January 22nd: Heidegger and Crowley

This week, a suggestion from Soror Ahaviel:

Please read Martin Heidegger‘s “What is Metaphysics?” (pp.89-110) and “The End of Philosophy and the Task of Thinking.” (pp.427-449)

Also read Chapter 0 of Aleister Crowley’s The Book of Lies (pp.6-7).

OPTIONAL: Ahaviel’s own comment on Heidegger.

Soror Ahaviel’s comment:

This week I would like to consider whether Crowley was right in saying that he wrote the “most complete treatise on existence” (The Book of Lies). It is not exactly clear to me that Crowley breaks free of metaphysics, so I want to look at Heidegger to ask what he and his deconstruction of metaphysics might contribute to magic. More specifically, let us read his 1919 and 1964 essays “What Is Metaphysics?” and “The End of Philosophy and the Task of Thinking,” alongside Chapter 0 of “The Book of Lies.” If Crowley was indeed still completely ensnared by metaphysics, and Heidegger managed to point to something more fundamental (what he called the “Lichtung”), then I don’t see how Crowley marked a fundamentally new aeon, if aeons are about fundamental ways of thinking. But maybe I’m totally confused about everything. I’m probably totally confused. At least thinking is more fun when you’re confused.

I also attach some fragments of what I’ve written on the Lichtung, because I think Heidegger is still pretty entrapped by the metaphysical masculinism of Kampf/polemos. It’s an early attempt, more or less before I encountered magic, to wrestle with themes that are still provoking me, even and especially as I develop magically.

For next week, January 29th:

A number of us will be working Mark Stavish’s The Liturgy of Hermes, at the suggestion of Frater Ex Nihilo. We thought it convenient to provide the text in advance.

May you flourish! May you EXCEED.

January 1st: How To See Fairies

For New Year’s Day, a suggestion from Hermafetes con Harrow: Ramsey Dukes’ How to See Fairies. We’ll discuss “Week Two: a Sense of Place” – pages 59-78.

Hermafetes’ comment:

I love this text because, unlike many other magical texts, it teaches techniques so fundamental that most introductory books overlook them entirely.
Before reading this book, I hadn’t realized that some of the things I naturally do (call it neurodivergence if you like) are actually a form of these techniques. Recognizing these actions as deliberate skills and practicing them intentionally has value, whether you’re learning them for the first time or refining innate abilities.
A few years ago, we explored how to tune in to sensory input and observe everything simultaneously without judgment. (What Alan Watts might call “floodlight consciousness.”) This week, we’ll shift focus to “vibes.” Specifically the vibes of a place. Most of us have been to a place with strong “good” or “bad” vibes, and while this is valid, what if we could also perceive subtler vibes like “okay” or “awkward” with the same clarity?
I encourage you to pick one of this week’s exercises and let me know how it goes. I’ll do the same. ❤

December 18th: Moonchild

Ok, it’s our last week with Aleister Crowley’s Moonchild! Go ahead and finish the book if you have time – Chapters XVI through XXIII. If you don’t get all the way through, come anyway! And we’ll talk about the Babalon Working too.

Love, Grang

December 11th: Moonchild

Despite a lot of trifling disparagement, we persist with Aleister Crowley’s Moonchild. Please read from Chapter XII, Of Brother Onofrio, his Stoutness and Valiance; and of the Misadventures that came thereby to the Black Lodge, through Chapter XV, Of Dr. Vesquit and his Companions, how they Fared in their Work of Necromancy; and of a Council of War of Cyril Gray and Brother Onofrio; with certain opinions of the Former upon the Art of Magic.

December 4th: Moonchild

This week we continue with Aleister Crowley’s novel, Moonchild. Please read from Chapter VI, “Of a Dinner, With the Talk of Divers Guests,” though XI, “Of the Moon of Honey, and its Events; with Sundry Remarks on Magic; the Whole Adorned With Reflections Useful to the Young.”

November 20th: The Emerald Tablet

This week, at the behest of Helios Epicence, we read The Emerald Tablet of Hermes: Multiple Translations.

WITH a few pages from The Alchemy Reader: 27-28, “Hermes Trismegistus,” and 246-247, Isaac Newton’s commentary on the Tablet. Please also take a look at the images at the beginning of the book, Figures 1-14.

A word from Helios:

The Emerald Tablet may be the beating heart within the body of Western/Middle Eastern Alchemy writings devoted to the cultivation of a Philosopher’s Stone. Many hold the Tablet, the source of the Hermetic adage “As Above, So Below”, to be a rubric of instruction for the Great Work, both physically and spiritually. However, the exploration of the Tablet’s history tends to terminate at its earliest Latin translations during the Renaissance, while this literary comparison will take us further back, to a less recognizable version of the piece.