The Temple of Set II

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The Temple of Set II Page 55

by Michael A Aquino


  and cellular coding, after which he analyzes the best arguments the creationists have to offer. While dismissing

  creationism as ridiculous, he agrees with British Museum palaeontologist Colin Patterson: ‘They [the creationists]

  didn’t have the right answers, but they certainly asked a lot of the right questions.’ In addition to a 4-page

  bibliography of technical works, Hitching provides an additional 4-page annotated bibliography of introductory

  reading, keyed to points brought out in the chapters of his book. If you intend to think or talk about evolutionary

  theory, this book should be considered TOS-1; if you don’t, then TOS-3.”

  17F. The Body Electric: Electromagnetism and the Foundation of Life by Robert O. Becker, M.D. and Gary

  Seldon. NY: William Morrow, 1985. (TOS-3) MA: “Becker is an orthopedic surgeon who gradually uncovered a

  number of correlations between electromagnetic phenomena and the behavior of living tissue. In this tightly argued

  and well-documented book, he discusses human brain evolution and behavior in terms of past and present EM field

  influences, as well as the more general effects of EM radiation on living beings. This book is reviewed in detail in

  Runes #III-3. From the text: ‘Francis Ivanhoe, a pharmacologist and anthropologist at two universities in San

  Francisco, made a statistical survey of the braincase volume of all known Paleolithic human skulls, and correlated

  the increase with the magnetic field strength & major advances in human culture during the same period. Ivanhoe

  found bursts of brain-size evolution at about 380-340,000 years ago, and again at 55-30,000 years ago. Both

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  periods correspond to major ice ages, the Mindel & the Wuerm, and they were also eras when great cultural

  advances were made - the widespread domestication of fire by Homo Erectus in the early Mindel, and the

  appearance of Homo Sapiens Sapiens (Cro-Magnon peoples) and gradual decline of Neanderthals (Homo Sapiens)

  during the Würm ...’ [See also #19I/J.]”

  17G. The Rise of Life by John Reader. (LVT-3) J. Lewis VI°: “Published as a coffee-table book, this history of

  life from the time of core formation 4.5 billion years ago through the present day is highly readable. Within its pages

  can be found evidences of the Gift of Set as life moves from one-celled presence to the succeeding rulers of the

  Earth. Keep an eye out for this one; it is worth its $15.95 price, though it can be found for less at book warehouses.”

  17H. Shadows of the Mind: A Search for the Missing Science of Consciousness by Roger Penrose. Oxford:

  Oxford University Press, 1994 (ISBN: 0-19-853978-9). (TOS-4) MA: “Penrose is a Professor of Mathematics at

  Oxford, and this book is a strongly scientific effort to ‘get at’ the thing called ‘consciousness’ - which Penrose

  ultimately acknowledges cannot be attributed to the physical machinery of the brain, nor of any artificial

  intelligence systems in existence. It remains scientifically elusive. An interesting feature of this book is Penrose’s

  discussion of what he calls the ‘Platonic Universe, in which mathematical concepts and truths inhabit an actual

  world of their own, that is timeless and without physical location’. Penrose sketches his discussion in terms of the

  *interrelationship* of this ‘Platonic U’ with the ‘Physical U’ of scientific observation (the Temple of Set’s ‘objective

  universe’) and the ‘bridge’ of the ‘Mental U’ of observing/reflecting intelligences.”

  17I. The Tangled Web: Biological Constraints on the Human Spirit by Melvin Konner, Ph.D., M.D.. NY: Holt,

  Rinehart & Winston, 1982. (TOS-3) Patty Hardy IV°: “A thoughtful and cautious study of human nature,

  particularly its destructive facets, from a biological perspective. The author realizes that humans are oddly

  transitional, and calls for self-knowledge guided by a sense of wonder. He fears the political misuse of behavioral

  biology, but he fears ignorance still more.” DW: “Magistra Hardy suggested this book for Category #16, Magister

  Ronald L. Barrett for #17. Konner is currently Professor of Anthropology at Emory University, jointly appointed to

  the Department of Psychiatry at the Emory School of Medicine.”

  17J. Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. NY: Harper & Row, 1990.

  (TOS-1) DW: “If the crisis of 1975 had not caused the rapid change from Indulgence to Xeper, but things had

  happened gradually, we would have Csikszentmihalyi’s concept of Flow. The way to happiness lies not in mindless

  hedonism but in mindful challenge. This is about the art of obtaining happiness by learning to control the psyche

  and seeking new challenges for the self. It is about Xeper, written from the perspective of a non-magician. A great

  book, and one that you can give to your nonSetian friends.”

  17K. The Stars my Destination by Alfred Bester. Various editions beginning 1956. (TOS-5) DW: “Gulliver

  Foyle is lost in space, floating away from the wrecked rocket. He discovers a great secret, and in using it changes the

  world forever. What he does is to put the secret into the right hands, and by giving it away accomplishes his goals

  from the meanest to the greatest. It provides a better look at Revelations 13:13, and reveals the real reason why the

  Temple of Set is a scary organization. ‘Gully Foyle is my name,/ And Terra is my nation./ Deep space my dwelling

  place,/ The stars my destination.’”

  * * *

  F17A. 2001: A Space Odyssey. MGM/United Artists, 1968. MGM/UA VHS #MV700002. (12-1022).

  Screenplay by Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke. Directed/produced by Kubrick. (LVT-1) MA: “As noted in

  #17A, the conceptual roots for 2001 go back 1-1/2 decades to Childhood’s End, though this was [for obvious religious

  reasons] not advertised with the film’s release. Even so it is surprising that the film did not draw fire from

  conventional religion, its theme being that mankind is essentially an experiment on this planet by an alien

  intelligence. The simple device of changing the ‘Devil’ Karellen [or Set] to a Golden Sectioned monolith made the

  plot sufficiently abstract to be non-threatening. Besides, most audiences were less interested in the Nietzschean/

  Setian implications of the film than they were with HAL the computer [supposedly more advanced than IBM, so his

  name was created by ‘the next higher letter’], space scenes with Strauss waltzes, and the final ‘stargate trip’ scene.

  Seen through Setian lenses, 2001 remains a beautiful essay on the Gift of Set.” J. Lewis VI°: “The message of 2001

  took many a person around many a mulberry bush on its arrival on the theater circuit. I saw it shortly after its

  release while in the company of several Christian brothers and priests, and grew weary of hearing the monolith

  being described as ‘God’. They missed the point completely: The monolith served as a god-like instrument, but

  readers of #17A get a far better picture of what was actually occurring. [Setians attending Set-VIII visiting Universal

  Studios got to see HAL and the Discovery during the holiday. The monolith was not available at the time, but we

  managed to interact with the real thing later on during the Conclave.]”

  F17B. Five Million Years to Earth. British, 1968. DW: “This sci-fi adventure in the Quatermass series shows

  the Gift of Set in a thriller format. Workers unearth a spaceship (powered by an inverse pentagram) in a remote part

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  of London (named ‘Hob’s End’ after the Devil said to have appeared there in ancient times). It’s part of a Martia
n

  plot: The Martians look like ‘demons’ (an idea reused in #F19C2), and they’re coming back through a

  Remanifestation of their ideas. Sadly Satan loses, but this is a great treat for Pylon film night.”

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  Category 18: Life and Death

  Leben und Tod

  as of February 26, 2003

  To the profane, life and death are automatic, inevitable, and unalterable. Hence they take the

  influence of the life/death continuum on human affairs for granted. To the magician, life and death can

  be influenced and eventually controlled altogether. The Victor Frankenstein of yesterday becomes the

  genetic engineer of tomorrow. New forms and mutations of life will become possible, death may cease

  save through accident, and the Self may evolve into a Self-contained state of existence unhampered by a

  physical shell chained to the entropy of the objective universe. Xeper.

  18A. The Immortalist by Alan Harrington. NY: Avon Books #380-00201-125, 1969 [recently revised and

  updated]. (TOS-3) MA: “In this brilliant book Harrington argues that the presence and the fear of death are root

  causes for much if not all of human behavioral characteristics. Non-human animals cannot conceptualize and

  anticipate death, hence are not governed by it. Harrington then catalogues the surprising number of ways in which

  death-awareness grips human philosophy, presents data on efforts to arrest death, and finally ventures hypotheses

  concerning a non-death- obsessed environment. A scientific rejection of the Osirian ethic. I originally reviewed

  #18A in the Church of Satan’s newsletter The Cloven Hoof #V-1: ‘The Secrets of Life and Death’, reprinted as

  Appendix 71 in #6N and also available in the Order of the Trapezoid section of the Intranet.”

  18B. The Immortality Factor by Osborn Segerberg, Jr. NY: Bantam Books #553-08183-195, 1974.

  [Deutschland: WU: 25/12684] (TOS-4) MA: “This is a somewhat more technical approach to the questions

  addressed in #18A, with emphasis on the physiological aging/ regeneration processes [see also #17F’s discussion of

  this], the creation of life, and ecological implications of a controlled life/death environment [cf. Logan’s Run]. Well-

  researched & argued.”

  18C. The Book of Opening the Mouth by E.A. Wallis Budge (Trans.). NY: Benjamin Blom, 1972. (TOS-5) MA:

  “The Spell for Life Unbounded by Time, caricatured as the ‘Scroll of Thoth’ in the classic Boris Karloff film The

  Mummy. As with other TOS-5 codes, this text is not to be read or used casually or irresponsibly. The motion picture

  Deathdream (Quadrant/Impact Films, 1972) can give you a good idea of what can happen when you tinker with

  necromancy without appreciating the consequences of ‘success’.”

  18D. Our Eternity by Maurice Maeterlinck. NY: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1914. (TOS-4) MA: “A revision and

  expansion of Maeterlinck’s 1911 essay ‘Death’. The highest form of inductive logic directed towards the major issues

  of existence and survival of the egocentric consciousness after material death. Key to the effectiveness of #18C.

  [Maeterlinck is also the author of #2I.]”

  18E. The Mysteries of Life and Death: An Illustrated Investigation into the Incredible World of Death by

  Professor Keith Simpson, OBE, FRCP, FC Path, et al. NY: Crown (Crescent Books, 1980). (TOS-3) MA: “At first

  glance this appears to be a rather morbid ‘coffee-table’ book, but it soon becomes apparent that it is quite a bit more.

  For one thing, the contributing authors are among the most respectable and distinguished in their fields, which

  range from philosophy and criminal psychiatry to pathology and forsenics. Here is the entire concept of death for

  you to examine: mythology, physiological aspects, psychological considerations, and cultural legacy. There are

  chapters on assassination, disease, the soul, strange & bizarre funeral & entombment practices, suicide, artistic

  influences, war, etc. After you get over feeling queasy [the photographs & illustrations pull no punches], you will be

  fascinated to discover just how little you actually knew about the phenomenon of death [hence life], and just what

  the limits of human knowledge concerning it happen to be.”

  18F. The Savage God: A Study of Suicide by A. Alvarez. NY: Random House, 1972. [Deutschland: Der

  grausame Gott, Verlag Hoffman u. Campe, Hamburg, 1974] (TOS-3) MA: “An incisive, objective, and empathetic

  investigation into the psychology of suicide, accompanied by a survey of suicide themes in historical literature. Said

  the New York Times of this book: ‘To write a book about suicide - to transform the subject into something beautiful

  - this is the forbidding task that Alvarez has set for himself; he has succeeded!’”

  18G. The Jewel of Seven Stars by Bram Stoker. NY: Kensington Publishing Corp (Zebra Books #416), 1978

  (originally published by Rider & Company, UK, 1912). (TOS-5) MA: “After writing Dracula Stoker set out to do for

  ancient Egyptian magic and immortality what he had done for medieval vampirism, and JSS was the result -

  certainly his second greatest creation. Though well-received in England, JSS remained almost unavailable and

  unknown in the USA until this small paperback firm brought out this edition. The book recounts the story of Queen

  Tera, a mysterious sorceress of old Khem, one of whose hands was seven-fingered. Superstitiously hated and feared

  by the ordinary priesthoods and court cliques, Tera used her arts to discover the great spell for immortality drawn

  from the Seven Stars of the Thigh of Set, and enchanted it into her tomb through the Xepera-shaped Jewel of Seven

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  Stars. Subtly, sensitively, Stoker evokes in the Initiate reader the success and triumph of Tera - though to the

  uninitiate it will seem that she failed. [See also my “My Last Three Books” in Scroll #XVIII-2, April 1992.] See

  #F18A.”

  * * *

  F18A. Blood from the Mummy’s Tomb. Hammer Films. MA: “Recently restored/released on DVD [with some

  informative and amusing interviews with cast & crew]. Despite its lurid title, it is actually a film version of Bram

  Stoker’s The Jewel of Seven Stars - and a much more faithful treatment of the novel than the later and better-known

  Charlton Heston remake The Awakening. The only irritant is the ending: Whereas Stoker’s novel ends on a

  romantic, mystical note, BMT concludes [as does Awakening] with a ‘monster movie shock scene’ completely absent

  in the original. Cast includes Andrew Keir, Valerie Leon, James Villiers. Directed by Seth Holt. See #18G.”

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  Category 19: The MetaMind

  Der Metamind

  as of February 26, 2003

  The Æon of Set heralds the expansion and extension of Elect minds into yet a third stage of

  intellectual evolution - a point of perspective as far removed from that of mankind as mankind’s is from

  Pithecanthropus. [No doubt the prospect will seem as incredible to humans as a forecast of their

  Coming Into Being would have seemed to Pithecanthropus.] Many phenomena casually called “ESP” are

  in fact the first symptoms of what may be termed the Metamind. Setians should gain an understanding

  of the human mind’s characteristics, physiology, and potential - then apply Metamental experiments to

  appropriate situations. “The most exhilarating thing in the world, I think, is the ability of the

  Setamorphic Metamind to correlate all its contents.”

  19A. The Philosopher’s Stone by Colin Wilson. NY: Warner Paperback Library #0-446-59213-7, 1974. (TOS-1)
r />   MA: “A novel concerning the Metamind - with a Lovecraftian accent. A more intellectual treatment of the theme

  than Wilson’s better-known #7E [although #7E has a more colorful plot]. An expansion on much of the historical

  and bibliographical data in #19A may be found in Wilson’s earlier book The Outsider (Boston: Houghton Mifflin

  Company, 1956). Subsequently Wilson wrote #4A and became thoroughly confused when he tried to explain the

  Metamind as a natural phenomenon.”

  19B. The Psychology of Man’s Possible Evolution by Peter D. Ouspensky. NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 1969.

  [Deutschland: Die Psychologie des möglichen Menschen, Barth-Verlag Bern, Edition Pleyaden, Berlin, 1981]

  (COS-1) (TOS-1) (SHU-1) AL: “Should be read especially by those members whose magical ability is hampered by

  flaws in their balance factor.” MA: “A series of lectures which explain the Gurdjieff approach to the concept better

  than G. himself was able to do. If you’re unfamiliar with G., see Gurdjieff by Louis Pauwels (NY: Weiser, 1972). See

  also the section on G. in #4A.” DW: “This is a great book for Pylons to discuss - one lecture per meeting. For those

  who catch the Gurdjieff bug, I recommend that they later read Ouspensky’s In Search of the Miraculous (NY:

  Harcourt, Brace & World, 1949).”

  19C. The Fourth Way by Peter D. Ouspensky. NY: Random House (Vintage), 1957. [Deutschland: Der Vierte

  Weg, Sphinx Verlag, CH-Basel, 1983] (TOS-4) MA: “An advanced commentary in the form of questions and answers

  concerning the material covered by #19B. The greatest value in both this book and #19B lies in the subsequent

  practice and use of the techniques by the magician.”

  19D. Tao of Jeet Kune Do by Bruce Lee. Burbank: Ohara Publications, 1975. (TOS-4) Lee: “To realize freedom,

  the mind has to learn to look at life, which is a vast movement without the bondage of time, for freedom lies beyond

  the field of consciousness. Watch, but don’t stop and interpret, ‘I am free’ - then you’re living in a memory of

  something that has gone. To understand and live now, everything of yesterday must die.”

  19E. The Brain Revolution by Marilyn Ferguson. NY: Bantam Books #553-08412-225, 1975. [Deutschland:

 

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