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- "Temple of Set Reading List:
- Category 19 - The Metamind" (1/24/88CE)
- 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
-
- The AEon of Set heralds the expansion and extension of Elect minds into yet
- a third stage of intellectual evolution - a point of perspective as far
- removed from that of mankind as mankind's is from Pithecanthropus. [No doubt
- the prospect will seem as incredible to humans as a forecast of their Coming
- Into Being would have seemed to Pithecanthropus.] Many phenomena casually
- called "ESP" are in fact the first symptoms of what may be termed the
- Metamind. Setians should gain an understanding of the human mind's
- characteristics, physiology, and potential - then apply Metamental
- experiments to appropriate situations. "The most exhilarating thing in the
- world, I think, is the ability of the Setamorphic Metamind to correlate all
- its contents."
-
- 19A. _The Philosopher's Stone_ by Colin Wilson. NY: Warner Paperback Library
- #0-446-59213-7, 1974. (TS-1) MA: "A novel concerning the Metamind - with a
- Lovecraftian accent. A more intellectual treatment of the theme than
- Wilson's better-known #7E [although #7E has a more colorful plot]. An
- expansion on much of the historical and bibliographical data in #19A may be
- found in Wilson's earlier book _The Outsider_ (Boston: Houghton Mifflin
- Company, 1956). Subsequently Wilson wrote #4A and became thoroughly confused
- when he tried to explain the Metamind as a natural phenomenon."
-
- 19B. _The Psychology of Man's Possible Evolution_ by Peter D. Ouspensky. NY:
- Alfred A. Knopf, 1969. (CS-1) (TS-1) AL: "Should be read especially by those
- members whose magical ability is hampered by flaws in their balance factor."
- MA: "A series of lectures which explain the Gurdjieff approach to the
- concept better than G. himself was able to do. If you're unfamiliar with G.,
- see _Gurdjieff_ by Louis Pauwels (NY: Weiser, 1972). See also the section on
- G. in #4A."
-
- 19C. _The Fourth Way_ by Peter D. Ouspensky. NY: Random House (Vintage),
- 1957. (TS-4) MA: "An advanced commentary in the form of questions and
- answers concerning the material covered by #19B. The greatest value in both
- this book and #19B lies in the subsequent practice and use of the techniques
- by the magician."
-
- 19D. _Tao of Jeet Kune Do_ by Bruce Lee. Burbank: Ohara Publications, 1975.
- (TS-4) Lee: "To realize freedom, the mind has to learn to look at life,
- which is a vast movement without the bondage of time, for freedom lies
- beyond the field of consciousness. Watch, but don't stop and interpret, 'I
- am free' - then you're living in a memory of something that has gone. To
- understand and live now, everything of yesterday must die."
-
- 19E. _The Brain Revolution_ by Marilyn Ferguson. NY: Bantam Books #553-
- 08412-225, 1975. (TS-3) MA: "An easy-to-read summary of the physiology of
- the brain to the extent that it is mapped. Well-researched and documented.
- This book is an excellent jumping-off point for further investigations. An
- especially interesting section describes the weaknesses and vulnerabilities
- of the brain to physical and psychological stimuli or deprivation. In other
- words, the mind is affected by the body more than most persons realize. This
- is important to the magician in control both of self and of others."
-
- 19F. _Physical Control of the Mind: Towards a Psychocivilized Society_ by
- Jose' M.R. Delgado, M.D. NY: Harper and Row (Harper Colophon Books), 1969.
- (TS-4) MA: "Delgado, Professor of Physiology at Yale University, is one of
- the most distinguished authorities in the field of Electrical/chemical
- Stimulation of the Brain (ESB). This book is necessarily dated, but it is so
- well-written that it deserves to be perused as a preface to more recent
- works on the subject. In various sections of the text, Delgado discusses ESB
- techniques and experiments, clinical & psychological applications of ESB,
- the definition of the mind and 'soul' as distinct from the brain, and the
- many ethical issues involved in such a line of research. For a discussion of
- the Central Intelligence Agency's ESB experiments, see _Operation Mind
- Control_ by W.H. Bowart (NY: Dell #0-44016755-8, 1978). See also _The Search
- for the 'Manchurian Candidate'_ by John Marks (NY: Times Books, 1979). See
- also #19X."
-
- 19G. _The Psychology of Anomalous Experience_ by Graham Reed. Boston:
- Houghton Mifflin Company, 1974. (TS-4) MA: "Reed is Professor of Psychology
- at Canada's York University. This book addresses unusual, irregular, and
- puzzling experiences - deja' vu, illusions, delusions, hallucinations, etc.
- - in terms of the mind's normal psychological processes of gathering,
- monitoring, processing, and storing information. Drawing from the _Existenz_
- of Jaspers (#16B) and others who have stressed the distinction between the
- form and content of psychological experience, Reed approaches the border
- between psychology and philosophy. An extremely useful reference text for
- the magician who is attempting to identify valid mental vs. Metamental
- impressions."
-
- 19H. _The Roots of Coincidence_ by Arthur Koestler. NY: Vintage Books #V-
- 934, 1972. (TS-3) MA: "The debate over the sense/nonsense of parapsychology
- rages on. To date _Psi_ has not yet been proven to standards of scientific
- law, but then neither have a great many other interesting and useful
- phenomena. In their anxiety to gain academic respectability,
- parapsychologists have been easy victims for the Uri Gellers and other
- opportunists and fringe-occultists. This book by Koestler cuts through all
- the confusion and discusses the concepts of telepathy, psychokinesis,
- precognition, ESP, and clairvoyance in a rational and logical context.
- Subsections relate the concepts to Einsteinian theories of physics and
- fields, and to the controversial theories of Lamarck and Kammerer. Selected
- theories in this book were later tested by Koestler, and the results were
- compiled as The Challenge of Chance by Alister & Robert Hardie and Koestler
- (NY: Vintage Books #V-393, 1975). The physical, physiological,
- philosophical, and metaphysical conclusions drawn by Koestler from his
- cumulative research are set forth in his _Janus: A Summing Up_ (NY: Random
- House, 1978), recommended as a complement to the aforementioned earlier
- works."
-
- 19I. _Design for Destiny_ by Edward W. Russell. NY: Ballantine Books #23405,
- 1971. (TS-3) -and-
- 19J. _The Fields of Life: Our Links with the Universe_ by Dr. Harold Saxon
- Burr. NY: Ballantine Books #23559, 1972. (TS-4) MA: "During a period of more
- than forty years, Burr and his colleagues at the Yale University School of
- Medicine conducted research that indicated the existence of electrodynamic
- fields surrounding an permeating living entities. Even more interesting was
- the evidence that these fields can be 'mapped', and that changes in the
- fields can be used for diagnostic purposes. [See also #17F.] #19J is Burr's
- own account of his research; it is both more technical and more scholarly
- than #19I (which is a deliberately sensationalized speculation on the
- possible implications of the L-field theory). Accordingly #19J may be
- considered a work of scientific calibre, while #19I is more along the lines
- of 'food for thought'. For example, #19I hypothesizes the existence of
- similar fields for thought ('T-fields'), which might be a way out of the
- difficulty of justifying ESP in terms of energy required for electronic
- transmission. Normal electrical thought impulses are too weak to pass
- through the skull, much less the air beyond."
-
- 19K. _The Game of Wizards: Psyche, Science, and Symbol in the Occult_ by
- Charles Ponce. Baltimore: Penguin Books #3864, 1975. (TS-3) MA: "Ponce is a
- member of the C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology [see also
- #14C]. In this book he attempts to formulate the connection between the
- human psyche and the 'occult', and on the whole he is successful. The reader
- will note the influence of #19I/J in his methodology. Ponce's only problem
- is that he is a neo-Cabalist; hence he hangs himself by one foot from the
- Tree of Life. His book is interesting and provocative nevertheless."
-
- 19L. _Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes_ by Jacques Ellul. NY:
- Vintage Books #V-874, 1973. (TS-3) MA: "Between objective truth and the
- subjective individual lies interpretation, and the deliberate manipulation
- of this interpretation is called 'propaganda'. This book defines the
- concept, illustrates its social applications & effects, and evaluates its
- psychological consequences in a careful, scholarly manner. [For a specific
- discussion of the use of propaganda in religion, see William Sargent's
- _Battle for the Mind: A Physiology of Conversion and Brainwashing_ (NY:
- Harper & Row Perennial Library #P-231, 1957).]"
-
- 19M(1). _The Crack in the Cosmic Egg_ by Joseph Chilton Pearce. NY:
- Washington Square Press #41648-0, 1971.
- 19M(2). _Exploring the Crack in the Cosmic Egg_ by Joseph Chilton Pearce.
- NY: Washington Square Press #83118-6, 1974.
- (TS-3) MA: "A philosophical exploration into the human body's ability, both
- conscious and unconscious, to alter objective reality, with both
- physiological and philosophical [don Juan, Christ, etc.] case studies.
- Necessarily Pearce investigates the conceptual processes involved in
- 'thinking' and finds that the entire body - not just the 'roof brain' - is
- involved in the process. Many actual principles applicable to ritual magic,
- ESP, and PK phenomena may be uncovered, if only to the extent of a crack, in
- these intriguing works. [Compare also with #19I/J.]"
-
- 19N. _The Deep Self_ by John C. Lilly, M.D. NY: Warner Books #33-023, 1977.
- (TS-5) MA: "Lilly has achieved prominence [or notoriety] as the principal
- proponent of, and experimentor with the sensory deprivation tank during the
- last two decades. This book summarizes and analyzes the findings of his
- earlier books and reports, and offers practical guidance concerning the
- construction and use of isolation tanks. Lilly, who along with his work was
- portrayed in the 1981 film _Altered States_, comments: 'In the province of
- the mind, what one believes to be true either is true or becomes true within
- certain limits. These limits are to be found experientally and
- experimentally. When the limits are determined, it is found that they are
- further beliefs to be transcended. In the province of the mind, there are no
- limits. The body imposes definite limits.'"
-
- 19O. _A New Model of the Universe_ by Peter D. Ouspensky. NY: Alfred A.
- Knopf, 1931 [reprinted Random House (Vintage Books), 1971]. (TS-3) MA: "A
- series of essays addressing various problems of esoterica according to what
- Ouspensky calls the 'psychological method'. He surveys many Eastern and
- Western cultural traditions, together with modern scientific principles, in
- an attempt to find common threads. The title of the book is somewhat
- misleading, because the book does not comprise an integrated argument
- towards a particular conclusion. [The title is actually that of one of the
- included essays.] I would recommend #19B and #19C first, after which one
- will be sufficiently familiar with Ouspensky's idiom to derive the greatest
- benefit from his essays."
-
- 19P. _Behavior Control_ by Perry London. NY: Harper & Row, 1969. (CS-3) AL:
- "A Satanic glimpse into the very near future. As this book was too hot for
- most markets, it might be difficult to obtain."
-
- 19Q. _The Myth of Mental Illness_ by Thomas S. Szasz. NY: Dell Publishing
- Co., 1961. (CS-3) AL: "A scathing indictment against the Judaeo/Christian
- glorification of weakness and inadequacy which has fostered the psychic
- vampire. A fine book by a courageous writer."
-
- 19R. _The Manufacture of Madness_ by Thomas S. Szasz. NY: Dell Publishing
- Co., 1970. (TS-3) MA: "An incisive comparison of the philosophy and methods
- of the medieval Inquisition with those of the modern mental health
- profession, specifically with reference to involuntary mental
- hospitalization. Szasz is an M.D. who is motivated by outrage at what he
- perceives as unethical practices within his profession. In this volume he
- explains how an initial, tacit decision is made to consider a deviant - as
- an 'Other' (i.e. something less than a 'normal' human being), whereupon any
- social, religious, or humanistic rights that 'normal' humans have may be
- denied him with impunity. Once accorded 'Other' status, the unfortunate
- victim becomes the helpless plaything of the society and its officials. In
- this sense a medieval person accused of witchcraft, a concentration-camp
- inmate, and a member of contemporary society declared legally insane are all
- 'Others'. For a series of historical readings illustrating the progress of
- this phenomenon, see Szasz' _The Age of Madness_ (NY: Doubleday Anchor
- Books, 1973)."
-
- 19S. _The Secret of the Golden Flower_ by Richard Wilhelm (Trans.). London:
- Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd, 1931. (TS-3) MA: "A classic of Chinese Taoism
- describing the process of the attainment of transcendental existence by the
- means of creating a mandala from the personal subconscious. An oriental
- approach to the premises of #19M, as well as being one of the key influences
- in the magical philosophy of W.B. Yeats [see #10H]."
-
- 19T. _Wilhelm Reich: Life Force Explorer_ by James Wyckoff. Greenwich,
- Conn.: Fawcett Publications #449-00586-095, 1973. (TS-3) MA: "A thoughtful,
- carefully researched, and succinct biography of Reich, including synopses of
- his various theories. An excellent 'first book' to read to become acquainted
- with this 20th-century 'Dr. Frankenstein'. For a more detailed account of
- his controversial theory of life energy, see Ola Raknes, Ph.D., _Wilhelm
- Reich and Orgonomy_ (Baltimore, Maryland: Penguin Books #A1472, 1971). See
- also #14A, as well as my _Cloven Hoof_ article 'The Frankenstein Legacy'
- [reprinted as Appendix 75 in #6N]."
-
- 19U. _An End to Ordinary History_ by Michael Murphy. Los Angeles: J.P.
- Tarcher [distributed by Houghton Mifflin], 1982. (TS-4) MA: "Like many other
- works on this list, this book is an iceberg-tip. The entire field of
- parapsychological research in the Soviet Union and other communist countries
- has long lain under a blanket of semi-suppression - not because such
- research is discredited, but rather because it is considered a potentially
- vital state secret. Since the publication of Ostrander & Schroeder's
- _Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain_ in 1970, there hasn't been
- much written outside of obscure technical material [which is fine for the
- Temple's archives but inconvenient for individual Setians' libraries]. #19U
- is a novel, but derives much of its 'fiction' from Murphy's extensive
- experience in this field in collaboration with the 'Transformation Project',
- a San Francisco-centered data base of human consciousness evolution. See
- also _Jacob Atabet_ by the same author. Murphy is co-founder of California's
- famous Esalen Institute at Big Sur."
-
- 19V. _The Soulsucker_ by Ted Sabine. NY: Pinnacle Books, 1975. (TS-3)
- Robertt Neilly IV*: "The main character in this novel has a functioning
- Metamind. Its understanding of the human mind enables it to convey mental
- suggestions to humans, including bodily sensations, moods, and time & sense
- perception."
-
- 19W. _Mind Wars_ by Ron McRae. NY: St. Martin's Press, 1984. (TS-3) MA: "An
- update to _Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain_ with a military
- flavor, written not by scientists but by one of Jack Anderson's
- sensationalistic journalists. Nevertheless this is a rather impressively
- researched and written book, packed with data found nowhere else outside of
- classified government research reports. McRae analyzes the 'remote viewing'
- experiments conducted amongst much fanfare & big bucks by the Stanford
- Research Institute [see #2O] and concludes [as I do] that their results are
- unconvincing. Excellent chapter entitled 'The Need to Believe' on wishful
- thinking concerning Psi phenomena. The debunking of phony psychics like Uri
- Geller is treated. The chapter on the 'First Earth Battalion' is zany; its
- deletion would have improved the book. There is an excellent 12-page
- bibliography, listing both classified and unclassified sources."
-
- 19X. _Acid Dreams: The CIA, LSD and the Sixties Rebellion_ by Martin A Lee
- and Bruce Shlain. NY: Grove Press, 1985. (TS-3) MA: "This is an
- oversize/345-page paperback which takes the reader on a behind-the-scenes
- tour of the psychedelic/hippie/new left culture of the United States ~
- interrelated with the covert drug exploration, money laundering, and
- clandestine dealing programs of the private and public sectors. It is a tour
- to leave even the most cynical & suspicious Satanist thoroughly stunned at
- the calculating 'machinery' operating behind the apparently-innocent
- peace/love movement of the '60s/'70s. This story does not devalue the
- genuine idealisms of some of the more visionary and idealistic people
- described in #4K, but it does show that every silver cloud has its dark
- lining - to rearrange the aphorism a bit! In this case the lining was/is a
- very dark one indeed."
-
-