Chaos magick: doing what works & more
By Psyche | November 8, 2007
[T]here [is] a type of occultist who believes that it doesn’t matter what you do in magic that “intention is everything”. I am a strong believer in the phrase “the path to hell is paved with good intentions” and think these types of occultists are more dangerous to the experimental magician because everyone thinks that they hold similar, sloppy views.
These occultists often call themselves chaos magicians or repeat Aleister Crowley’s much misunderstood phrase “Do what you will be the whole of the Law,” [sic] as if it gives them a wholesale license to bunk off from doing any work.– Nick Farrell, “Experimentation as Magical Path”
I’m reading Magick on the Edge1, ambitiously subtitled “An Anthology of Experimental Occultism”. The above quote appears in the first essay, which is otherwise quite good at making a decent case for “experimental” magick. (Though isn’t all magick experimental? Isn’t that the point of doing the Work?)
In the context of the essay, Farrell is snidely suggesting that chaos magickians (or magicians, if you prefer) practice magick with no understanding or interest in the theory behind it2, cheerily believing that as long as you want “it”, “it” will happen. I hear this expressed online on occasion, but I’m surprised to read such a misguided sentiment expressed so blatantly in print3.
“Intent” forms a central part of any magickal working – chaote and otherwise – for without purpose, what’s the point? And I’ll fess up, in chaos magick, the intentions aren’t always “good” in the Wiccan (or even Golden Dawn) sense of the term, but with the experienced practitioner they are never sloppy.
Writing under various pseudonyms Lionel Snell pioneered what would come to be the incorporated into the philosophy of chaos magick with S.S.O.T.B.M.E, written as Lemuel Johnstone and, writing as Liz Angerford and Ambrose Lea, Thundersqueak which explored these themes further.
Ray Sherwin’s The Theatre of Magick and The Book of Results
were also instrumental in defining chaote philosophy.
At times I have argued that to know how something works can be an impediment from some points of view. These days I would argue that to be aware of how a technique works during its performance under ritual circumstances can be an impediment. In any case I would also argue, paradoxically, that to have a model for how a technique works acts almost as a sigil in itself.
– Ray Sherwin, The Book of Results
While it’s true that at its most basic chaos magick might be summed up as “doing what works”, however this simple statement belies the self-awareness that must be cultivated to fully appreciate what that implies.
Deconstructing the self to understand one’s personal memetic make-up, which symbol sets work, which don’t, exploring new techniques to expand one’s options: these are hallmarks of the chaote’s practice. Chaos magick is results-oriented; it requires an honest appraisal of one’s work and the effects achieved – especially when results are not evident.
Peter Carroll’s Liber Null & Psychonaut details strenuous exercises to hone the will and expand the magickian’s skillset4, and Liber Kaos
lays out a twenty-one stage training program to further develop various techniques. While these training programs are not required of a chaote, similar, if perhaps less organized, self-training systems will be found in any chaote’s practice.
It’s ironic that in his concern for tarnishing the reputation of “experimental” magickians Farrell directs misinformed jibes at chaotes and Thelemites: this, I think, can be far more “dangerous”.
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Footnotes:
- Edited by Taylor Ellwood, published by Immanion Press, 2007. [back]
- For now I’ll leave it to the Thelemites to challenge the sidelong insult aimed at them. [back]
- It’s a shame, too, because I liked his earlier work, Gathering the Magic: Creating 21st Century Esoteric Groups
: http://www.spiralnature.com/reviews/book/farrelln.html#gtm1. [back]
- With much material cribbed from Aleister Crowley and Austin Osman Spare. [back]
Related posts:
- Magick on the Edge, edited by Taylor Ellwood
- Top 5 Books on Chaos Magick
- Aleister Crowley, chaos, itako…and college Quidditch?
- Chaotes then and now
- Dave Lee, Chaotopia! and chaos magick in general
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Category: Essays & Opinion,Magick
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