2010-07-31

The Demon of Dialectics

Filed under: Buddhism,Crowley,Julius Evola — by Cologero @ 16:37
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The premise from which the Buddhist Doctrine of Awakening starts is the destruction of the demon of dialectics; the renunciation of the various constructions of thought and speculation which are simply an expression of opinion, and of the profusion of theories, which are projections of a fundamental restlessness in which a mind that has not yet found itself its own principle seeks for support.

~ Julius Evola, The Doctrine of Awakening

This premise is the exact opposite of what people believe. They believe in the search for the right opinion, the correct view, the salvific belief. The purpose of this search is to do the impossible: to build a castle in the air. The man engaged in this quest is unaware of this elementary thesis:

We accept the proofs of Hume, Kant, Herbert Spencer, Fuller, and others of this thesis:
The Ratiocinative Faculty or Reason of Man contains in its essential nature an element of self-contradiction.

~ Aleister Crowley, Equinox Vol 1 No 2

To this we would add, from Goedel: if a system of thought contains no self-contradiction, then it is incomplete.

While for Beings in the human state, there is necessarily a perspective (see Hermit Crabs and Nietzsche), it is equally necessary to understand that it is only a perspective, something arbitrary and ephemeral, and unrelated to real knowledge, True Will, Awakening, the Solar spirit. All our opinions on politics and popular culture, our likes and dislikes, our style or dress, are all equally arbitrary and stand as obstacles to Awakening.

Opinion, O disciples, is a disease; opinion is a tumour; opinion is a sore. He who has overcome all opinions, O disciples, is called a saint, one who knows. (Majjhima-nikaya 2:38)

Crowley once proposed an interesting exercise, which we adapt. For one year, be a political liberal. Subscribe to their journals, read their web sites, attend their rallies. The following year, read conservative journals, watch their networks, participate in their demonstrations. Try to understand the worldviews of each, how that affects their opinions on issues, and blinds them to deeper truths. The same could be done with attitudes toward pop cultures or personal styles. Such exercises will loosen the hold that opinions have over us; they will give us more options for action; they will begin the process of awakening our consciousness from the turgidity of ordinary life.

Man has two aspects: his essence and his personality. His essence is who he truly is, what he is born with, beyond the superficialities of opinion. Personality is what accrues to him during his life, his opinions and imaginings, or “social constructs”. You will find that what is essential and what is a social construct are polar opposites from what is commonly believed.

“Do I contradict myself? I embrace multitudes.” (Walt Whitman) Go ahead, embrace multitudes. Only thought can contradict itself, “I” cannot.

Copyright © 2009, 2010 Gornahoor Press

2008-05-21

Fundamentals of Sex Magick

Filed under: Crowley,Magick — by Cologero @ 08:29

“The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom.” ~ William Blake

Several would-be esoterists have tried to convince me that sex magick, particularly the Crowleyian version, is the fast track to enlightenment. They do so apparently on the grounds that since their social life already revolves around sex and drugs, that therefore it would be a natural fit for them. If it were that simple, then any American inner city would be a centre of spiritual enlightenment. Even an experienced Mason has told me that the search for the Grail is really chercher la femme, on the grounds that the shape of the cup reminds him of a vagina. I could only conclude that we travel in different circles.

Although there are reasons for limiting the male orgasm–and not out of prudery or some Victorian moral code–there is no doubt sexual energy has been used as a tool for self-realisation. Since Crowley has left records of his experiences, it seems useful to pay attention. First of all, Crowley’s “method of science” means that the sexual experience–even one’s own–must be treated with detachment and objectivity. Any one who has attempted this will notice regarding a sex act as merely physiological significantly changes the experience itself; he will also notice how much of the sexual experience is controlled by the imagination and not the biology.

Crowley’s essay Liber DCCCXI: Energized Enthusiasm describes his experiences. He points out that the ceremonial use of sex has restrictions that don’t apply to the natural physical purpose of sex. “If the act in itself is to be the sacrament in a religious ceremony, this act must be accomplished solely for the love of God. All personal considerations must be banished utterly.” And again, “I need hardly emphasize the necessity for the strictest self-control and concentration on their [the celebrant’s] part. As it would be blasphemy to enjoy the gross taste of the wine of the sacrament, so must the celebrant suppress even the minutest manifestation of animal pleasure.”

Crowley notes, “It is, indeed, of the first importance for the celebrant in any phallic rite to be able to complete the act without even once allowing a sexual or sensual thought to invade his mind. The mind must be as absolutely detached from one’s own body as it is from another person’s.”

Nowadays, Tibetan Buddhism is a rival for the sex magick crowd. Its appeal to its Western adherents is that it is cooler than their parents’ religion and compatible with science. Then there are all the thangkas depicting the yabyum, again depicting something they fancy themselves to be skilled at when those interminable meditation sessions become fatiguing. Never mind that Tibetan Buddhist sexual morality is identical to that of the despised Roman church, that is a mere detail that arises from the culture of Tibet and not fundamental to Buddhism.

Nevertheless, the Dalai Lama asserts that initiation into Buddhist Tantra is reserved to those who have achieved total indifference to experience. He gives the example that if you don’t care whether you are served an elegant meal or a serving of faeces with a glass full of pus, then you are ready for Tantra. It seems that Crowley may have taken this dictum quite literally.

In his book Carnal Alchemy, Stephen Flowers notes that on one particular sex magick session, Crowley was “forced into an act of caprophagy as a kind of Holy Eucharist.” (p. 20) Now Dr. Flowers is a brilliant linguist, a promoter of Germanic languages, and somewhat kinky himself. Nevertheless, he prefers the clinically sounding Latin word, rather than the more colourful Anglo-Saxon equivalent. I myself would prefer the elegant French—manger la merde d’amour—since it sounds as though it deserves a glossy monthly magazine with scratch-off sniffers.

Copyright © 2009, 2010 Gornahoor Press