The Satanic Bible

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by Michael A Aquino


  forgotten that things were not better until history

  presented the churches with a clear choice: reform

  or die. 96

  2. Atheism

  As the record of El is mythological - the fables

  of the J/C Holy Bible - all the atheist need do is

  dismiss that document as superstitious fiction to

  96 Fowles, John, The Aristos. Boston: Little, Brown, 1964,

  extracts from Chapter 7/Christianity.

  - 179 -

  prove his point: El is nothing more than an old

  fairytale.

  The problem here, however, is that the atheist

  is all too anxious to limit the question to mere

  acceptance/rejection of Biblical mythology. He does

  not demand that his position also stand the test of

  other conventional religions, like those of Asia or

  Native America. That is too much trouble, and it

  jeopardizes the simple smugness he enjoys with his

  Abrahamic coup de grace.

  In academia the term “scholasticism” refers to

  reasoning deliberately towards the support of a

  predetermined conclusion. Facts are acknowledged

  and accepted only if they support the argument, and

  ignored or denounced if they do not.

  Scholasticism became [in]famous during

  medieval and Renaissance times for the J/C-

  supporting “learned” arguments of Christians such

  as Augustine and Aquinas (both duly sanctioned by

  Catholic canonization).

  Theoreticians not feeling the necessity to

  support “scripture” were not so honored: Niccoló

  Machiavelli’s name was given to the Devil as “Old

  Nick”, and Galileo was forced to deny his science to

  remain alive.

  Today one still searches in vain for a professed

  atheist who has announced his position only after a

  non-scholasticisic search through all possible doors

  to the truth. It is precisely this precariousness which

  makes their proclaimed confidence so brittle - and

  why they often react to challenges perfunctorily.

  3. Agnosticism

  The J/C agnostic doesn’t assert the conviction

  of the atheist - generally because of laziness. He is a

  - 180 -

  procrastinator who would rather not risk a wrong

  decision - or the antagonisms following any

  decision. “Kick the can” and change the subject!

  C. Satanimal

  1.

  Satanism

  In 1966 the Church of Satan got off to a

  somewhat uncertain start, and this was echoed in

  the original Satanic Bible as well.

  The problem was that as religious metaphysics

  seemed the de facto domain of institutional faiths,

  the ostensible opposition to it defaulted to the

  physical position.

  As the Satanic religion was oriented towards

  human affairs rather than laboratory science, the

  euphemism settled upon was “carnality”.

  So in this context Indulgence meant just being

  a “happy animal”, luxuriating contentedly in all

  those pleasurable “Seven Deadly Sins”.

  After a few years of Eyes Wide Shut frolics,

  however, Satanists noticed that something

  important was missing. The Satanist, in studying

  and practicing both Lesser and Greater Black Magic,

  assumes the prerogatives and powers of a god: that

  is to say the “knowledge of Good & Evil” as acquired

  by Adam & Eve.

  But unlike those unfortunate slaves and their

  progeny, the Satanist does not suppress this

  knowledge or accept guilt and punishment for

  possessing and asserting it. Rather he glories in it

  and seeks to expand ad improve his exercise of it.

  This is, obviously, Indulgence in the far more

  exalted sense of the Diabolicon.

  - 181 -

  2. NonRedemption

  In “Might is Right” and the second original

  “Lucifer” essay, a need for “redemption” was

  acknowledged, with the Satanic caveat being the

  assumption of self-, rather than Jesus/Mohammed-

  redemption.

  The implication seemed to be that although

  sins remain sins, the Satanist reserves the right to

  judge himself, including preemptive pardon. “I can’t

  be sanctimonious like other priests and ministers,”

  sorrowfully admitted Anton LaVey in Satanis. 97

  Then he grinned: “But I can do anything I want!”

  With time and experience this license was

  realized to be inadequate if only hedonistic.

  Assuming the prerogative to define Good & Evil

  clearly carried with it the responsibility to do so

  conscientiously.

  Before too long the Church of Satan found itself

  in the ironic, almost comic position of being the

  champion of the highest possible concept of

  morality. Now its contrast to conventional religion

  highlighted their insincerity, hypocrisy, and cold-

  blooded callousness to the point of torture, murder,

  g e n o c i d e . N o s u c h d e p r a v i t y w o u l d b e

  countenanced in a Satanist! In 1972 Anton said in

  the Church’s Cloven Hoof newsletter:

  Other religions have had thousands of years

  to construct a wall of righteous immunity with

  which to surround themselves, though they have

  fought, one against the other.

  Their priests can nefariously use their

  prestigious positions, for, even though their deceit

  is visible, so are the deceits of those who are

  97 Satanis, the Devil’s Mass. 1970. DVD: “Something Weird

  Video” #ID1615SWDVD.

  - 182 -

  empowered to criticize them. Hence nothing is

  said. Our Priests’ shortcomings will also be

  visible, but many voices will be raised in criticism,

  for such criticism is justified when it attacks the

  Devil. Our Priests must be superior human

  beings.

  To attack our detractors is easy. Any Satanist

  will find them to be small and unfair game; he will

  receive no trophies upon bagging the limit. Such

  sport can be entered into by the most fledgling

  Satanist, armed with a modicum of logic and a

  pantheon of Satanic deities from which to draw, in

  a tournament of fantasy.

  The Priest of Mendes, however, is a lion in

  the path of those whose only justification for living

  rests on their adherence to the side of “goodness”.

  The Satanic Priest will be observed in all

  aspects of his “evilness”, whether it be a pick of the

  nose or an unmown lawn.

  Our Priests and Priestesses - like Cæsar’s

  wife - can do no wrong.

  The Priesthood of the Church of Satan

  requires far more perfection of its candidates than

  do the priesthoods of other religions, for the Priest

  or Priestess of Satan is the foundation of modern

  Satanism.

  As we grow, there is less room for marginal

  persons within the Church. As we progress,

  standards of leadership are tightened - not only

  because we become a brighter object of scrutiny,

  but because of incr
easingly higher qualifications

  possessed by new members. 98

  The pleasures of Indulgence thus transitioned

  from nonchalant hedonism to the sophisticated

  Epicureanism of the ancient Hellenistic cosmopolis:

  the supreme pleasure to result from the wisest

  Good: what Plato had sought through the dialectic

  of his Dialogues.

  98 LaVey, Anton in The Cloven Hoof, March 1972.

  - 183 -

  It was important to Plato that virtue be raised

  to a level of rationality. It was not enough for

  people to be unconsciously or instinctively virtuous;

  they must “taste of the knowledge of good and evil”

  and then knowingly choose the good.

  Plato stratified thought as Eikasia (primitive

  emotion), Pistis (ordinary active/reactive thinking),

  Dianoia (precise, logical, enlightened thought), and

  Nœsis (intuition and apprehension of the Agathon):

  In classical political thought there was a

  concern to locate authority beyond anything that

  anyone could appropriate, either in wisdom or in

  justice, or, as in the Platonic Agathon - the

  supreme Good which is beyond definition.

  The Agathon can accommodate as many

  formulations as there are human beings, and every

  person can make his own report.

  As there will always be a transcending or

  conceivable Good beyond the good(s) of particular

  individuals, the Agathon is ineffable and

  indefinable, and necessarily transcends the spatial

  and the temporal limits of finite powers of

  perception.99

  To be a god, then, carries with it the

  responsibility of wisdom, of ethics, of serving the

  Holy Grail that is the Agathon. It need hardly be

  noted that El and his entourage failed in all of this

  atrociously, shockingly, disgracefully.

  So if you take upon yourself the name, dignity,

  and legacy of the Prince of Darkness, you will see in

  your Xeper, your telos, a divinity breathtaking in its

  magnificence. But once you drink from this Grail,

  there is no turning back.

  99 Iyer, Raghavan N., ParaPolitics: Toward the City of Man.

  New York: Oxford University Press, 1979, page #22.

  - 184 -

  3. Telos

  a. Symbolique

  Telos (from the Greek τέλος for “end”,

  “purpose”, or “goal”) originates in Egyptian

  Symbolism100 as the principle that the design and

  organization of an object, a life-form, or a process

  inherently requires preconception based on

  purpose.

  Conventional academic doctrine is that living

  beings’ purpose is selectively the result of

  environmental survival needs: Darwinian “natural

  selection”: There is no inherent purpose to life-

  forms beyond passive/reactive survival, avoidance of

  pain, seeking of pleasure, and instinct to reproduce.

  b. Lamarck101

  Prior to Darwin’s theory of passive natural

  selection, the French biologist Jean Baptiste

  Lamarck (1744-1829), while not denying such

  passive evolution, augmented it with what he

  termed “soft evolution” (in modern parlance

  “Lamarckism”). Under this theory, characteristics

  developed or acquired by a given living being can be

  inherited by its progeny, thus adding the element of

  intentional purpose to evolution.

  100 Plutarch: “First I want to interpret for you the theology of

  the Egyptians. Through symbols they reveal certain mystical

  ideas that are hidden and invisible, just as nature in its

  perceptible forms has to a certain extent expressed with

  symbols the invisible reasons for things.” - Schwaller de

  Lubicz, Isha, Her-Bak: Egyptian Initiate. New York: Inner

  Traditions, 1967, page #271.

  101 Anton LaVey was an emphatic and unshakable Lamarckian.

  - 185 -

  If Lamarckism is allowed to operate according

  to human intellectual will, of course, then the

  principle of purpose on the individual human scale

  is established. This in turn suggests that there may

  be a greater element of purpose above and beyond

  the individual: one or more neteru who manifest

  through that individual, both physically and

  consciously.

  While outrageously heretical to the Darwinian

  establishment, which is rigidly deistic if not outright

  atheistic, such a master-principle of purpose was

  neither unknown nor repugnant to the ancients,

  who by the time it had reached Greece from Egypt

  referred to it as telos.

  c.

  Teleology

  Teleology is the doctrine that final causes of

  phenomena exist. Further that purpose and design

  are a part of or are apparent in nature. Further that

  phenomena are not only guided by mechanical

  forces (e.g. passive natural selection), but also move

  towards certain goals of self-realization.

  d. Mechanism

  The opposite of teleology is mechanism,

  which describes phenomena in terms of prior causes

  instead of their presumed destination or fulfillment.

  [Modern science is thus mechanistic.]

  - 186 -

  - 187 -

  13: Metacarnation

  A. Consciousness

  1.

  Metaphysics:

  Consciousness as an Entity

  S i n c e c o n v e n t i o n a l t h e o l o g y r e g a r d s

  consciousness as “the soul in action”, it has

  generally been happy to just blur the two concepts

  into a single, nothing-further-needed axiom of

  religious faith.

  Philosophers seeking to escape the label of

  such mere faith found that the moment they strayed

  from the simple act of self-awareness, they were

  actually addressing other issues, such as whether

  physical sensory input is/was occurring, whether

  such input is reliable, and indeed whether the

  mental processing of concepts and information (e.g.

  “thought”) should somehow be either a requirement

  or evidence of awareness. René Descartes’ famous

  “cogito ergo sum” (= I think, therefore I am) is an

  example of such off-the-mark confusion; arguments

  both pro and con this maxim have all focused on the

  act of thinking rather than mere self-awareness.

  - 188 -

  2. Physics:

  Consciousness as an Illusion

  Modern physical science remains adamantly

  materialistic; any hint of a metaphysical presence or

  activity is tantamount to heresy. If consciousness

  exists, therefore, it must be explainable [away] as

  the physical brain generating some form of illusory

  self-imagery.

  In support of this theory, scientists note that if

  the brain is anæsthetized, the individual “blacks

  out”. Also when the body and brain sleep,

  consciousness either blacks out or becomes merely a

  spectator to hallucination (e.g. dreaming).

  Upon examination both of these scientific

  claims fail to be conclusive.

&n
bsp; As ordinary consciousness is accustomed to

  being reactive to physical sensory input, the sudden

  muting of all such input by anæsthesia throws the

  consciousness into a sudden non-sensory mode with

  which it has no experience. The result is temporary

  inactivity, though below the level of sensory imagery

  it continues to receive stimulus signals from the

  physical body.

  In certain anæsthesia applications, moreover,

  the body’s transmissions to the consciousness are

  muted while that consciousness remains alert and

  communicative. If it were merely a function of the

  body’s normal physical sensory processes, this

  would not occur.

  Where sleep and dreaming are concerned, it

  has already been established that the quality and

  coherence of the act of thinking is an entirely

  different concern than self-awareness per se.

  Where ordinary sleep and dreaming are

  concerned, once again awareness must not be

  - 189 -

  confused with thinking. In short, the random

  imagination characteristic of dreams, or the absence

  of such experiences if the resting brain has so

  lowered its sensory transmissions, has no relevance

  to awareness. Being self-aware does not require this

  to be continuous.

  3. Consciousness/Brain Distinction

  Whether the conscious/“soul” (Egyptian

  MindStar) is distinguishable from the physical brain

  is related to the constitution of bodily “death”, which

  is itself not all that simple to determine.

  In 1981 a Commissioners’ Conference on

  Unites States Laws proposed a model state law

  entitled the Uniform Determination of Death Act,

  since adopted by some but not all states. It reads:

  An individual who has sustained either (1)

  irreversible cessation of circulatory and

  respiratory functions, or (2) irreversible cessation

  of all functions of the entire brain, including the

  brain stem, is dead. A determination of death must

  be made in accordance with accepted medical

  standards.

  This suffices in the OU to discard bodies no

  longer collectively-metabolizing, but it is an

  unsubstantiated overreach of OU materialism to

  claim that the absence of brain-electricity proves the

  obliteration of the mind/consciousness - which is

 

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