248 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
248 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
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PAGAN HISTORY
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Paganism is a loose word for the large variety of polytheistic, shamanistic,
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and mystical non-monotheistic religions. Paganism exists in all cultures,
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from paleolithic to technological, but has historically waxed and waned. The
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ancient Egyptians are an example of a highly pagan society; so are the ancient
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Romans; and all paleolithic cultures from the Old Stone Age to the present
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have strong pagan elements. An example of a less pagan culture would be the
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West for the last thousand years or so, since the centuries following the Fall
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of Rome. The domination of the Middle East by Christians and Moslems has also
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largely shut out paganism.
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Characteristic of paganism is a tolerance for other paganistic ideas, even
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those that literally contradict one's own. Such persecutions as have been
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directed against paganistic religions by each other are by-products of
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political struggles and mass population movements rather than ideologically
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motivated. The same is to some extent true of early Judaism, which was the
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direct inheritor to the traditions of a strongly pagan society. A slave
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revolt apparently led to a few hundred thousand slaves with no place to live;
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to get them, they butchered the inhabitants of pagan cities and took up
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residence in the cities themselves. They invoked their war god to justify
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this action. Similarly, when the beginnings of the modern Greek mythology
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were laid down, it was as a result of invading Northern barbarians supplanting
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the earlier (and somewhat gynocentric) Titan mythology with their imported
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religion, which grew more refined and less aggressive later on, as happened
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with Judaism.
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Before it came under the thumb of monotheism, the West was dominated by the
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highly civilized Roman culture. The Roman Republic and Empire were
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characterized by an unusually large number of religions together in a single
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social whole, frequently sharing the same geography and even the same temples.
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This explicitly eclectic (or "syncretistic", as it is more usually known in
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studies of the Romans) synthesis is more similar to modern neo-paganism
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than any other form of historical paganism I know of. However, it ended after
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the Christian emperors took over and Rome fell.
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The post-pagan West experienced frequent resurgences of paganism in various
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forms. If we date this at 1000 CE for convenience, we see first the
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Inquisitorial period, where paganism was punished with death and torture. Then
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there comes the Renaissance, in which pagan symbolism and ideas in art and
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philosophy were somewhat more common than explicitly Christian ones. The
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Renaissance lasted until the 16th century. Note that the Inquisitions lasted
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effectively until the Enlightenment period, and were bad during the
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Renaissance, but ceased to be mostly ideologically motivated after the first
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three centuries. The Inquisition had become a political arm of the Vatican, a
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force useful in many ways other than suppressing heresy. It spent much of its
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time accomplishing political, anti-feminist, and covert goals of the Church.
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We see in the trial of the Templars in the fourteenth century that uncommonly
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faithful people were caught in a secular political struggle between the King
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of France and the Pope. They were routinely tortured, the usual prompted
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confessions were given, and they were executed, for reasons having nothing to
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do with ideology or heresy except as excuses.
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It is also during the Renaissance that we begin to have evidence of what we
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may consider explicitly religious paganism again. Most of the grimoires we
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have date from this era; alchemists, often overtly Christian but employing
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pagan symbolism and texts, were most common during the Renaissance; the
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Kabbalah and Tarot originate in the Renaissance, forming the backbone of
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modern pagan symbolism. The Renaissance also saw the obscure origins of a
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rebirth, in improved form, of Greek humanism, technically pagan because of its
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suppression by Christian Rome and its use of theistic symbols.
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The Reformation was again a less pagan period; Protestant rulers like
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Elizabeth and James carried out their own anti-heresy pogroms, annihilating
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most evidence of witchcraft. Of particular interest in the Reformation is
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Scot's "The Discoverie of Witchcraft," which presents the humanist and
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rationalist perspective on witches which has generally triumphed today: that
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witch accusations were more often driven by factors such as ugliness, personal
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enmity, poverty, and so forth than on ideological grounds, and that in fact
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there were no witches. This is probably true only of the later Inquisitorial
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period. Earlier on, the Inquisition certainly did help in the temporary
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stamping out of paganism; so if pagans are witches, there were witches.
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We need not bother much with Murray's supposedly anthropological study of
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English witchcraft in the Inquisitorial period, except to note that it has
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been devoutly accepted by many modern pagans, and to point out some of its
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flaws. Based on late Inquisitorial evidence and the consistency of the
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confessions obtained by the Inquisitors, and tossing in some disjointed scraps
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of English folk history and legend, Murray asks us to believe that a
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paleolithic subculture lasted in England, living semi-naked in the bushes,
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until nearly the beginning of the Reformation at least, and possibly until the
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current day. Of course late Inquisitorial confessions were consistent; they
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were practically dictated to the torture victim. A much better account of the
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relationship of paganism to Christianity before and during England's
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post-pagan period is Jessi Weston's classic "From Ritual to Romance." Its
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conclusions were derived from decades of intense study of the Grail mythology
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and its anthropological, mythological, and social context.
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As a parting note on the Reformation, we may note the peculiar phenomenon of
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court astrologers and alchemists and their ilk, the most notable examples
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being the sorcerer John Dee and the seer Edward Kelley under Elizabeth. These
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were the inheritors of Paracelsus and the other alchemists and Christian
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medicine doctors, using pagan symbols and methods with a veil of Christian
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symbolism. Kelley stopped the work of Dee and Kelley under unknown
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circumstances; he is said to have been told by the angels to form a group sex
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arrangement with Dee and his wife, which they supposedly did for awhile; in
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another version, Kelley was driven from the work by a prophecy of a new age
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dawning, which was heresy.
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So, on to the Enlightenment of the seventeenth century. This was more
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humanistic than religious, though humanism is a religion on alternate
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Tuesdays; it all depends which of the many reasonable definitions you use. In
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any case, the seventeenth centuries saw the first applications of the renewed
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Greek humanism that originated in the Renaissance. The counter-Christian
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current was running stronger; more and more, people were beginning to demand
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equal treatment for all, and freedom from the rigid boundaries of thought
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and expression imposed on them by governments and churches alike. This
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humanism has colored most "opposition" religious movements in America since
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this time, much for the better in my opinion. This is because principles of
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respect for the individual were put into the American system of government (as
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an afterthought - the humanistic heyday had ended in the 1780's in America,
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and the new would-be ruling class had to be forcibly reminded), and the
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governmental structure was such that it was able to make progress in its
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understanding of freedom.
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Things did not work out quite so well in France's humanistic revolution,
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largely due to Robespierre, the atheistic moral grandfather of Stalin and Pol
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Pot. He interpreted opposition to monarchy as punishing high birth with low
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death, and then set out ruthlessly to purge opposition and deviation. Soon
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monarchy was re-established in France.
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The nineteenth century was a period of resurgence of paganism. The
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neo-classical movement was explicitly devoted to rediscovering the virtues of
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the highly pagan societies Rome and Greece. This movement was to be by far
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the dominant force of the century. Humanism was further applied to the
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institution of slavery, resulting in war and social upheaval. The Prometheans
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such as Blake, Shelley, Byron, and so forth were widely considered to be
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among the greatest luminaries of the period.
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The method of science and its results made available much more information on
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religions of the East and of less civilized cultures. Contact between
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religiously different but politically equal forces invariably leads to mutual
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excuses for the other, largely to help keep trade going, but also as a result
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of time spent in foreign climes observing the practice of religion. This
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creates, although not in great numbers at first, a different attitude toward
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religions than the dogmatic denial of all other religions possible only under
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a large and self-sufficient monolithic theocracy. Other religions are seen as
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not neccessarily conflicting with one's own any more than another art movement
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does with one's own favorite.
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There was a more open resurgence of sorcery in less overtly Christian forms,
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particularly in the last half of the century. This attracted many notable
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adherents, and from the publication of "The Magus" by Barrett in 1801, created
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a magical library in modern English which is still widely read and used. It
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used the work of Renaissance magicians, court sorcerors, Kabalists, and so
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forth, and attempted to apply the psychological principles of the day in
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various original fudgings. There was also the Theosophical movement, largely
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discredited by Blavatsky's proven cheating on tests of psychic powers, and
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rather more like spiritualism with Eastern allusions than any Eastern
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religion.
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The psychical movement, which changed its name to parapsychology, grew out of
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spiritualism, which grew out of mesmerism, which was apparently fairly
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original and totally ludicrous, but did yield the secret of hypnotism. This
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led legitimate investigators to examining the claims of other groups usually
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brushed off as mystical. The early Society for Psychical Research,founded in
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1882 and led by prominent scientists such as the American psychologist William
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James, was formed "first, to carry on systematic experimentation with hypnotic
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subjects, mediums, clairvoyants, and others; and, secondly, to collect
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evidence concerning apparitions, haunted houses, and similar phenomena which
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are incidentally reported, but which, from their fugitive nature, admit of no
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deliberate control."
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It is to be noted that there is still, a century later, no replicable
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experiment to demonstrate the existence of anything but hypnotic subjects in
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this list. It is also worth noting that while general models of the layout of
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the psyche continue to be employed in psychotherapy, there is still no
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generally agreed upon experimental methodology to falsify features of these
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models. Finally, it should be noted that the ritual magic methods employed
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by many pagans, in other times as well as today, still have not been placed
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under real scientific scrutiny to determine whether or not they produce any
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physically measurable effects. (My feeling is that such effects are limited
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in scope to participants in the rituals and people who have knowledge of their
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occurrence, whether such knowledge is true or false.)
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Various factions of magicians struggled to survive in the early half of the
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twentieth century, against an increasingly Christian atheist culture; that is,
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a materialistic populace considered almost exclusively with day-to- day life
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and easy entertainment, but still paying occasional lip service to
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Christianity and suspicious of all other religions. Most of the inheritors of
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nineteenth-century magical paganism were hopelessly fragmented and dogmatized,
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incapable of working together and resolving their differences.
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In the late forties, Gerald Gardner began publishing books on witchcraft.
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Gardner was a known associate of Crowley's and his rituals use a lot of
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symbolism drawn from Crowley, but only a few actual references to Crowley. He
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is also reported to have associated with Theosophist groups. Crowley was one
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of the chief inheritors of the jumble left at the end of the nineteenth
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century, as well as a traveler and student in Eastern lands. In any case,
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Gardner (after Crowley) called for yet another neo-classicism, following the
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pattern of all the other resurgences of Greco-Roman paganism, but more
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explicitly religious.
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The laudable looseness of Gardner's system was more attractive to magically
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inclined people than the Golden Dawn and Theosophy splinters remaining. It
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freed them to create on their own, and they went at it with a vengeance. One
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reason for the greater effective freedom was that Gardner was not as hard an
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act to follow as many of the Golden Dawn leaders. He was soon gone beyond by
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his students, many of whom went off to form their own Gardnerian splinters and
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mythological histories of their origin.
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Another reason was the less formidable Gardnerian system of initiation. Most
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magical groups had complex multi-layered spiritual hierarchies. These were
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supposed to represent psychological fact, but little in the way of acceptable
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empirical observation was used to correct these schemes, mostly drawn from
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loose interpretations of the Kaballa, and they can't be said to have really
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compelling inter-individual force. These were replaced by a simple hierarchy
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of three grades. This was the high-level structure of the Golden Dawn, and of
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a number of Masonic groups, which divided their degrees into categories.The
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third grade was no longer reserved for secret chiefs who almost certainly
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never existed or for mythological prophets, and the initiations had a
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more joyful and celebratory character, rather than a system of awful
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psychological ordeals. (I feel that the emphasis on ordeals and spiritual
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hierarchy was a product of Christian influence, with the triumph of martyrdom
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as a supreme spiritual experience and the hierarchic nature of the Church, and
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that a simpler formula based on Thelemic growth, like the dominant neo-pagan
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formula, rather than Christian death/rebirth is more appropriate.)
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A common claim among neo-pagans is that paganism was suddenly revealed to the
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world in the fifties after centuries of hiding. This is demonstrably false;
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all that is needed is a bit of history, textual analysis, and symbolic
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comparison to see how close neo-paganism (as the movement came to be known in
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the sixties) is to its known historical antecedents. But mythological
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histories are themselves traditional in world religions. While it is
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important to know the real history of a religion, this does not invalidate the
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possible value of mythological tales of the origin, because these serve as
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fictional statements of intent, often incorporating powerful symbolism. They
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have literary value in this respect; and literary or other artistic value is a
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type of spiritual value.
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Modern religious paganism has made a unique contribution. No eclectic/pagan
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movement of the historical past has brought the contributions of paleolithic
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shamanism into the fold as well as has neo-paganism. In large part this is
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due to a rise in knowledge of such religions at the same time as the rise of
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neo-paganism. This is an extremely valuable contribution; in shamanism lies
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the roots of all human religion. A coven meeting still resembles a GD lodge
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considerably more than it does a shamanistic lodge, despite the valuable
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addition of techniques originating in shamanism.
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This has been a necessarily brief and incomplete account. I have not
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mentioned Rabelais, the Rosicrucians, the decadent poets, Nietzsche, deSade,
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Levi, Gurdjieff, James, Augustine, Shakespeare, Masonry, Paine, American
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utopian communities, Jung, Merlin, art and spirit, or Gnosticism, all of which
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are vital elements of the story; I have given short shrift to the psychical
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movement and its influence on nineteenth and twentieth century paganism; and I
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have neglected many other relevant topics. But I hope this will suffice
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as a brief overview of the pagan history preceding neo-paganism.
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