is not always a safe place, and for some people it becomes a truly dreadful nightmare. Through my work I have met too many people who are seriously depressed, anguished, tormented, and even suicidal because of what is sometimes refered to, with irony or gallows humour, as their 'Glastonbury Experience'. People are literally pulled apart mentally and physically'.

This final reference was explained in terms of the story of Richard Whitling, the last Abbot of Glastonbury, who was siezed by Thomas Cromwell on behalf of Henry VIII and dragged by horses, together with two other monks to the top of the Tor, where they were hung, drawn and quartered.  The Abbot's head was then hung on the gate of the Abbey and his limbs taken to Wells, Bath, Ilchester and Bridgewater. This story also revealed another strange feature of Glastonbury, its energies seemed to encourage people and even protect them, only to suddenly turn on them without warning. Whitling was constantly reassured by Henry that his abbey was safe from dissolution during the Reformation, being an examplary religious institution. As the last Abbey in England it became one of the most important sacred sites in the country before the unexpected arrival of Cromwell. The bones of Whiting were gathered up and buried at the Abbey where they were allegedly later discovered and identified by a psychic. They are now in the keeping of the enigmatic Father Damian at the reestablished Prinknash Abbey who privately regards them as the relics of the sainted Abbot, even though this is still not recognised by the Vatican.

A similar though less drastic fate befell the discovery of the Abbot's bones, Frederick Bligh Bond, the archeologist and psychic who was appointed by the Church of England to exacavate the Abbey in 1908. Bond was a Freemason, Theosophist and member of the SPR and SRIA who made many geomantic discoveries about the Abbey, including its alleged Cabalist Gematria. He had free reign in the village for 13 years, largely popularising it, and was on the verge of new discoveries when changes in his employers, now opposed to psychism, suddenly removed him from his role. A devastating blow and mockery he took several years to recover from. Some of his work was carried on later by the other Glastonian Wellesley Tudor Pole. A more dramatic tale told of psychics following the tradition of Bond who took to psychic questing after a mysterious blue bowl was found. Years of research was influenced by several independent psychics who all associated the bowl with a veiled female spirit. One 'saw' a secret document that told its origin, hidden under a stone in the middle east, even giving the markings to be found on the stone. After exhaustive search the stone was actually found, complete with predicted markings, and under it was absolutely nothing. The team broke up disillusioned soon after. Like many Glastonians they had been raised up and dropped from a great height.

All of this was tame compared to the psychological nightmares experienced by other Glastonians, which seemed to increase over the years. Even locals spoke of the 'blight', a local fog phenomena which hangs over the village, obscuring even the top of the Tor, bringing with it an oppressive atmosphere. In recent times despite its New Age gloss the village has experienced its first 'drug related murder'. The darker events of the village inspired the novel, the Chalice, and its concept of an anti-Grail, enfuriating many local hippies, but regarded as authentic in its ambience and style, if not its explanation, by several local occultists. Some have regarded all this in ethical terms, as one writer put it:

"It is a dangerous place because of the very potency of its spiritual energies, as those who have despoiled its brooding aura have discovered to their cost. It can generate madness and death as easily as tranquility and revelation. But this is the function of all terrestrial oracles".

Jack was sceptical on this however seeing no real discernment in the victims of the place. While some have been relatively untouched, such as Geoffrey Ashe in the 60s/70s and Dion Fortune in the 40s (who coincidentally came to sequentially live in the same house without knowing it), and others benefited from the association, such as the eccentric Katherine Maltwood, who discovered the Glastonbury Zodiac, several well intentioned occultists have not prospered there. And even Dion Fortune contracted leukaemia a few years after arriving as the villages new celebrity. Curiously those least effected seemed to be those without goals or agendas who just lived on a day to day basis in the now,

One interesting case was of the former pagan activist and libertarian Tony Roberts, who became enamoured with the place, studied its mysteries and became its self appointed guardian amongst the growing occult community in the village. Although a popular radical, if an outspoken one, Roberts was rejected by exclusionist feminists in the local Goddess community, and soon entered into a feud with them in opposition to their 'feminazi' ethos, this turned bitter and lasted for years before Roberts died of a massive heart attack on the Tor. An event celebrated by his enemies who threatened to exhume his body and scatter the bones.

This theme of dismemberment was regarded as a crucial feature of the enigma, and one writer who'd come to a similar view claimed the energies of the Tor were negative and brought a tearing apart, while the energies of the Abbey were positive and healed. Others saw things in terms of a war between pagan and Christian forces. But Jack took a more sceptical view than this neat dualism, argueing that while the Abbey may have that effect and may even have been founded with that aim, it was not part of the occult process itself, which was far older than Christianity. Rather he suggested the area was as the legends said a gateway to the land of the dead, and a place of death and rebirth, where the most severe 'tests' were experienced, and all of ones faults and virtues were intensified and challanged. A process that would either transform and perfect all it touched or destroy it. A true chapel perilous.


This was one of the most enlightening and entertaining talks at the Moot for some time.     

       

 

   

   

 

Posted by Kao23 | 0 comment(s)

September 06, 2008

6 months ago, I was offered a Deutsche Dogge (great dane) pup about six months old at that time. I accepted, however the owner (a german woman) changed her mind. Her son came to me a few weeks ago and offered the dogge, again. I sadly turned him down for my yard is not that big, especially with three other dogs already present, and was not certain I could do right by him. Day afore yesterday, her son came to me, and told me his mother ordered him to get rid of the dogge one way or another. *chuckle* I decided not to fight it; I accepted. He is a splendid critter at a year old now, very dark brindle, long legged, and lanky. I am pleased that they never cut his ears. He needs a bit more weight on him and lots of attention that he did not get at his former home. I will be picking him up next monday. I am temporarily moving Robin Goodpuppy to a neighbor's yard as I wish to have Roam and Buffalo Starpuppy meet him without the very female Robin about to distract them.

It was intriguing to have this dogge be offered, given my great interest (alright, I admit,... obsession with) in the Ile of Dogges. It may be that he will be an inspiration to my research and work on the Ile. 

This final acceptance triggered a memory from long ago when I was in my early teen years. I was walking home from school and a great grey dog came walking up the sidewalk towards me. I waited and the dog came to me and without lifting his paws, placed his head on my shoulder. I was pleased that he was so sweet. I caressed and scritched and spoke with him for a good while, then he left to go his way. I never saw him again, though I had hopes. 

Keywords: acceptance, dogs, Ile of Dogges, memory, research, writing

Posted by Feather | 0 comment(s)

August 24, 2008

Discovered the KIA on Kayoss Day, 8/23/08. the article on Qliphotic Magic was so thrilling that i decided to donate some time exploring here and prettying things up as i am able. I am aligned with the spirit of this project and am a long-time supporter of the Kaotik. long may your 23-pointed star wave. nocTiferSmile

Keywords: chaos, gratitude, introduction, Kaos Day, qliphoth

Posted by nocTifer | 0 comment(s)

July 16, 2008

A good bit embarrasing for a carpenter*chuckle*

 

A few items, first, to give context; My time at home is spent in the 'yard'. I go indoors, if needful or feel like doing so. It is a shelter, useful in heavy rain, or to sleep, though I am often to be found sleeping in the yard (oftimes in the roomy tent), with one or all of three dogs aside me, (and me covered in misquito repellent, if not in the tent, lol). I have a small camper trailor, and rent the property and a larger trailor. This larger trailor and the source of my current injury, became over the years a storage area. (for awhuile I did not live here, but kept the place.) In the hallway of this place was a hole in the floor that I ignored; I walked over it. I did not fix it. (deliberate not so blind spot?)

 

Yesterday afternoon, this bit of 'reality' and I met closely, intimately. LOL  Me left leg all the way to me arse did go thru the floor and the leg through the piping underneath. After everything stopped moving, and I ascertained that nothing was broken, merely bruised and torqued,   I laughed at meself, here I am , a carpenter stuck up to hir arse in the floor of an area of hir own lair!

 Needless to say, a bit sore, and lesson learned *chuckle*

 

>^ ^

>~ ~

>>.

-<<<<<~ 

Keywords: Lessons, Reality

Posted by Feather | 1 comment(s)

July 10, 2008

Rupert Sheldrake at Alternatives, St James 7/8/08

Rupert Sheldrake’s overview of his Morphic Resonance theory, started with the best summary of the history of western metaphysics I’ve ever heard, focusing on the  basic dichotomy of Eternity vs Change (aha, Apollo and Dionysos I thought). It certainly sharpened my understanding. He began with the Greeks who prioritised Eternity over all else, by argueing for an unchanging essence that underpinned and ordered everything. This possibly began with a mystical experience of a timeless realm he argued, but suggested this was a fundamental error which he sought to correct. Firstly Pythagoras had claimed number and mathematics was the basis of Eternity, the fundamental root of all being, existing in an ideal realm outside Space-Time. This was expanded on by Plato, who stated that everything had an eternal, perfect archetype, or blueprint, that existed in the same abstract, ideal realm as mathematics, giving it its form (thus there was one ideal horse-form, for example, which shaped all imperfect, real horses). A very conservative form of idealism, which emphasised the ‘normal’ and ‘perfect’, and created hierarchies of ‘natural perfection’. He then pointed to the Greek opposition to this stance, typified by Heraclitus, which said the only thing eternal was Change itself, as everything was in flux and diversity the norm. But observed that even Heraclitus had argued that there was a stability to reality, ordered by the Logos, in that everything moved in eternal cycles, repeating themselves over and over in a constant pattern, like the seasons (the classical Pagan or Dionysian view?). Thus even here the ideal of Eternity was still paramount, and maintained by the Logos, the eternal Word, or Law of Nature. Plato argued the Logos was guided by the archetypal Forms, which were all aspects of one Absolute Form, the Good (the ‘solar’ centre of the cycles you could say), and that Change, or ‘chaos’ as he saw it, was a mere drift away from perfection and order, and so an ‘evil’ to be opposed. Heraclitus thought the opposite but was marginalised in Greek thought. He only briefly mentioned Aristotle, the other great Greek idealist, who differed from Plato only in the more liberal view that the ideal Forms were somehow within Nature not outside of it, and that Change was a fine tuning towards gradual perfection, but still maintained the hierarchy of perfection and the faith in the ideal. An important minority view was that of the Atomists, typified by Democritus, who argued that only Matter was eternal, and consisted of particles or atoms, which randomly combined, uncombined and recombined according to geometrical rules, and that Change was merely this random ordering.   

 

Sheldrake then contrasted this with the Jewish ideal of Progress, the idea that there was not some preordained perfection but rather a perfection was something in the future that we move towards, and that Change was the norm that made this possible. This was realised by the wandering nature of legendary Jewish history and search for the promised land. He prefered this but pointed out that then as now, the ‘promised land’ was full of Palestinians, and so preconcieved ideas or goals rarely worked. He then explained how Christianity emerged as a fusion of the Greek and Jewish ideals under the late Romans. Here the Logos and the Absolute Form became aspects of the Mind of the Jewish God. Progress arrived as God’s plan, but Eternity still ruled. The ideas of Plato and Aristotle were thus Christianised. However with the collapse of Imperial Rome superstitioned reigned (Note: The Father, Son and Holy Ghost of superstition could be regarded as Jehovah, Absolute Form, and the Logos of earlier philosophy, but Sheldrake didn’t state this).

The most important factor was the return to centre stage of Plato, Aristotle in the Rennaissance, as well as the new  popularity of Democritus and his Atomism, which was linked to the concept of Individualism and social organisation. But it was not until the Reformation that the Jewish concept of Progress was really absorbed he suggested, and with it came the idea of Evolution. Then experimental Scientific Philosophy began and these three ideas became merged in various combinations. Francis Bacon took this idea up and essentially began the Enlightenment and Modern Science, but he and his later followers, Newton and Wren, were all Pythagoreans or Platonists at heart. These positions were based on habits of thought however not reason Sheldrake argued. Bacon’s greatest practical innovation however was said to be the systematisation of experimentation. Bacon also argued for a process of Social Evolution, believing that Change was the rule in the Human social order, as was demonstrated by History, but that Nature was eternal and fixed. It was goverened by the Laws of Nature, which as a lawyer, Bacon described legalistically. Sheldrake regarded this as anthropomorphic, qouting C S Lewis who said ‘this makes a falling stone a man, and even a citizen’.

 

This was followed by a history of the triumph of the Evolutionary paradigm in Science. At first simply seen as a social phenomena, Darwin expanded it into Biology and lifeform development, drawing on Social Theory, but maintained that Nature itself was fixed. Then Einstein demonstrated the Universe was expanding, but added a ‘fudge’ called the Cosmological Constant to maintain an eternal stability. This has shown to be false he claimed, and has been replaced by the idea that the Universe itself is evolving like an organism. Once thought to be running down into heat death, it was now seen as expanding constantly and evolving. Darwinian concepts are being deployed to explain this. However Matter was seen as eternal for a long time, as were ‘constants’ like Position, but Quantum Mechanics demonstrated this was not fixed either and was all a state of flux. But still Eternity was retained in the basic Laws of Nature. Sheldrake suggested that, given the trend this would go as well, and the Laws of Nature would be seen as mere habits, as Eternity was a myth.

 

This was where Morphic Resonance fitted in, as the mechanism of all evolution, from the Laws of Nature, to Lifeforms, to Mind and Memory. The general idea being that everything was linked into one big field on all levels, Nomological, Material, Cosmical, Biological, Social, Mental and Psychological. All ordered forms in this field were just habituated patterns, or impressions in it, based on nodes of force resonating with each other. It was these habits that had not only created the illusion of Eternity, but the illusion itself had become a habituated thought pattern, like all thoughts and ideologies.

 

His argument for Cosmological Morphic Resonance was to ask scientists if the Laws of Nature existed before the Big Bang and the formation of the Cosmos, if they say yes then they are Platonists, who believe in unprovable or unfalsifiable, non-scientific elements,  and if they say no, they either believe all the Laws of Nature miraculously came into existance at the Big Bang (including Laws effecting things not then existant), or that they evolved with the Cosmos. He likewise tackled Quantum Physics by suggesting the Multiverse contravened Ockham’s Razor, and that its supporters such as Lord Rees, the head of the Royal Society agreed, but had said it did away with God and the supernatural. In contrast he proposed a Resonant Quantum Mechanics (perhaps like Decoherence Theory?). He then outlined how Morphic Resonance made Genetics redundant, or at least as nothing more than a protein factory for producing the building blocks that Morphic Resonance organised. Evidence for this was the insuffient genetic difference between species, given the complexity and diversity of life. Furthermore he argued the brain functioned by connecting resonant ideas, and particularly that memory was a resonance between past and present mental states (and possibly even future states). Even our personal identity was a resonance between our current awareness and past memories. ESP was a resonance with others according to how well the subjects were atuned or alike. Group psychology and herd formation was another kind of socio-cultural resonance. But most controversially he suggested the mind was extended outside the body as part of a universal field of which we were all part, drawing parallels with Jung’s Collective Unconscious. Even suggesting that personal memories were stored here and not in the brain, which was just a tuning device. His evidence for his memory theory drew on Pribram’s holistic mind theory and research that showed an octopuses memory was everywhere in its brain, but nowhere in particular, and how bits of the human brain could be removed without memory loss. His extended mind theory draws on his ESP experiments.

 

Other anecdotes he put forward were that if Morphic Resonance were true, things learnt by other minds would spread, the much contested hundreth monkey effect. But gave evidence for this in the form of the mystery of the increasing ease of IQ tests. He even argued exams could be easier by answering the questions in reverse order, so the earlier answers tackled last will already have been answered by many others. He even suggested testing  this in an experiment with  head  of exam board.


When asked if he had a metaphysical philosophy that explained how all this worked he said no, but suggested that the philosophy of Kashmir Shivaism was interesting (curiously as this is also an influence on Neo-Dionysian thought).

 

I was very impressed by his presentation though noted he underplayed his experiments that haven’t had good results and was sceptical of his claim that Morphic Resonance was behind every ordered phenomena at every level! A good idea become obsessive or the greatest discovery of all time? Either way I think he’s closer than most others to science of the future.    

Posted by Kao23 | 2 comment(s)

June 27, 2008

Hmm, what will the Japanese come up with next?

When I first heard about Realdolls a few years back, I figured it would only be a matter of time before they started putting robotics in them.  Well, as far as I know they still haven't, but I have just heard about AI Robotics, a Japanese company that has started to make androids.

They are currently taking pre-orders for Perfect Woman, (I wonder how much feminist backlash they will face?) a female android that can apparently be taught to clean and cook (would you trust it?)  Can they be taught to kill? (Scary prospect).  I don't know if Perfect Woman has the same kind of sex enabled technology as Realdoll, but if it doesn't, its only going to be a matter of time before the two technologies meet...

Aside from the films Stepford Wives, Bladerunner and AI coming up in my head as I think where this is heading, I'm also thinking of the magical possibilities of these things.  If they really can clean and cook and perform other household chores, then I can see it won't be long before every household has one, or two.  Thoughts of the Matrix and Terminator also come to mind at this point.

But by the time they are in mass production, using them as a physical basis to house servitor spirits may become and attractive prospect.  After all, the ability to build slave lifeforms that did the sorcerors bidding was largely what the creation of homunculi was all about.

One last thing, for the heterosexual woman and gay men of you, apparently a male version of the android will also be available soon.  I wonder if they'll make it look like Data.  I dare say some will dress them up that way if they can... Wink

Keywords: ai, android, bladerunner, funny, humour, japan, lisa, realdoll, robot, stepford wives, technology

Posted by Anton Channing | 0 comment(s)

May 22, 2008

Just published my latest serpent blog entry, The Race Myth

Keywords: adam, even, genes, genetics, home sapien, human, human origins, origins, race, racial

Posted by Anton Channing | 0 comment(s)

May 13, 2008

I have just agreed to become a staff writer for key64.net and to celebrate I've just written my first article there as staff.  Of course I once used to be a regular contributor of the old site, key23, and I had one article published by key64 already, but it still feels special to me, so I'm mentioning it anyway... Wink

So this first article is Know Thyself, and it is somewhat of a expansion upon a central theme to my blog Sorcery and Comfort.

Keywords: apollo, delphi, discovery, key64, know, knowledge, self, thyself, yourself

Posted by Anton Channing | 0 comment(s)

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