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American Dream wrote:Crowley functioned in a milieu that included High Magic, Yoga, Buddhism, Rosicrucianism, Quabbalah, Sufism and other such esoteric traditions.
It should by no means be thought that Uncle Aleister tainted all those areas of spiritual endeavor simply because he had contact.
American Dream wrote:Crowley functioned in a milieu that included High Magic, Yoga, Buddhism, Rosicrucianism, Quabbalah, Sufism and other such esoteric traditions.
It should by no means be thought that Uncle Aleister tainted all those areas of spiritual endeavor simply because he had contact.
Of course he didn't invent all of those things, did he?
American Dream wrote:Stephen Morgan wrote:American Dream wrote:Crowley functioned in a milieu that included High Magic, Yoga, Buddhism, Rosicrucianism, Quabbalah, Sufism and other such esoteric traditions.
It should by no means be thought that Uncle Aleister tainted all those areas of spiritual endeavor simply because he had contact.
Of course he didn't invent all of those things, did he?
I was a bit unclear in what I wrote.
I am saying that these types of esoteric traditions- High Magic, Yoga, Buddhism etc.- are potentially useful, despite Crowley's efforts to "brand them" as part and parcel of his own Thelemic practices. Thelemic Magick I do not recommend in anyway, although I do recognize that aspirants and practitioners come in a variety of forms.
OP ED wrote:people who do not know anything about something should likely refrain from discussing it, especially if the only information they have seems to rely entirely on National Enquirer headlines from a century ago...
American Dream wrote:I want to emphasize that spiritual questions are very personal, and individual choices deserve to be respected- whether they are to follow a certain path, to not believe at all, or whatever.
I think there are very good reasons to be cautious of Aleister Crowley, and I'm not going to hold back from saying that. Of course, every one should be free to come to their own conclusions, to act accordingly, and to learn from their own experiences.
I hope I made that clear.
Did Crowley really sacrifice children?
No. Most of the rumors concerning "child sacrifice" stem from disingenuous misquoting of a passage from his book Magick in Theory and Practice:
"For the highest spiritual working one must accordingly choose that victim which contains the greatest and purest force. A male child of perfect innocence and high intelligence is the most satisfactory and suitable victim. "
Even though he is quoting someone else, taken out of context, this seems pretty damning. However, Crowley was in fact discussing ritual masturbation, which he believed consituted a form of "sacrifice," according to the old biblical idea of preventing contraception by "spilling seed." As he explains in his footnote on the same page, "... 'It is the sacrifice of oneself spiritually. And the intelligence and innocence of that male child are the perfect understanding of the Magician, his one aim, without lust of result. And male he must be, because what he sacrifices is not the material blood, but his creative power.' ..."
In reality, Crowley considered even abortion to be a crime and certainly never advocated child murder, which is quite evident if one delves into his writings.
Human sacrifice would also be against Crowley's "Law of Thelema," which considers it a grave sin to interfere with the will of another person. This of course takes all the fun out of it for the hysterics, who continue to gleefully recount this passage as a literal truth.
Truth4Youth wrote:Human sacrifice would also be against Crowley's "Law of Thelema," which considers it a grave sin to interfere with the will of another person. This of course takes all the fun out of it for the hysterics, who continue to gleefully recount this passage as a literal truth.
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