gunslinger_burrito wrote:I'm quite big on LaVey. I do think a lot of his ideas are really, really, solid, at their very core, but are in dire need of a modern-day face lift. The CoS has only a few members who actually do anything, and well.....I could rant.
The schism of "Satan isn't real" killed off practicing occultists, Satanism sort of drifted into a netherworld of rebellious atheism with Aquino et all doing the Setian thing as a spinoff from CoS.
I don't know how other people will or do interpret this, but in my experience and honest opinion, there's nothing supernatural going on. If there was, it would be another quantifiable field of study. All the best fields of the occult, in my current interpretation, act as sorts of psychological heuristics. The same processes can be found in all shapes and forms, but the outward appearance or symbol of the process can vary.
Have to go by what your personal experiences dictate makes sense. I tend to both agree and disagree simultaneously, in that most supernaturally-attributed events are far from supernatural.
But I've experienced things well outside contemporary science, including multiple persons witnessing an event.
And no, since I know somebody will jump in to troll eventually, no interest in conjuring things for their amusement or the alleged $1m USD "reward" for doing so from the militant non-theists.
But woo-woo flowers and beads and benevolent spirits in happy harmony, nope - there are many, many darker things afoot out there.
For instance, if you learn about mindfulness meditation, you will find parallels in Buddhism (obviously) but also in some of Crowley's works, Spare's works, and so on. Some occultists got their ideas more obviously from Buddhism than others. Spare breaks it down into simpler and more encompassing ideas.
Yea, Spare goes straight for the toolset very fast; Crowley only incorporates Buddhism and yoga IMO because at the time, the whole Eastern philosophy thing was seriously in vogue - turn of the 20th century hipster material to be honest. The practices can be helpful, but not essential to the basic practices that he begs, borrows, steals, and creates from the Golden Dawn toolset.