412 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
412 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
Abstracted from "Magick in Theory and Practice" by Crowley
|
|
|
|
I) DEFINITION
|
|
Magick is the Science and Art of causing Change to occur in
|
|
conformity with Will.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: It is my Will to inform the World of certain
|
|
facts within my knowledge. I therefore take "magickal weapons",
|
|
pen, ink, and paper; I write "incantations"---these
|
|
sentences---in the "magickal language" ie, that which is
|
|
understood by the people I wish to instruct; I call forth
|
|
"spirits", such as printers, publishers, booksellers and so
|
|
forth and constrain them to convey my message to those people.
|
|
The composition and distribution of this book is thus an act of
|
|
Magick by which I cause Changes to take place in conformity
|
|
with my Will.
|
|
|
|
note: In one sense Magick may be defined as the name given to
|
|
Science by the vulgar.
|
|
|
|
II) POSTULATE
|
|
ANY required change may be effected by the application of the
|
|
proper kind and degree of Force in the proper manner, through the
|
|
proper medium to the proper object.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: I wish to prepare an ounce of Chloride of Gold. I
|
|
must take the right kind of acid, nitro-hydrochloric and no
|
|
other, in a vessel which will not break, leak or corrode, in
|
|
such a manner as will not produce undesirable results, with the
|
|
necessary quantity of Gold: and so forth. Every change has its
|
|
own conditions. In the present state of our knowledge and
|
|
power some changes are not possible in practice; we cannot
|
|
cause eclipses, for instance, or transform lead into tin, or
|
|
create men from mushrooms. But it is theoretically possible to
|
|
cause in any object any change of which that object is capable
|
|
by nature; and the conditions are covered by the above
|
|
postulate.
|
|
|
|
III) THEOREMS
|
|
1) Every intentional act is a Magickal act.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: See "Definition" above.
|
|
|
|
note: By "intentional" is meant "willed" But even
|
|
unintentional acts so seeming are not truly so. Thus,
|
|
breathing is an act of the Will to Live.
|
|
|
|
2) Evey successful act has conformed to the postulate.
|
|
|
|
3) Every failure proves that one or more requirements of the
|
|
postulate have not been fulfilled.
|
|
|
|
Illustrations: There may be failure to understand the case, as
|
|
when a doctor makes a wrong diagnosis, and his treatment
|
|
injures the patient. There may be a failure to apply the
|
|
right kind of force, as when a rustic tries to blow out an
|
|
electric light. There may be failure to apply the right degree
|
|
of force, as when a wrestler has his hold broken, There may be
|
|
failure to apply the force in the right manner, as when one
|
|
presents a cheque at the wrong window of the Bank. There may
|
|
be failure to employ the correct medium, as when Leonardo da
|
|
Vinci saw his masterpiece fade away. The force may be applied
|
|
to an unsuitable object, as when one tries to crack a stone,
|
|
thinking it a nut.
|
|
|
|
4) The first requisite for causing any change is thorough
|
|
qualitative and quantitative understanding of the conditions.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: The most common cause of failure in life is
|
|
ignorance of one's own True Will, or of the means to fulfill
|
|
that Will. A man may fancy himself a painter, and waste his
|
|
life trying to become one; or he may really be a painter, and
|
|
yet fail to understand and to measure the difficulties
|
|
peculiar to that career.
|
|
|
|
5) The second requisite of causing any change is the practical
|
|
ability to set in right motion the necessary forces.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: A banker may have a perfect grasp of a given
|
|
situation, yet lack the quality of decision, or the assets,
|
|
necessary to take advantage of it.
|
|
|
|
6) "Every man and every woman is a star". That is to say, every
|
|
human being is intrinsically an independant individual with
|
|
his own proper character and proper motion.
|
|
|
|
7) Every man and every woman has a course, depending partly on the
|
|
self, and partly on the environment which is natural and
|
|
necessary for each. Anyone who is forced from his own course,
|
|
either through not understanding him- self, or through
|
|
external opposition, comes into conflict with the order of the
|
|
Universe, and suffers accordingly.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: A man may think it is his duty to act in a
|
|
certain way, through having made a fancy picture of himself,
|
|
instead of investigating his actual nature. For example, a
|
|
woman may make herself miserable for life by thinking that she
|
|
prefers love to social consideration, or vice versa. One woman
|
|
may stay with an unsympathetic husband when she would really
|
|
be happy in an attic with a lover, while another may fool
|
|
herself into a romantic elopement when her only pleasures are
|
|
those of presiding over fashionable functions. Again, a boy's
|
|
instinct may tell him to go to sea, while his parents insist
|
|
on his becoming a doctor. In such a case he will be both
|
|
unsuccessful and unhappy in medicine.
|
|
|
|
8) A Man whose conscious will is at odds with his True Will is
|
|
wasting his strength. He cannot hope to influence his
|
|
environment efficiently.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: When Civil War rages in a nation, it is in no
|
|
condition to undertake the invasion of other countries. A man
|
|
with cancer employs his nourishment alike to his own use and
|
|
to that of the enemy which is part of himself. He soon fails
|
|
to resist the pressure of his environment. In practical life,
|
|
a man who is doing what his conscience tells him to be wrong
|
|
will do it very clumsily. At first!
|
|
|
|
9) A Man who is doing his True Will has the inertia of the
|
|
Universe to assist him.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: The first principle of success in evolution is
|
|
that the individual should be true to his own nature, and at
|
|
the same time adapt himself to his environment.
|
|
|
|
10) Nature is a continuous phenomenon, though we may not know in
|
|
all cases how things are connected.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: Human comsciousness depends on the properties of
|
|
protoplasm, the existence of which depends on innumerable
|
|
physical conditions peculiar to this planet; and this planet
|
|
is determined by the mechanical balance of the whole universe
|
|
of matter. We may then say that our con- sciousness is
|
|
causally connected with the remotest galaxies; yet we do not
|
|
even know how it arises from--or with--the molecular changes
|
|
in the brain.
|
|
|
|
11) Science enables us to take advantage of the continuity of
|
|
Nature by the empirical application of certain principles
|
|
whose interplay involves different orders of idea connected
|
|
with each other in a way beyond our present comprehension.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: We are able to light cities by rule-of-thumb
|
|
methods. We do not know what consciousness is, or how it is
|
|
connected with muscular action; what electricity is or how it
|
|
is connected with the machines that generate it; and our
|
|
methods depend on calculations involving mathema- tical ideas
|
|
which have no correspondance in the Universe as we know it.
|
|
note: For instance "irrational", "unreal" and "infinite"
|
|
expressions.
|
|
|
|
12) Man is ignorant of the nature of his own being and powers.
|
|
Even his idea of his limitations is based on experience of the
|
|
past, and every step in his progress extends his empire. There
|
|
is therefore no reason to assign theoretical limits to what he
|
|
may be, or what he may do.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: A generation ago it was supposed theoretically
|
|
impossible that man should ever know the composition of the
|
|
fixed stars. It is known that our senses are adapted to
|
|
receive only a fraction of the possible rates of
|
|
vibration.Modern instruments have enabled us to detect some of
|
|
these supra-sensibles by indirect methods, and even to use
|
|
their peculiar qualities in the service of man, as in the case
|
|
of the rays of Hertz and Roentgen. As Tyndall said, man might
|
|
at any moment learn to percieve and utilize vibrations of all
|
|
concievable and inconcievable kinds. The ques- tion of Magick
|
|
is a question of discovering and employing hitherto unknown
|
|
forces in nature. We know that they exist, and we cannot doubt
|
|
the possibility of mental or physical instruments capable of
|
|
bringing us into relation with them.
|
|
|
|
note: i.e., except---possibly---in the case of logically
|
|
absurd questions such as the Schoolmen discussed in connection
|
|
with "God"
|
|
|
|
13) Every man is more or less aware that his individuality
|
|
comprises several orders of existence, even when he maintains
|
|
that his subtler principles are merely symptomatic of the
|
|
changes in his gross vehicle. A similar order may be assumed
|
|
to extend throughout nature.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: One does not confuse the pain of a toothache
|
|
with the decay that causes it. Inanimate objects are sensitive
|
|
to certain physical forces, such as electrical and thermal
|
|
conductivity; but neither in us nor in them--so far as we
|
|
know--is there any direct conscious perception of these
|
|
forces. Imperceptible influences are therefore associated with
|
|
all material phenomena; and there is no reason why we should
|
|
not work upon matter through these subtle energies as we do
|
|
through their material bases. In fact, we use magnetic force
|
|
to move iron and solar radiation to reproduce images.
|
|
|
|
14) Man is capable of being, and using, anything which he
|
|
perceives, for everything which he perceives is in a certain
|
|
sense a part of his being. He may thus subjugate the whole of
|
|
the Universe of which he is conscious to his individual Will.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: Man has used the idea of God to dictate his
|
|
personal conduct, to obtain power over his fellows, to excuse
|
|
his crimes, and for innumer- able other purposes, including
|
|
that of realizing himself as God. He has used the irrational
|
|
and unreal conceptions of mathematics to help him in the
|
|
construction of mechanical devices. He has used his moral
|
|
force to influence the actions even of wild animals. He has
|
|
employed poetic genius for political purposes.
|
|
|
|
15) Every force in the Universe is capable of being transformed
|
|
into any other kind of force by using suitable means. There is
|
|
thus an inexhaustible supply of any particular kind of force
|
|
that we may need.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: Heat may be transformed into light and power by
|
|
using it to drive dynamos. The vibrations of the air may be
|
|
used to kill men by so ordering them in speech so as to
|
|
inflame war-like passions. The hallucinations connected with
|
|
the mysterious energies of sex result in the perpetuation of
|
|
the species.
|
|
|
|
16) The application of any given force affects all the orders of
|
|
being which exist in the object in the object to which it is
|
|
applied, whichever of of those orders is directly affected.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: If I strike a man with a dagger, his
|
|
consciousness, not his body only, is affected by my act,
|
|
although the dagger, as such, has no direct relation
|
|
therewith. Similarly, the power of my thought may so work on
|
|
the mind of another person as to produce far-reaching physical
|
|
changes in him, or in others through him.
|
|
|
|
17) A man may learn to use any force so as to serve any purpose,
|
|
by taking advantage of the above theorems.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: A man may use a razor to make himself vigilant
|
|
over his speech, by using it to cut himself whenever he
|
|
ungaurdedly utters a chosen word. He may serve the same
|
|
purpose by resolving that every incident of his life shall
|
|
remind him of a particular thing, making every impression the
|
|
starting point of a connected series of thoughts ending in
|
|
that thing. He might also devote his whole energies to some
|
|
one par- ticular object, by resolving to do nothing at
|
|
variance therewith, and to make every act turn to the
|
|
advantage of that object.
|
|
|
|
18) He may attract to himself any force of the Universe by making
|
|
himself a fit receptacle for it, and arranging conditions so
|
|
that its nature compels it to flow toward him.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: If I want pure water to drink, I dig a well in a
|
|
place where there is underground water; I prevent it from
|
|
leaking away; and I arrange to take advantage of water's
|
|
accordance with the laws of Hydrostatics to fill it.
|
|
|
|
19) Man's sense of himself as seperate from, and opposed to, the
|
|
Universe is a bar to his conducting its currents. It insulates
|
|
him.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: A popular leader is most successful when he
|
|
forgets himself and remembers only "The Cause". Self-seeking
|
|
engenders jealousies and schism. When the organs of the body
|
|
assert their presence other by silent satisfaction, it is a
|
|
sign they are diseased. The single exception is the organ of
|
|
reproduction. Yet even in this case its self-assertion bears
|
|
witness to its dissatisfaction with itself, since it cannot
|
|
fulfil its function until completed by its counterpart in
|
|
another organism.
|
|
|
|
20) Man can only attract and employ the forces for which he is
|
|
really fitted.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: You cannot make a silk purse out of a sow's ear.
|
|
A true man of science learns from every phenomeneon. But
|
|
Nature is dumb to the hypocrite; for in her there is nothing
|
|
false.
|
|
|
|
note: It is no objection that the hypocrite is himself part of
|
|
Nature. He is an "endothermic" product, divided against
|
|
himself, with a tend- ency to break up. He will see his own
|
|
qualities everywhere, and thus obtain a radical misconception
|
|
of phenomena. Most religions of the past have failed by
|
|
expecting nature to conform with their ideals of proper
|
|
conduct.
|
|
|
|
21) There is no limit to the extent of the relations of any man
|
|
with the Universe in essence; for as soon as man makes himself
|
|
one with any idea the means of measurement cease to exist. But
|
|
his power to utilize that force is limited by his mental power
|
|
and capacity, and by the circumstances of his human
|
|
environment.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: When a man falls in love, the whole world
|
|
becomes, to him, nothing but love boundless and immanent; but
|
|
his mystical state is not contagious; his fellow-men are
|
|
either amused or annoyed. He can only extend to others the
|
|
effect which his love has had upon himself by means of his
|
|
mental and physical qualities. Thus Catullus, Dante and
|
|
Swinburne made their love a mighty mover of mankind by virtue
|
|
of their power to put their thoughts on the subject in musical
|
|
and eloquent language. Again, Cleopatra and other people in
|
|
authority moulded the fortunes of many other people by
|
|
allowing love to influence their political actions. The
|
|
Magician, however well he succeed in making contact with the
|
|
secret sources of energy in nature, can only use them to the
|
|
extent permitted by his intellectual and moral qualities.
|
|
Mohammed's intercourse with Gabriel was only effective because
|
|
of his statesmanship, soldiership, and the sublimity of his
|
|
command of Arabic. Hertz's discovery of the rays which we now
|
|
use for wireless telegraphy was sterile until it reflected
|
|
through the minds and wills of the people who could take his
|
|
truth and transmit it to the world of action by means of
|
|
mechanical and economic instruments.
|
|
|
|
22) Every individual is essentially sufficient to himself. But he
|
|
is unsatisfactory to himself until he has established himself
|
|
in his right relation with the universe.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: A microscope, however perfect, is useless in the
|
|
hands of savages. A poet, however sublime, must impose himself
|
|
upon his generation if he is to enjoy (and even to understand)
|
|
himself, as theoretically should be the case.
|
|
|
|
23) Magick is the Science of understanding oneself and one's
|
|
conditions. It is the Art of applying that understanding in
|
|
action.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: A golf club is intended to move a special ball
|
|
in a special way in special circumstances. A Niblick should
|
|
rarely be used on the tee or a brassie under the bank of a
|
|
bunker. But also, the use of any club demands skill and
|
|
experience.
|
|
|
|
24) Every man has an indefeasible right to be what he is.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: To insist that any one else should comply with
|
|
one's own standards is to outrage, not only him, but oneself,
|
|
since both parties are equally born of necessity.
|
|
|
|
25) Every man must do Magick each time he acts or even thinks,
|
|
since a thought is an internal act whose influence ultimately
|
|
affects action, though it may not do so at the time.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: The least gesture causes a change in a man's own
|
|
body and in the air around him; it disturbs the balance of the
|
|
entire Universe, and its effects continue eternally throughout
|
|
all space. Every thought, how- ever swiftly suppressed, has
|
|
its effect on the mind. It stands as one of the causes of
|
|
every subsequent thought, and tends to influence every sub-
|
|
sequent action. A golfer may lose a few yards on his drive, a
|
|
few more with his second and third, he may lie on the green
|
|
six bare inches too far from the hole, but the net result of
|
|
these trifling mishaps is the difference between halving and
|
|
losing the hole.
|
|
|
|
26) Every man has a right, the right of self preservation, to
|
|
fulfill himself to the utmost.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: A function imperfectly performed injures, not
|
|
only itself, but everything associated with it. If the heart
|
|
is afraid to beat for fear of disturbing the liver, the liver
|
|
is starved for blood and avenges itself on the heart by
|
|
upsetting digestion, which disorders respiration, on which
|
|
cardiac welfare depends.
|
|
|
|
note: Men of "criminal nature" are simply at issue with their
|
|
true Wills. The murderer has the Will to Live; and his will
|
|
to murder is a false will at variance with his true Will,
|
|
since he risks death at the hands of Society by obeying his
|
|
criminal impulse.
|
|
|
|
27) Every man should make Magick the keystone of his life. He
|
|
should learn its laws and live by them.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: The Banker should discover the real meaning of
|
|
his existence, the real motive which led him to choose that
|
|
profession. He should under- stand banking as a necessary
|
|
factor in the economic existence of mankind instead of merely
|
|
a business whose objects are independant of the general
|
|
welfare. He should learn to distinguish false values from
|
|
real, and to act not on accidental fluctuations but on
|
|
considerations of essential importance. Such a banker will
|
|
prove himself superior to others; because he will not be an
|
|
individual limited by transitory things, but a force of
|
|
Nature, as impersonal, impartial and eternal as gravitation,
|
|
as patient and irresistable as the tides. His system will not
|
|
be subject to panic, any more than the law of Inverse Squares
|
|
is disturbed by elections. He will not be anxious about his
|
|
affairs because they will not be his; and for that reason he
|
|
will be able to direct them with the calm, clear- headed
|
|
confidence of an onlooker, with intelligence unclouded by
|
|
self- interest, and power unimpaired by passion.
|
|
|
|
28) Every man has a right to fulfill his own will without being
|
|
afraid that it may interfere with that of others; for if he is
|
|
in his proper place, it is the fault of others if they
|
|
interfere with him.
|
|
|
|
Illustration: If a man like Napoleon were actually appointed
|
|
by destiny to control Europe, he should not be blamed for
|
|
exercising his rights. To op- pose him would be an error. Any
|
|
one so doing would have made a mistake as to his own destiny,
|
|
except insofar as it mught be necessary for him to learn the
|
|
lessons of defeat. The sun moves in space without
|
|
interference. the order of nature provides an orbit for each
|
|
star. A clash proves that one or the other has strayed from
|
|
its course. But as to each man that keeps his true course, the
|
|
more firmly he acts, the less likely others are to get in his
|
|
way. His example will helpthem to find their own paths and
|
|
pursue them. Every man that becomes a Magician helps others to
|
|
do likewise. The more firmly and surely men move, and the more
|
|
such action is accepted as the standard of morality, the less
|
|
will conflict and confusion hamper humanity.
|