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Chaos magic

Chaos magic, also spelled chaos magick,[1][2] is a modern tradition of magic.[3] Emerging in England in the 1970s as part of the wider neo-pagan and esotericist subculture,[4] it drew heavily from the occult beliefs of artist Austin Osman Spare, expressed several decades earlier.[3] It has been characterised as an invented religion,[5] with some commentators drawing similarities between the movement and Discordianism.[6][7] Magical organizations within this tradition include the Illuminates of Thanateros and Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth.

The founding figures of chaos magic believed that other occult traditions had become too religious in character.[8] They attempted to strip away the symbolic, ritualistic, theological or otherwise ornamental aspects of these occult traditions, to leave behind a set of basic techniques that they believed to be the basis of magic.[8][9]

Chaos magic teaches that the essence of magic is that perceptions are conditioned by beliefs, and that the world as we perceive it can be changed by deliberately changing those beliefs.[10] Chaos magicians subsequently treat belief as a tool, often creating their own idiosyncratic magical systems and frequently borrowing from other magical traditions, religious movements, popular culture and various strands of philosophy.[11]

Hugh Urban has described chaos magic as a union of traditional occult techniques and applied postmodernism[11] – particularly a postmodernist skepticism concerning the existence or knowability of objective truth.[12] Namely, according to him, chaos magic rejects the existence of absolute truth, and views all occult systems as arbitrary symbol-systems that are only effective because of the belief of the practitioner.[12]

History edit

Origins and influences (1900–1982) edit

 
Austin Osman Spare in 1904. His ideas formed the basis of chaos magic.

Austin Osman Spare's work in the early to mid 1900s is largely the source of chaos magical theory and practice.[13][14] Specifically, Spare developed the use of sigils and the use of gnosis to empower them.[14][15] Although Spare died before chaos magic emerged, he has been described as the "grandfather of chaos magic".[16] Working during much the same period as Spare, Aleister Crowley's publications also provided a marginal yet early and ongoing influence, particularly for his syncretic approach to magic and his emphasis on experimentation and deconditioning.[17] Later, concurrent with the growth of religions such as Wicca in the 1950s and 1960s, different forms of magic became more common, some of which came in "explicitly disorganized, radically individualized, and often quite 'chaotic' forms".[18] In the 1960s and the decade that followed, Discordianism, the punk movement, postmodernism and the writings of Robert Anton Wilson emerged, and they were to become significant influences on the form that chaos magic would take.[19][20]

During the mid-1970s chaos magic appeared as "one of the first postmodern manifestations of occultism",[14] built on the rejection of a need to adhere to a "single, systematized convention",[21] and aimed at distilling magical practices down to a result-oriented approach rather than following specific practices based on tradition.[22] An oft quoted line from Peter Carroll is "Magic will not free itself from occultism until we have strangled the last astrologer with the guts of the last spiritual master."[23]

Peter J. Carroll and Ray Sherwin are considered to be the founders of chaos magic, although Phil Hine points out that there were others "lurking in the background, such as the Stoke Newington Sorcerors".[24] Carroll was a regular contributor to The New Equinox, a magazine edited by Sherwin, and thus the two became acquainted.[24][7]

In 1976-77 the first chaos magic organization Illuminates of Thanateros (IOT) was announced.[25] The following year, 1978, was a seminal year in the origin of chaos magic, seeing the publication of both Liber Null by Carroll and The Book of Results by Sherwin – the first published books on chaos magic.[26]

According to Carroll, "When stripped of local symbolism and terminology, all systems show a remarkable uniformity of method. This is because all systems ultimately derive from the tradition of Shamanism. It is toward an elucidation of this tradition that the following chapters are devoted."[27]

Development and spread (1982–1994) edit

New chaos magic groups emerged in the early 1980s – at first, located in Yorkshire, where both Sherwin and Carroll were living. The early scene was focused on a shop in Leeds called The Sorceror's Apprentice, owned by Chris Bray. Bray also published a magazine called The Lamp of Thoth, which published articles on chaos magic, and his Sorceror's Apprentice Press re-released both Liber Null and The Book of Results, as well as issuing Psychonaut and The Theatre of Magic.[28] The "short-lived" Circle of Chaos, which included Dave Lee, was formed in 1982.[29] The rituals of this group were published by Paula Pagani as The Cardinal Rites of Chaos in 1985.[30]

Ralph Tegtmeier (Frater U∴D∴), who ran a bookshop in Germany and was already practicing his own brand of "ice magick", translated Liber Null into German.[29] Tegtmeier was inducted into the IOT in the mid-1980s, and later established the German section of the order.[29]

As chaos magic spread, people from outside Carroll and Sherwin's circle began publishing on the topic. Phil Hine, along with Julian Wilde and Joel Biroco, published a number of books on the subject that were particularly influential in spreading chaos magic techniques via the internet.[31]

In 1981, Genesis P-Orridge established Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth (TOPY).[32] P-Orridge had studied magic under William S. Burroughs and Brion Gysin in the 1970s, and was also influenced by Aleister Crowley and Austin Osman Spare, as well as the psychedelic movement.[33][31] TOPY practiced chaos magic alongside their other activities, and helped raise awareness of chaos magic in subcultures like the Acid House and Industrial music scenes.[34] Along with being an influence on P-Orridge, Burroughs was himself inducted into the IOT in the early 1990s.[35]

Pop culture: (1994–2000s) edit

From the beginning, chaos magic has had a tendency to draw on the symbolism of pop culture in addition to that of traditional magical systems; the rationale being that all symbol systems are equally arbitrary, and thus equally valid – the belief invested in them being the thing that matters.[36] The symbol of chaos, for example, was lifted from the fantasy novels of Michael Moorcock.[37]

Preluded by Kenneth Grant – who had studied with both Crowley and Spare, and who had introduced elements of H.P. Lovecraft's fictional Cthulhu mythos into his own magical writings[38] – there was a trend for chaos magicians to perform rituals invoking or otherwise dealing with entities from Lovecraft's work, such as the Great Old Ones. Hine, for example, published The Pseudonomicon (1994), a book of Lovecraftian rites.[14]

From 1994 to 2000, Grant Morrison wrote The Invisibles for DC Comics' Vertigo imprint, which has been described by Morrison as a "hypersigil": "a dynamic miniature model of the magician's universe, a hologram, microcosm or 'voodoo doll' which can be manipulated in real time to produce changes in the macrocosmic environment of 'real' life."[39] Both The Invisibles and the activities of Morrison themself were responsible for bringing chaos magic to a much wider audience in the late 1990s and early 2000s, with the writer outlining their views on chaos magic in the "Pop Magic!" chapter of A Book of Lies (2003)[36] and a Disinfo Convention talk. [40]

Morrison's particular take on chaos magic exemplified the irreverent, pop cultural elements of the tradition, with Morrison arguing that the deities of different religions (Hermes, Mercury, Thoth, Ganesh, etc.) are nothing more than different cultural "glosses" for more universal "big ideas"[39] – and are therefore interchangeable: both with each other, and with other pop culture icons like The Flash, or Metron, or Madonna.[39]

Post-chaos magic: 2010s edit

Alan Chapman – whilst praising chaos magic for "breathing new life" into Western occultism, thereby saving it from "being lost behind a wall of overly complex symbolism and antiquated morality" – has also criticised chaos magic for its lack of "initiatory knowledge": i.e., "teachings that cannot be learned from books, but must be transmitted orally, or demonstrated", present in all traditional schools of magic.[41]

Beliefs, core concepts, and practices edit

Belief as a tool edit

The central defining tenet of chaos magic is arguably the idea that belief is a tool for achieving effects.[42] In chaos magic, complex symbol systems like Qabalah, the Enochian system, astrology or the I Ching are treated as maps or "symbolic and linguistic constructs" that can be manipulated to achieve certain ends but that have no absolute or objective truth value in themselves. [citation needed] Religious scholar Hugh Urban notes that chaos magic's "rejection of all fixed models of reality" reflects one of its central tenets: "nothing is true everything is permitted".[12]

Both Urban and religious scholar Bernd-Christian Otto trace this position to the influence of postmodernism on contemporary occultism.[12][43] Another influence comes from Spare, who believed that belief itself was a form of "psychic energy" that became locked up in rigid belief structures, and that could be released by breaking down those structures. This "free belief" could then be directed towards new aims.[citation needed] Otto has argued that chaos magic "filed away the whole issue of truth, thus liberating and instrumentalising individual belief as a mere tool of ritual practice."[44]

Magical paradigm shifting edit

Peter J. Carroll suggested assigning different worldviews to the sides of a die, and then inhabiting a particular random paradigm for a set length of time (a week, a month, a year, etc.), depending on which number is rolled. For example, 1 might be paganism, 2 might be monotheism, 3 might be atheism, and so on.[12]

Phil Hine has stated that the primary task here is "to thoroughly decondition" the aspiring magician from "the mesh of beliefs, attitudes and fictions about self, society, and the world" that his or her ego associates with:

Our ego is a fiction of stable self-hood which maintains itself by perpetuating the distinctions of "what I am/what I am not, what I like/what I don't like", beliefs about ones politics, religion, gender preference, degree of free will, race, subculture etc all help maintain a stable sense of self.[45]

Cut-up technique edit

The cut-up technique is an aleatory literary technique in which a written text is cut up and rearranged, often at random, to create a new text. The technique can also be applied to other media: film, photography, audio recordings, etc. It was pioneered by Brion Gysin and William S. Burroughs.[46]

Burroughs – who practiced chaos magic, and was inducted into the Illuminates of Thanateros in the early 1990s – was adamant that the technique had a magical function, stating "the cut ups are not for artistic purposes".[47] Burroughs used his cut-ups for "political warfare, scientific research, personal therapy, magical divination, and conjuration"[47] – the essential idea being that the cut-ups allowed the user to "break down the barriers that surround consciousness".[48] Burroughs stated:

I would say that my most interesting experience with the earlier techniques was the realization that when you make cut-ups you do not get simply random juxtapositions of words, that they do mean something, and often that these meanings refer to some future event. I've made many cut-ups and then later recognized that the cut-up referred to something that I read later in a newspaper or a book, or something that happened... Perhaps events are pre-written and pre-recorded and when you cut word lines the future leaks out.[48]

David Bowie compared the randomness of the cut-up technique to the randomness inherent in traditional divinatory systems, like the I Ching or Tarot.[49]

Genesis P-Orridge, who studied under Burroughs[citation needed] described it as a way to "identify and short circuit control, life being a stream of cut-ups on every level. They are a means to describe and reveal reality and the multi-faceted individual in which/from which reality is generated."[50]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Carroll (2008).
  2. ^ Humphries & Vayne (2005), p. 17.
  3. ^ a b Chryssides (2012), p. 78.
  4. ^ Woodman (2003), p. 2.
  5. ^ Cusack & Sutcliffe (2017), p. [page needed].
  6. ^ Urban (2006), pp. 233–238.
  7. ^ a b Duggan (2014), p. 96.
  8. ^ a b Drury (2011), p. 86.
  9. ^ Hine (2009), p. 15.
  10. ^ Woodman (2003), p. 15-16, 165, 201.
  11. ^ a b Clarke (2004), pp. 105–106.
  12. ^ a b c d e Urban (2006), pp. 240–243.
  13. ^ Carroll (1987), p. 8.
  14. ^ a b c d Siepmann (2018), p. 85.
  15. ^ Urban (2006), p. 231.
  16. ^ Vitimus (2009), p. 115.
  17. ^ Hine (2009), p. 45.
  18. ^ Urban (2006), p. 233.
  19. ^ Hine (2009), p. 10.
  20. ^ Siepmann (2018), p. 84.
  21. ^ Siepmann (2018), p. 86.
  22. ^ Otto (2020), pp. 767–768.
  23. ^ Carroll (2008), p. 46.
  24. ^ a b Hine (2009), p. 8.
  25. ^ Otto (2020), pp. 762–763.
  26. ^ Duggan (2014), p. 91.
  27. ^ Carroll (1987), p. 30.
  28. ^ Hine (2009), p. 9.
  29. ^ a b c Otto (2020), p. 775.
  30. ^ Hine (2009), p. 11.
  31. ^ a b Duggan (2014), p. 95.
  32. ^ Baddeley (2010), p. 156.
  33. ^ Siepmann (2018), p. 90.
  34. ^ Siepmann (2021), p. 283.
  35. ^ Stevens (2014), ch. 22.
  36. ^ a b Morrison (2003), p. 16-25.
  37. ^ Nozedar (2008), p. 49.
  38. ^ Levenda (2013), p. 8.
  39. ^ a b c Morrison (2003), p. 21.
  40. ^ Metzger (2002), pp. 98–115.
  41. ^ Chapman (2008), p. 12.
  42. ^ Otto 2020, p. 769f.
  43. ^ Otto 2020, p. 764.
  44. ^ Otto 2020, p. 771.
  45. ^ Hine (2009), p. [page needed].
  46. ^ Cran (2016), p. 86.
  47. ^ a b Harris (2017), p. 134.
  48. ^ a b Burroughs (1974), p. 28.
  49. ^ Doggett (2011), p. 201.
  50. ^ P-Orridge (2010), p. 132.

Works cited edit

  • Baddeley, Gavin (2010). Lucifer Rising: Sin, Devil Worship & Rock n' Roll (third ed.). London: Plexus. ISBN 978-0-85965-455-5.
  • Burroughs, William S. (1974). The Job: Interviews with William S. Burroughs. Random House. ISBN 9780802100573.
  • Carroll, Peter J. (1987). Liber Null & Psychonaut. Weiser Books. ISBN 9781609255299.
  • Carroll, Peter J. (2008). Psybermagick: Advanced Ideas in Chaos Magick: Revised Edition. Original Falcon Press. ISBN 9781935150657.
  • Chapman, Alan (2008). Advanced Magick for Beginners. Karnac Books. ISBN 9781904658412.
  • Chryssides, George D. (2012). Historical Dictionary of New Religious Movements (2 ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8108-6194-7.
  • Clarke, Peter (2004). Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements. Routledge. ISBN 9781134499700.
  • Cran, Rona (2016). Collage in Twentieth-Century Art, Literature, and Culture: Joseph Cornell, William Burroughs, Frank O'Hara, and Bob Dylan. Routledge. ISBN 9781317164296.
  • Cusack, Carole M.; Sutcliffe, Steven J., eds. (2017). The Problem of Invented Religions. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781317373353.
  • Doggett, Peter (2011). The Man who Sold the World: David Bowie and the 1970s. Random House. ISBN 9781847921451.
  • Drury, Nevill (2011) [2002]. The Watkins Dictionary of Magic: Over 3000 Entries on the World of Magical Formulas, Secret Symbols and the Occult. Duncan Baird Publishers. ISBN 9781780283623.
  • Duggan, Colin (2014). "Perennialism and Iconoclasm: Chaos Magick and the Legitimacy of Innovation". In Asprem, Egil; Granholm, Kennet (eds.). Contemporary Esotericism. Taylor & Francis Group.
  • Harris, Oliver (2017). "William S. Burroughs: Beating Postmodernism". In Belletto, Steven (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to the Beats. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107184459.
  • Hine, Phil (2009). Condensed Chaos: An Introduction to Chaos Magic. Original Falcon Press. ISBN 9781935150664.
  • Humphries, G.; Vayne, J. (2005). Now That's What I Call Chaos Magick. United Kingdom: Mandrake of Oxford. ISBN 978-1869928742.
  • Levenda, Peter (2013). The Dark Lord: H.P. Lovecraft, Kenneth Grant and the Typhonian Tradition in Magic. Nicolas-Hays, Inc. ISBN 9780892542079.
  • Metzger, Richard (2002). Disinformation: The Interviews: Uncut & Uncensored. Red Wheel Weiser. ISBN 9781609259365.
  • Morrison, Grant (2003). "Pop Magic!". In Metzger, Richard (ed.). Book of Lies: The Disinformation Guide to Magick and the Occult. Red Wheel Weiser. ISBN 9780971394278.
  • Nozedar, Adele (2008). The Element Encyclopedia of Secret Signs and Symbols: The Ultimate A-Z Guide from Alchemy to the Zodiac. HarperCollins UK. ISBN 9780007264452.
  • Otto, Bernd-Christian (2020). "The Illuminates of Thanateros and the institutionalisation of religious individualisation". Religious Individualisation. pp. 759–796. doi:10.1515/9783110580853-038. ISBN 9783110580853. S2CID 213653031.
  • P-Orridge, Genesis Breyer (2010). Thee Psychick Bibile: Thee Apocryphal Scriptures ov Genesis Breyer P-Orridge and Thee Third Mind ov Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth. Feral House. ISBN 9781932595949.
  • Siepmann, Daniel (2018). "Unholy Progeny: Psychic TV and Witch House at the Crossroads of Occultism in the Information Age". Journal of Musicological Research. 37 (1): 81–104. doi:10.1080/01411896.2018.1413870. S2CID 194837251.
  • Siepmann, Daniel (2021). "Occultism in the Acid House Music of Psychic TV". Preternature. 10 (2): 249–292.
  • Stevens, Matthew Levi (2014). The Magical Universe of William S. Burroughs. Mandrake.
  • Urban, Hugh (2006). Magia Sexualis: Sex, Magic, and Liberation in Modern Western Esotericism. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520932883.
  • Vitimus, Andrieh (2009). Hands-on Chaos Magic: Reality Manipulation Through the Ovayki Current. Llewellyn Worldwide. ISBN 978-0-7387-1508-7.
  • Woodman, Justin (2003). Modernity, Selfhood, and the Demonic: Anthropological Perspectives on "Chaos Magick" in the United Kingdom (Ph.D. dissertation). Goldsmiths, University of London. doi:10.25602/gold.00028683.

Further reading edit

  • Atanes, Carlos (2022). Chaos Magic for Skeptics. Mandrake of Oxford. ISBN 9781914153174.
  • Blackwell, Christopher (2010). "Before, Chaos, and After". Wiccan Rede. Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  • Carr-Gomm, Philip; Heygate, Richard (2010). The Book of English Magic. The Overlook Press. ISBN 9781590207604.
  • Carroll, Peter J. (1992). Liber Kaos. Weiser Books. ISBN 9780877287421.
  • Carroll, Peter J. (2010). Octavo: A Sorcerer-Scientist's Grimoire (Roundworld ed.). Mandrake of Oxford. ISBN 9781906958176.
  • Clutterbuck, Brenton (7 April 2017). "Chaos in the UK: From the KLF to Reclaim the Streets". Historia Discordia. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  • Gyrus (1997). "Chaos and Beyond". Dreamflesh. Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  • Hawkins, Jaq D. (1996). Understanding Chaos Magic. Capall Bann Publishing. ISBN 1-898307-93-8.
  • Hawkins, Jaq D. (2017). Chaonomicon. Chaos Monkey Press.
  • Hine, Phil (1998). Prime Chaos: Adventures in Chaos Magic. New Falcon Publications. ISBN 9781609255299.
  • Hine, Phil (2009). The Pseudonomicon. New Falcon Publications. ISBN 9781935150640.
  • Sherwin, Ray (1992). The Book of Results. Revelations 23 Press. ISBN 9781874171003.

chaos, magic, band, chaos, magic, band, also, spelled, chaos, magick, modern, tradition, magic, emerging, england, 1970s, part, wider, pagan, esotericist, subculture, drew, heavily, from, occult, beliefs, artist, austin, osman, spare, expressed, several, decad. For the band see Chaos Magic band Chaos magic also spelled chaos magick 1 2 is a modern tradition of magic 3 Emerging in England in the 1970s as part of the wider neo pagan and esotericist subculture 4 it drew heavily from the occult beliefs of artist Austin Osman Spare expressed several decades earlier 3 It has been characterised as an invented religion 5 with some commentators drawing similarities between the movement and Discordianism 6 7 Magical organizations within this tradition include the Illuminates of Thanateros and Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth The founding figures of chaos magic believed that other occult traditions had become too religious in character 8 They attempted to strip away the symbolic ritualistic theological or otherwise ornamental aspects of these occult traditions to leave behind a set of basic techniques that they believed to be the basis of magic 8 9 Chaos magic teaches that the essence of magic is that perceptions are conditioned by beliefs and that the world as we perceive it can be changed by deliberately changing those beliefs 10 Chaos magicians subsequently treat belief as a tool often creating their own idiosyncratic magical systems and frequently borrowing from other magical traditions religious movements popular culture and various strands of philosophy 11 Hugh Urban has described chaos magic as a union of traditional occult techniques and applied postmodernism 11 particularly a postmodernist skepticism concerning the existence or knowability of objective truth 12 Namely according to him chaos magic rejects the existence of absolute truth and views all occult systems as arbitrary symbol systems that are only effective because of the belief of the practitioner 12 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins and influences 1900 1982 1 2 Development and spread 1982 1994 1 3 Pop culture 1994 2000s 1 4 Post chaos magic 2010s 2 Beliefs core concepts and practices 2 1 Belief as a tool 2 2 Magical paradigm shifting 2 3 Cut up technique 3 References 3 1 Citations 3 2 Works cited 4 Further readingHistory editOrigins and influences 1900 1982 edit Further information Austin Osman Spare nbsp Austin Osman Spare in 1904 His ideas formed the basis of chaos magic Austin Osman Spare s work in the early to mid 1900s is largely the source of chaos magical theory and practice 13 14 Specifically Spare developed the use of sigils and the use of gnosis to empower them 14 15 Although Spare died before chaos magic emerged he has been described as the grandfather of chaos magic 16 Working during much the same period as Spare Aleister Crowley s publications also provided a marginal yet early and ongoing influence particularly for his syncretic approach to magic and his emphasis on experimentation and deconditioning 17 Later concurrent with the growth of religions such as Wicca in the 1950s and 1960s different forms of magic became more common some of which came in explicitly disorganized radically individualized and often quite chaotic forms 18 In the 1960s and the decade that followed Discordianism the punk movement postmodernism and the writings of Robert Anton Wilson emerged and they were to become significant influences on the form that chaos magic would take 19 20 During the mid 1970s chaos magic appeared as one of the first postmodern manifestations of occultism 14 built on the rejection of a need to adhere to a single systematized convention 21 and aimed at distilling magical practices down to a result oriented approach rather than following specific practices based on tradition 22 An oft quoted line from Peter Carroll is Magic will not free itself from occultism until we have strangled the last astrologer with the guts of the last spiritual master 23 Peter J Carroll and Ray Sherwin are considered to be the founders of chaos magic although Phil Hine points out that there were others lurking in the background such as the Stoke Newington Sorcerors 24 Carroll was a regular contributor to The New Equinox a magazine edited by Sherwin and thus the two became acquainted 24 7 In 1976 77 the first chaos magic organization Illuminates of Thanateros IOT was announced 25 The following year 1978 was a seminal year in the origin of chaos magic seeing the publication of both Liber Null by Carroll and The Book of Results by Sherwin the first published books on chaos magic 26 According to Carroll When stripped of local symbolism and terminology all systems show a remarkable uniformity of method This is because all systems ultimately derive from the tradition of Shamanism It is toward an elucidation of this tradition that the following chapters are devoted 27 Development and spread 1982 1994 edit New chaos magic groups emerged in the early 1980s at first located in Yorkshire where both Sherwin and Carroll were living The early scene was focused on a shop in Leeds called The Sorceror s Apprentice owned by Chris Bray Bray also published a magazine called The Lamp of Thoth which published articles on chaos magic and his Sorceror s Apprentice Press re released both Liber Null and The Book of Results as well as issuing Psychonaut and The Theatre of Magic 28 The short lived Circle of Chaos which included Dave Lee was formed in 1982 29 The rituals of this group were published by Paula Pagani as The Cardinal Rites of Chaos in 1985 30 Ralph Tegtmeier Frater U D who ran a bookshop in Germany and was already practicing his own brand of ice magick translated Liber Null into German 29 Tegtmeier was inducted into the IOT in the mid 1980s and later established the German section of the order 29 As chaos magic spread people from outside Carroll and Sherwin s circle began publishing on the topic Phil Hine along with Julian Wilde and Joel Biroco published a number of books on the subject that were particularly influential in spreading chaos magic techniques via the internet 31 In 1981 Genesis P Orridge established Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth TOPY 32 P Orridge had studied magic under William S Burroughs and Brion Gysin in the 1970s and was also influenced by Aleister Crowley and Austin Osman Spare as well as the psychedelic movement 33 31 TOPY practiced chaos magic alongside their other activities and helped raise awareness of chaos magic in subcultures like the Acid House and Industrial music scenes 34 Along with being an influence on P Orridge Burroughs was himself inducted into the IOT in the early 1990s 35 Pop culture 1994 2000s edit From the beginning chaos magic has had a tendency to draw on the symbolism of pop culture in addition to that of traditional magical systems the rationale being that all symbol systems are equally arbitrary and thus equally valid the belief invested in them being the thing that matters 36 The symbol of chaos for example was lifted from the fantasy novels of Michael Moorcock 37 Preluded by Kenneth Grant who had studied with both Crowley and Spare and who had introduced elements of H P Lovecraft s fictional Cthulhu mythos into his own magical writings 38 there was a trend for chaos magicians to perform rituals invoking or otherwise dealing with entities from Lovecraft s work such as the Great Old Ones Hine for example published The Pseudonomicon 1994 a book of Lovecraftian rites 14 From 1994 to 2000 Grant Morrison wrote The Invisibles for DC Comics Vertigo imprint which has been described by Morrison as a hypersigil a dynamic miniature model of the magician s universe a hologram microcosm or voodoo doll which can be manipulated in real time to produce changes in the macrocosmic environment of real life 39 Both The Invisibles and the activities of Morrison themself were responsible for bringing chaos magic to a much wider audience in the late 1990s and early 2000s with the writer outlining their views on chaos magic in the Pop Magic chapter of A Book of Lies 2003 36 and a Disinfo Convention talk 40 Morrison s particular take on chaos magic exemplified the irreverent pop cultural elements of the tradition with Morrison arguing that the deities of different religions Hermes Mercury Thoth Ganesh etc are nothing more than different cultural glosses for more universal big ideas 39 and are therefore interchangeable both with each other and with other pop culture icons like The Flash or Metron or Madonna 39 Post chaos magic 2010s edit Alan Chapman whilst praising chaos magic for breathing new life into Western occultism thereby saving it from being lost behind a wall of overly complex symbolism and antiquated morality has also criticised chaos magic for its lack of initiatory knowledge i e teachings that cannot be learned from books but must be transmitted orally or demonstrated present in all traditional schools of magic 41 Beliefs core concepts and practices editBelief as a tool edit The central defining tenet of chaos magic is arguably the idea that belief is a tool for achieving effects 42 In chaos magic complex symbol systems like Qabalah the Enochian system astrology or the I Ching are treated as maps or symbolic and linguistic constructs that can be manipulated to achieve certain ends but that have no absolute or objective truth value in themselves citation needed Religious scholar Hugh Urban notes that chaos magic s rejection of all fixed models of reality reflects one of its central tenets nothing is true everything is permitted 12 Both Urban and religious scholar Bernd Christian Otto trace this position to the influence of postmodernism on contemporary occultism 12 43 Another influence comes from Spare who believed that belief itself was a form of psychic energy that became locked up in rigid belief structures and that could be released by breaking down those structures This free belief could then be directed towards new aims citation needed Otto has argued that chaos magic filed away the whole issue of truth thus liberating and instrumentalising individual belief as a mere tool of ritual practice 44 Magical paradigm shifting edit Peter J Carroll suggested assigning different worldviews to the sides of a die and then inhabiting a particular random paradigm for a set length of time a week a month a year etc depending on which number is rolled For example 1 might be paganism 2 might be monotheism 3 might be atheism and so on 12 Phil Hine has stated that the primary task here is to thoroughly decondition the aspiring magician from the mesh of beliefs attitudes and fictions about self society and the world that his or her ego associates with Our ego is a fiction of stable self hood which maintains itself by perpetuating the distinctions of what I am what I am not what I like what I don t like beliefs about ones politics religion gender preference degree of free will race subculture etc all help maintain a stable sense of self 45 Cut up technique edit The cut up technique is an aleatory literary technique in which a written text is cut up and rearranged often at random to create a new text The technique can also be applied to other media film photography audio recordings etc It was pioneered by Brion Gysin and William S Burroughs 46 Burroughs who practiced chaos magic and was inducted into the Illuminates of Thanateros in the early 1990s was adamant that the technique had a magical function stating the cut ups are not for artistic purposes 47 Burroughs used his cut ups for political warfare scientific research personal therapy magical divination and conjuration 47 the essential idea being that the cut ups allowed the user to break down the barriers that surround consciousness 48 Burroughs stated I would say that my most interesting experience with the earlier techniques was the realization that when you make cut ups you do not get simply random juxtapositions of words that they do mean something and often that these meanings refer to some future event I ve made many cut ups and then later recognized that the cut up referred to something that I read later in a newspaper or a book or something that happened Perhaps events are pre written and pre recorded and when you cut word lines the future leaks out 48 David Bowie compared the randomness of the cut up technique to the randomness inherent in traditional divinatory systems like the I Ching or Tarot 49 Genesis P Orridge who studied under Burroughs citation needed described it as a way to identify and short circuit control life being a stream of cut ups on every level They are a means to describe and reveal reality and the multi faceted individual in which from which reality is generated 50 References editCitations edit Carroll 2008 Humphries amp Vayne 2005 p 17 a b Chryssides 2012 p 78 Woodman 2003 p 2 Cusack amp Sutcliffe 2017 p page needed Urban 2006 pp 233 238 a b Duggan 2014 p 96 a b Drury 2011 p 86 Hine 2009 p 15 Woodman 2003 p 15 16 165 201 a b Clarke 2004 pp 105 106 a b c d e Urban 2006 pp 240 243 Carroll 1987 p 8 a b c d Siepmann 2018 p 85 Urban 2006 p 231 Vitimus 2009 p 115 Hine 2009 p 45 Urban 2006 p 233 Hine 2009 p 10 Siepmann 2018 p 84 Siepmann 2018 p 86 Otto 2020 pp 767 768 Carroll 2008 p 46 a b Hine 2009 p 8 Otto 2020 pp 762 763 Duggan 2014 p 91 Carroll 1987 p 30 Hine 2009 p 9 a b c Otto 2020 p 775 Hine 2009 p 11 a b Duggan 2014 p 95 Baddeley 2010 p 156 Siepmann 2018 p 90 Siepmann 2021 p 283 Stevens 2014 ch 22 a b Morrison 2003 p 16 25 Nozedar 2008 p 49 Levenda 2013 p 8 a b c Morrison 2003 p 21 Metzger 2002 pp 98 115 Chapman 2008 p 12 Otto 2020 p 769f Otto 2020 p 764 Otto 2020 p 771 Hine 2009 p page needed Cran 2016 p 86 a b Harris 2017 p 134 a b Burroughs 1974 p 28 Doggett 2011 p 201 P Orridge 2010 p 132 Works cited edit Baddeley Gavin 2010 Lucifer Rising Sin Devil Worship amp Rock n Roll third ed London Plexus ISBN 978 0 85965 455 5 Burroughs William S 1974 The Job Interviews with William S Burroughs Random House ISBN 9780802100573 Carroll Peter J 1987 Liber Null amp Psychonaut Weiser Books ISBN 9781609255299 Carroll Peter J 2008 Psybermagick Advanced Ideas in Chaos Magick Revised Edition Original Falcon Press ISBN 9781935150657 Chapman Alan 2008 Advanced Magick for Beginners Karnac Books ISBN 9781904658412 Chryssides George D 2012 Historical Dictionary of New Religious Movements 2 ed Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8108 6194 7 Clarke Peter 2004 Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements Routledge ISBN 9781134499700 Cran Rona 2016 Collage in Twentieth Century Art Literature and Culture Joseph Cornell William Burroughs Frank O Hara and Bob Dylan Routledge ISBN 9781317164296 Cusack Carole M Sutcliffe Steven J eds 2017 The Problem of Invented Religions Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781317373353 Doggett Peter 2011 The Man who Sold the World David Bowie and the 1970s Random House ISBN 9781847921451 Drury Nevill 2011 2002 The Watkins Dictionary of Magic Over 3000 Entries on the World of Magical Formulas Secret Symbols and the Occult Duncan Baird Publishers ISBN 9781780283623 Duggan Colin 2014 Perennialism and Iconoclasm Chaos Magick and the Legitimacy of Innovation In Asprem Egil Granholm Kennet eds Contemporary Esotericism Taylor amp Francis Group Harris Oliver 2017 William S Burroughs Beating Postmodernism In Belletto Steven ed The Cambridge Companion to the Beats Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107184459 Hine Phil 2009 Condensed Chaos An Introduction to Chaos Magic Original Falcon Press ISBN 9781935150664 Humphries G Vayne J 2005 Now That s What I Call Chaos Magick United Kingdom Mandrake of Oxford ISBN 978 1869928742 Levenda Peter 2013 The Dark Lord H P Lovecraft Kenneth Grant and the Typhonian Tradition in Magic Nicolas Hays Inc ISBN 9780892542079 Metzger Richard 2002 Disinformation The Interviews Uncut amp Uncensored Red Wheel Weiser ISBN 9781609259365 Morrison Grant 2003 Pop Magic In Metzger Richard ed Book of Lies The Disinformation Guide to Magick and the Occult Red Wheel Weiser ISBN 9780971394278 Nozedar Adele 2008 The Element Encyclopedia of Secret Signs and Symbols The Ultimate A Z Guide from Alchemy to the Zodiac HarperCollins UK ISBN 9780007264452 Otto Bernd Christian 2020 The Illuminates of Thanateros and the institutionalisation of religious individualisation Religious Individualisation pp 759 796 doi 10 1515 9783110580853 038 ISBN 9783110580853 S2CID 213653031 P Orridge Genesis Breyer 2010 Thee Psychick Bibile Thee Apocryphal Scriptures ov Genesis Breyer P Orridge and Thee Third Mind ov Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth Feral House ISBN 9781932595949 Siepmann Daniel 2018 Unholy Progeny Psychic TV and Witch House at the Crossroads of Occultism in the Information Age Journal of Musicological Research 37 1 81 104 doi 10 1080 01411896 2018 1413870 S2CID 194837251 Siepmann Daniel 2021 Occultism in the Acid House Music of Psychic TV Preternature 10 2 249 292 Stevens Matthew Levi 2014 The Magical Universe of William S Burroughs Mandrake Urban Hugh 2006 Magia Sexualis Sex Magic and Liberation in Modern Western Esotericism University of California Press ISBN 9780520932883 Vitimus Andrieh 2009 Hands on Chaos Magic Reality Manipulation Through the Ovayki Current Llewellyn Worldwide ISBN 978 0 7387 1508 7 Woodman Justin 2003 Modernity Selfhood and the Demonic Anthropological Perspectives on Chaos Magick in the United Kingdom Ph D dissertation Goldsmiths University of London doi 10 25602 gold 00028683 Further reading editAtanes Carlos 2022 Chaos Magic for Skeptics Mandrake of Oxford ISBN 9781914153174 Blackwell Christopher 2010 Before Chaos and After Wiccan Rede Retrieved 11 June 2018 Carr Gomm Philip Heygate Richard 2010 The Book of English Magic The Overlook Press ISBN 9781590207604 Carroll Peter J 1992 Liber Kaos Weiser Books ISBN 9780877287421 Carroll Peter J 2010 Octavo A Sorcerer Scientist s Grimoire Roundworld ed Mandrake of Oxford ISBN 9781906958176 Clutterbuck Brenton 7 April 2017 Chaos in the UK From the KLF to Reclaim the Streets Historia Discordia Retrieved 12 June 2018 Gyrus 1997 Chaos and Beyond Dreamflesh Retrieved 11 June 2018 Hawkins Jaq D 1996 Understanding Chaos Magic Capall Bann Publishing ISBN 1 898307 93 8 Hawkins Jaq D 2017 Chaonomicon Chaos Monkey Press Hine Phil 1998 Prime Chaos Adventures in Chaos Magic New Falcon Publications ISBN 9781609255299 Hine Phil 2009 The Pseudonomicon New Falcon Publications ISBN 9781935150640 Sherwin Ray 1992 The Book of Results Revelations 23 Press ISBN 9781874171003 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chaos magic amp oldid 1221617417, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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