cptmarginal wrote:"I always find it interesting on these Crowley threads, they revolve around what he was or was not, did or did not, etc. Rather than many other artists, who are reflected on by their body of work, not so much the artist. I wonder how many people who debate have actually read but more importantly understood any of his work. "
You would prefer threads about the man to ignore his nature and his deeds? That wouldn't leave much to talk about. And the man wasn't an artist, as anyone who's come across his poetry will attest. Besides, you've misunderstood modern art. The persona of the artist is the whole point, that's how modern art works. You think any Emin or Hirst has artistic merit? Bollocks it does, it's all about them.
I don't know about "Crowleyites" but from reading the man's books I get the exact opposite impression. Not just that the very first steps involve reading a shitload of books about the history and comparative practice of religion and philosophy, but that you are also required to have independent knowledge of yoga practice (among other things)
That probably explains why so many of his little groupies don't seem to know very much.
OP ED wrote:neither. It is an oversimplification with needed citations. Crowley spoiled dozens of expeditions. You'll have to be more specific [dates, etc] if you wish to make so bold a claim as the one above and have your deliberately one-sided and unsourced statements taken at face value.
I suspect you do not even know what you're referencing and merely repeating internet innuendo without references. Or sunday express headlines.
I doubt the Express has mentioned the man since long before I was born. They're a newspaper, after a fashion, they're hardly going to be interested in anything so esoteric. I'm surprised you think he ruined dozen of expeditions, though. His mountaineering claims are debatable, of course, but his fans are normally eager to accept all his claims.
Look for the book "The Beast Demystified". A bit tame, but the most reliable books always are.
Thelemites I know, on the other hand, are much the opposite. Crowley's mysticism, as i've said previously, is not for beginners. Which is to say that independent knowledge of mysticism is not only permissibile it is required in most cases.
Yet genuine mystics will almost always disagree with his interpretations.
I find your platitudes about evil and left and right hands to be very shallow and generally uninformed, esp wrt how these things are interpreted by Thelemites.
I'm not interesting in Thelemic interpretations, I prefer going to the source. I object to the term Thelemic, also. Such weakly-egoed individuals shouldn't claim to represent Will.
Those who restrain desire, do so because theirs is weak enough to be restrained; and the restrainer of reason usurps its place and governs the unwilling. And being restrained, it by degrees becomes passive, till it is only the shadow of desire. Blake, Marriage of Heaven and Hell
[part of the 0* A:.A:. reading curriculum]
That's rather the idea, dear. If your ego is too weak to overcome your desires you've already died the little death, the real little death, because you're no more than a glorified animal. A beast, if you will. If you can control yourself your desires will eventually be whipped into shape and will be much easier to control. Habit-forming.
I don't want to imply that the left hand path is about giving into your desires, though. The natural conclusion to the logic of the left-hand path is the cultivation of perverted desires. I don't think the global elites start off as narco-pederasts. They make themselves that way because they think breaking the mental bonds of morality and convention will make them powerful, rational, supermen in fact. That's why you shouldn't be surprised to find James Shelby Downard talking about inter-racial sex in the Ku Klux Klan's occult rituals. To the Klan this was the big taboo, to Sade in was homosexuality and necrophilia, now it's narcopederasty.
bobdobbs wrote:I've heard that if you're a mountain climber and there's an avalanche trapping your companions, you're better off leaving them behind and going to get help. Any attempt at trying to rescue your trapped fellow climbers will only result in your own death, and you're better off trying to get help while you can.
You've probably heard right, but Crowley made no effort to fetch help.
Also, my two-cents about Crowley, I think he's fascinating, although I don't think he's any sort of messiah (as his followers think) and I don't think he's any sort of anti-christ either.
He's no more an anti-Christ than I am, he's not important enough. He was a second rate medium and pervert. He couldn't even recognise a true mystic when he was lucky enough to come across L Ron Hubbard, telling Parsons he was a con-man. (Technically true, of course.)
I feel that the book of the law is an important book to read and understand for anyone who is studying the occult, or religious texts, whether you agree with it or not. I feel he made a significant impact on the occult world, translated important lost occult books, and brought a new philosophy to the fore. But his egotism and arrogance may have tainted his efforts to start a religion around his "new aeon". Like him or hate him you can't deny his influence over modern occultism.
Of course he only channeled the Book of the Law, which demonstrates normal occultic attitudes, it's nothing revolutionary. All of the above, indeed, is unreasonably trusting of his claims to finding lost texts and so forth. His philosophy was the same as that of the Maquis de Sade, the social darwinists, the contactees and probably of Gilles de Retz if we could know it more accurately.
Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that all was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, and make it possible. -- Lawrence of Arabia