The Eye in the Triangle: An
Interpretation of Aleister Crowley, is a book by Israel
Regardie. The book description sounds like this:
“Aleister
Crowley, the greatest Magus of the twentieth century, redefined the very basis
of the Western Esoteric Tradition. His incalculably vast influence reaches through
all modern occultism. Whether acknowledged or not, he is the father of the
modern arts of ceremonial magick, Western Tantra, Tarot and Wicca. His devotees
ascribe even greater significance to his life, regarding him as the prophet of
the modern age.”
I
believe this is completely true, but I don´t see it in a positive way. In my blog post Witch
Power, Occult Awakening and Dangerous Illusions, I have written about the
wrong turn in occultism, which happened with the rise of evolutionism. Here occultism
was sought integrated with science. Such an “integration” ends unavoidable in
reductionism. In Crowley´s case the reductionism is psychologism.
In 1898 Crowley joined the
esoteric Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, where he was trained in
ceremonial magic. In Cairo, Egypt, where Crowley claimed to have been
contacted by a supernatural entity named Aiwass, who provided him
with The Book of the Law, a sacred text that served as the basis for
Thelema. Announcing the start of the Æon
of Horus, The Book declared this:
DO
WHAT THOU WILT SHALL BE THE WHOLE OF THE LAW
A fall into complete subjectivism.
Aiwass seems very inspired by the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. After his
channeling experience Crowley founded the religion of Thelema, identifying
himself as the prophet entrusted with guiding humanity into the Æon of
Horus in the early 20th century. His followers should "Do what thou
wilt" and seek to align themselves with their True Will through
the practice of magick (this is clearly an inspiration for the New Age
concept of create-your-own-reality).
Crowley gained widespread
notoriety during his lifetime, being a recreational drug experimenter, bisexual and
an individualist social critic. He was denounced in the popular press
as "the wickedest man in the world" and a Satanist. But Crowley
has remained a highly influential figure over Western esotericism, the counterculture,
postmodernism and New Age (see my article Constructivism:
The Postmodern Intellectualism Behind New Age and the Self-help Industry).
Political he was without doubt
a fascist, since he directly demonstrated this. Crowley described democracy as
an "imbecile and nauseating cult of weakness", and commented
that The Book of the Law proclaimed that "there is the master
and there is the slave; the noble and the serf; the 'lone wolf' and the herd".
In this attitude he was especially influenced by the work of Nietzsche
(Aiwass?) and by Social Darwinism. Although he had contempt for most
of the British aristocracy, he regarded himself as an aristocrat and styled
himself as Laird Boleskine, once describing his ideology as "aristocratic
communism". Pasi described Crowley's affinity to the extreme ideologies
of Nazism and Marxism–Leninism, which aimed to violently overturn
society: "What Crowley liked about Nazism and communism, or at least what
made him curious about them, was the anti-Christian position and the
revolutionary and socially subversive implications of these two movements. In
their subversive powers, he saw the possibility of an annihilation of old
religious traditions, and the creation of a void that Thelema, subsequently,
would be able to fill. All this forms a background understanding of that my
concept of The
Matrix Conspiracy Fascism, is to be found on both the political left and
right.
In the best Orwellian NewSpeak
style he taught his students to use thought distortions in order to get on in
the world, as for example contradictions. In his book The Vision and the Voice he writes something which sound like Yin
and Yang wisdom, but which is a clever distortion:
…all
the symbols are interchangeable for each containeth itself its own opposite.
And this is the great Mystery of the Supernals that are beyond the Abyss. For
below the Abyss contradiction is division. But above the Abyss contradiction is
Unity. And there could be nothing true except by virtue of contradiction that
is contained in itself.
He mixes the opposites instead
of discriminating between them, as Yin and Yang philosophy teaches, and instead
of clarity he therefore ends in obscurantism. In my Ebook The
Tragic New Age Confusion of Eastern Enlightenment and Western Idealism, I
describe how such a mistake happens by using Timothy Conway´s three-fold model
of Nondual reality.
Where philosophers would point
to logical problems such as self-refutation and contradiction, Crowley´s supporters
see this as a sign of “crazy wisdom” (about crazy wisdom, see my articles Why
I Don´t Teach Tibetan Dream Yoga, and Bhagwan
Shree Rajneesh (Osho). Osho was inspired by Crowley, and used precisely the
same rhetorical techniques of deliberately using contradictions in order to
manipulate his students.
Crowley´s paranormal
experiences and the contradictions can in my view not be due to any kind of
enlightenment, but to a spiritual crisis of some sort, altering between
ego-inflation and the dark night of the soul (see my article Spiritual
Crises as the Cause of Paranormal Phenomena).
Finally, about the concept of
The Eye in the Triangle. Usually this is used as a Christian symbol, were it
represents the eye of God watching over humanity (the
concept of divine providence). In Crowley´s case it refers to the Eye of
Horus, but has been reduced to psychology mixed with the concept of the third
eye. It is also a symbol used in many conspiracy theories, as for example the
Illuminati conspiracy, one of the sub-conspiracies in my concept of The Matrix
Conspiracy. Here it represents the rise of scientism (reductionism).
Another sub-conspiracy is the
666 conspiracy, which in my context has to do with a turning spirituality
upside down, so that we have a worship of ego and obscurantism, instead of
self-forgetfulness and clarity. Ironically enough, Crowley refers to himself as
the Great Beast, and used 666 as his magick number. His sex magick was
essentially about awakening the kundalini and rising it to the third eye. The demonical
aspects of this has been shown in my article The
Conspiracy of the Third Eye.
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