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- KNOWLEDGE.
- Da(acu)ath -- Knowledge -- is not a Sephira. It is not on the Tree of
- Life: that is, there is in reality no such thing.
- Of this thesis there are many proofs. The simplest (if not the best) is
- perhaps as follows:
- All knowledge may be expressed in the form S=P
- But if so, the idea P is really implicit in S; thus we have learnt
- nothing.
- And, of course, if not so, the statement is simply false.
- Now see how we come at once to paradox. For the thought "There is no
- such thing as knowledge," ~"Knowledge is a false idea," or however it may
- be phrased, can be expressed as S=P: it is itself a thing known.
- In other words, the attempt to analyse the idea leads immediately to a
- muddle of the mind.
- But this is of the essence of the Occult Wisdom concerning Da(acu)ath.
- For Da(acu)ath is the crown of the Ruach, the Intellect; and its place is
- in the Abyss. That is, it breaks into pieces immediately it is examined.
- There is no coherence below the Abyss, or in it; to obtain this, which
- is one of the chief canons of Truth, we must reach Neschamah.
- For this there is another explanation, quite apart from the purely
- logical trap. S=P (unless identical, and therefore senseless) is an
- affirmation of duality; or, we may say, intellectual perception is a denial
- of Samadhic truth. It is therefore essentially false in the depths of its
- nature.
- The simplest and most obvious statement will not bear analysis.
- "Vermilion is red" is undeniable, no doubt; but on inquiry it is found to
- be meaningless. For each term must be defined by means of at least two
- other terms, of which the same thing is true; so that the process of
- definition is always «MDUL»"obscurum per obscurius."«MDNM» For there are no
- truly simple terms. There is no real intellectual perception possible. What
- we suppose to be such is in fact a series of more or less plausible
- conventions based upon the apparent parallelism of experience. There is no
- final warrant that any two persons mean precisely the same thing by `sweet'
- or `high'; even such conceptions as those of number are perhaps only
- identical in relation to practical vulgar applications.
- These and similar considerations lead to certain types of philosophical
- scepticism. Neschamic conceptions are nowise exempt from this criticism,
- for, even supposing them identical in any number of persons, their
- expression, being intellectual, will suffer the same stress as normal
- perceptions.
- But none of this shakes, or even threatens, the Philosophy of Thelema.
- On the contrary, it may be called the Rock of its foundation. For the issue
- of all is evidently that all conceptions are necessarily unique because
- there can never be two identical points-of-view; and this corresponds with
- the facts; for there are points-of-view close kin, and thus there may be a
- superficial general agreement, as there is, which is found to be false on
- analysis, as has been shewn.
- From the above it will be understood how it comes that there are no
- Trances of Knowledge; and this bids us enquire into the tradition of the
- Grimoires that all knowledge is miraculously attainable. The answer is
- that, while all Trances are Destroyers of Knowledge -- since, for one
- thing, they all destroy the sense of Duality --they yet put into their
- Adept the means of knowledge. We may regard rational apprehension as a
- projection of Truth in dualistic form; so that he who possesses any given
- Truth has only to symbolise its image in the form of Knowledge.
- This conception is difficult; an illustration may clear its view. an
- architect can indicate the general characteristics of a building on paper
- by means of two drawings -- a ground plan and an elevation. Neither but is
- false in nearly every respect; each is partial, each lacks depth, and so
- on. And yet, in combination, they do represent to the trained imagination
- what the building actually is; also, "illusions" as they are, no other
- illusions will serve the mind to discover the truth which they intend.
- This is the reality hidden in all the illusions of the intellect; and
- this is the basis of the necessity for the Aspirant of having his knowledge
- accurate and adequate.
- The common Mystic affects to despise Science as "illusion": this is the
- most fatal of all errors. For the instruments with which he works are all
- of this very order of "illusory things." We know that lenses distort
- images; but for all that, we can acquire information about distant objects
- which proves correct when the lens is constructed according to certain
- "illusory" principles and not by arbitrary caprice. The Mystic of this kind
- is generally recognized by men as a proud fool; he knows the fact, and is
- hardened in his presumption and arrogance. One finds him goaded by his
- subconscious shame to active attacks on Science; he gloats upon the
- apparent errors of calculation which constantly occur, not at all
- understanding the self-imposed limitations of validity of statement which
- are always implied; in short, he comes at last to abandon his own
- postulates, and takes refuge in the hermit-crab-carapace of the theologian.
- But, on the other hand, to him who has firmly founded his rational
- thinking on sound principles, who has acquired deep comprehension of one
- fundamental science, and made proper paths between it and its germans which
- he understands only in general, who has, finally, secured the whole of this
- structure by penetrating through the appropriate Trances to the Neschamic
- Truths of which it is the rightly-ordered projection in the Ruach, to him
- the field of Knowledge, thus well-ploughed, well-sown, well fertilized,
- well left to ripen; is ready for him to reap. The man who truly understands
- the underlying formulae of one root-subject can easily extend his
- apprehension to the boughs, leaves, flowers, and fruit; and it is in this
- sense that the mediaeval masters of Magick were justified in claiming that
- by the evocation of a given Daimon the worthy Octinomos might acquire the
- perfect knowledge of all sciences, speak with all tongues, command the love
- of all, or otherwise deal with all Nature as from the standpoint of its
- Maker. Crude are those credulous or critical who thought of the Evocation
- as the work of an hour or a week!
- And the gain thereof to the Adept? Not the pure gold, certes, nor the
- Stone of the Philosophers! But yet a very virtuous weapon of much use on
- the Way; also, a mighty comfort to the human side of him; for the sweet
- fruit that hangs upon the Tree that makes men Gods is just this sun-ripe
- and soft-bloom-veiled globe of Knowledge.