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- "Temple of Set Reading List:
- Category 16 - Good and Evil" (8/13/89CE)
- Reprinted from: _The Crystal Tablet of Set_
- (c) Temple of Set 1989 CE
- Weirdbase file version by TS permission
-
- by Michael A. Aquino, Ipsissimus VI* Temple of Set
- Electronic mail: MCI-Mail 278-4041
-
- Much of human history can be explained, if not excused by the conflict
- between those of low intelligence (who consider good/evil objective) and
- those of high intelligence (who consider good/evil subjective). Certainly it
- begs the question to use those very terms to distinguish one extreme from
- the other! The Church of Satan sought freedom by attempting to reverse the
- good/evil norms of society; the Temple of Set seeks freedom by attempting to
- escape those norms - and preexisting ones - and to encourage its Initiates
- to construct enlightened, individualistic definitions. This is as much an
- art as a science, and the quest must be undertaken and pursued with logic,
- caution, common sense ... and apprehension of the Agathon.
-
- 16A. _Political Ideas and Ideologies: A History of Political Thought_ by
- Mulford Q. Sibley. NY: Harper & Row, 1970. (TS-1) MA: "Until you've read and
- digested this material, you really oughtn't to talk about 'political
- philosophy' any more than someone who hasn't read an anatomical textbook
- should try to hold forth on anatomy. I teach university courses surveying
- the history of political theory, and this is far and away the most lucid,
- objective, and comprehensive survey text I've yet found. It has two
- conspicuous omissions - Nietzsche and ancient Egypt - and it is oriented
- towards the political rather than the more abstract or conceptual branches
- of philosophy. So you won't find Kant, Schopenhauer, Sartre, etc. here. The
- author was a very distinguished and a very controversial Professor of
- Political Science at the University of Minnesota. If you wonder why
- something like this is TS-1, trust me. After you've absorbed the knowledge
- it contains, you'll wonder on what basis you held political opinions before
- reading it."
-
- 16B. _Nietzsche_ by Karl Jaspers. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1965.
- (TS-4) MA: "Trying to get a grip on Nietzsche through either his own
- writings or those of others is a bit like trying to get an octopus into a
- straitjacket. He thought at a level which the German language did not
- anticipate, and so there is bitter controversy concerning the proper
- translation of many of his terms and texts into English [to say nothing of
- their proper meaning in German]. After going through a number of editions,
- translations, texts, analyses, and criticisms, I have come to rest on #16B
- as the most useful for the Setian who wants to 'get at' Nietzsche as quickly
- and accurately as possible. Jaspers, Professor of Philosophy at the
- University of Basel, Switzerland, is one of the acknowledged giants of the
- academic community. In this book he sought to make the reader 'think
- Nietzsche's thoughts with him', and in my opinion he succeeded. There are
- sections on both Nietzsche's life and his philosophy, which must be
- considered together for the latter to be meaningful. 500 pages."
-
- 16C. _The Annotated Jules Verne: Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea_ by
- Walter James Miller. NY: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1976. (TS-4) MA: "English-
- language editions of this story prior to this edition have been appallingly
- distorted and shortened by incompetent editors and translators. Verne was a
- genius far beyond his reputation as a mere yarn-spinner, and his moral
- philosophy is sublimely subjective. The annotations in this edition will
- help to illustrate Verne's expertise in a variety of arts and sciences. Walt
- Disney must be given credit for bringing many direct quotes into his
- celebrated film: [Nemo: 'I am not what you call a civilized man! I have done
- with society entirely, for reasons which I alone have the right of
- appreciating. I do not therefore obey its laws, and I desire you never to
- allude to them before me again.']"
-
- 16D. _The Lord of the Rings_ by J.R.R. Tolkien. Cambridge: Houghton Mifflin,
- 1967 (2nd Edition). (TS-4) MA: "_LOTR_ is not on this list just because it
- is a stirring adventure tale, but rather because it illustrates a very
- significant point about good/evil: that 'evil' can be destroyed only by a
- greater 'evil' or by accident. Saruman attempts the former and Gandalf the
- latter, and Gandalf succeeds ... to the satisfaction of egalitarian readers
- [but who would want to hang around Middle-earth after all the excitement was
- gone?]. _LOTR_ is thus an argument for Christian morality, which is
- immediately evident from _The Silmarillion_, whose philosophical sections -
- the 'Ainulindale' and 'Valaquenta' - are transparently adapted from
- _Paradise Lost_."
-
- 16E. _The Marquis de Sade_ by Donald Thomas. Boston: New York Graphic
- Society, 1976. (TS-3) MA: "The best biographical treatment of this
- controversial and notorious libertine. As Thomas assesses him, he was
- opposed to the notion of progressive philosophy, holding the supreme power
- of the human race to be its self-destructive power; the extinction of the
- species is not to be regretted; history is not progress but helpless
- drifting. Compare this point of view with that of Satanism, which is
- similarly cynical but holds out certain hopes for the individual's
- transcending of the mass neurosis."
-
- 16F. _Parapolitics_ by Raghavan Iyer. NY: Oxford University Press, 1979.
- (TS-4) MA: "An admirable, beautifully orchestrated attempt to apply the
- political philosophy of Plato to the modern world. Iyer lays the groundwork
- with diagrams explaining the hierarchy of mental activity: Noesis ('pure
- vision' - apprehension of the Good [the Agathon]), Dianoia (logical
- 'thinking'), Pistis ('believing' - dogmatic acceptance of ideology), and
- Eikasia ('imagining' - the lowest form of image-simplification and
- instinctive behavior). These forms of activity may be applied to society in
- a variety of political 'dimensions', governed by various syntheses of logos
- (speech), will (strength), and eros (sympathy). The resultant political
- forces may be generated towards the attainment of various goals: self-
- preservation, power, stability, reason, welfare, perfectability, and
- ultimately the parapolitics of transcendence. This book is a pearl of
- thought; its sole defect is that it was cast before a world of largely
- egalitarian readers [it was allowed to go out of print in 1985]. Do not
- attempt it until you have first mastered #12C, #16A, and #16G. Iyer is
- Emeritus Professor of Political Science at the University of California,
- Santa Barbara."
-
- 16G. _Political Thinking_ by Glenn Tinder. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1986
- (4th Edition). (TS-1) MA: "This marvelous little (228 pages) paperback is
- composed completely of questions to the reader concerning the great
- political/philosophical issues of history, together with information on how
- major political philosophers addressed those questions. The questions are
- left open-ended, the expectation being that the reader must think his own
- answers to them. This book is thus an active mental exercise, not a textbook
- for passive memorization or indoctrination. Tinder is Professor of Political
- Science at the University of Massachusetts."
-
- 16H. _The Social Contract_ by Robert Audrey. NY: Atheneum, 1970. (CS-3) AL:
- "The Law of the Jungle as applied to human behavior. How the fallacy of 'all
- men are created equal' has created an imbalance - perhaps necessary - in
- man's potential. A beautifully written book guaranteed to hurt many whose
- only claim to fame is that they are 'higher animals'."
-
- 16I. _Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds_ by Charles
- Mackay, LL.D. NY: Harmony Books, 1980 [reprint of the 1841 edition]. (TS-3)
- MA: "Perhaps the most wonderful book-title since #13C's. A crazy, wonderful,
- informative, educational, and non-fictional tour of the major manias of
- Western civilization up to the time of the book's publication. As Andrew
- Tobias observes in his foreword: 'Once upon a time there was an emperor with
- no clothes. For the longest time no one noticed. As you will read in this
- marvelous book, there have been many naked emperors since. There will
- doubtless be many more.'"
-
- 16J. _Collective Search for Identity_ by Orrin E. Klapp. NY: Holt, Rinehart
- & Winston, 1969. (CS-3) AL: "A useful key to the understanding and
- utilization of Lesser Magic."
-
- 16K. _Heroes, Villains, and Fools_ by Orrin E. Klapp. Englewood Cliffs, New
- Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1962. (CS-3) AL: "Same comments as applied to
- [#16J]."
-
- 16L. _World Civilizations_ by Edward McNall Burns, Philip Lee Ralph, Robert
- E. Lerner, and Standish Meacham. NY: W.W. Norton, 1982 [6th Edition]. (TS-2)
- MA: "I am often concerned to see how little knowledge many aspiring
- Initiates have of exoteric human history. Unless you have a reasonably solid
- grounding in this subject, anything you derive from this reading list [and
- most other sensory-inputs] is going to be distorted in your mind. #16L is
- the best single- volume, collegiate-level survey I've yet found: up-to-date,
- readable, balanced, and comprehensive. Lavishly accented with color plates,
- maps, and many photographs & illustrations. It is a pleasure to read, as
- though one were drinking at a fountain of human adventure. 1,384 pages. See
- also #16M."
-
- 16M. _Western Civilizations_ by Edward McNall Burns, Robert E. Lerner, and
- Standish Meacham. NY: W.W. Norton, 1984 [10th Edition]. (TS-2) MA: "This is
- an alternative/companion volume to #16L, minus the non-Western sections
- [which permits greater emphasis & detail regarding the Western ones]. 1,068
- pages. A wonderful literary and intellectual experience."
-
- 16N. _Batman: The Dark Knight Returns_ by Frank Miller. NY: Warner Books
- #38-505, 1986. (TS-3) MA: "A Setian comic (?) book." Superman: "They'll kill
- us if they can, Bruce. Every year they grow smaller; every year they hate us
- more. We must not remind them that giants walk the Earth. You were the one
- they used against us, Bruce: the one who played it rough. When the noise
- started from the parents' groups, and the subcommittee called us in for
- questioning, you were the one who laughed - that scary laugh of yours ...
- 'SURE, we're criminals,' you said, 'We've ALWAYS been criminals. We HAVE to
- be criminals.'" Batman: "The world only makes sense when you FORCE it to."
-
-