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- "Temple of Set Reading List:
- Category 6 - Satanism" (6/1/88CE)
- 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
-
- Satanism is the "Blackest" of the Black Arts and until the North Solstice X
- encompassed the most advanced - and the most dangerous - school of religion
- and magical knowledge. Because its doctrines are intensely personal, hence
- asocial, conventional societies have tended to regard it as a threat to the
- docile, cooperative obedience of the citizenry. This bias against Satanism
- as something "necessarily criminal" will be evident in some of the following
- accounts, and it frequently resulted in persecution that drove Satanists
- even farther from the social mainstream. In 1966 CE (the year I of the ~on
- of Set) Anton Szandor LaVey founded the Church of Satan, an institution
- designed to translate the philosophy of Satanism into a socially- acceptable
- form. In X A.S. the Church of Satan evolved into the Temple of Set, at which
- time the philosophical inconsistencies and anti-Judaic/Christian orientation
- of the older organization were eliminated. The Black Art has now been raised
- to its highest form.
-
- 6A. _La-Bas_ (_Down There_) by J.K. Huysmans. NY: Dover Publications, 1972.
- (TS-3) MA: "This is the classic of late 19th-century French Satanism. It
- contains detailed accounts of the old 17th-century Black Mass as later
- practiced in 'underground' Paris. The book evidences a strong Christian
- moral bias; hence it is historically unreliable. Nevertheless it became a
- model for subsequent efforts at anti-Christian ceremonies. 'Devil-worship'
- sequences from most contemporary films, for example, can be recognized as
- variations on the _La-Bas_ account. [Appendix 64 of #6N reprints the Black
- Mass sequence from _La-Bas_.]"
-
- 6B. _The Satanic Mass_ by H.T.F. Rhodes. London: Jarrold's Publishers Ltd,
- 1968 [available in the U.S. from Citadel Publishers]. (CS-3) (TS-3) AL: "A
- non-hysterical account by a criminologist who has researched his subject
- well." MA: "This book, whose emphasis is criminological, traces Satanism
- from an underground French revolutionary movement to organized crime to
- decadent burlesque to modern cultural offshoots and influences [short of the
- Church of Satan, which had not yet been founded when the research for this
- book was completed]. Principal emphasis is on the French tradition and the
- Dashwood Hell-Fire Club. This was one of the basic sourcebooks for the
- Church of Satan during its formative years."
-
- 6C. _A Razor for a Goat_ by Elliot Rose. Toronto: University of Toronto
- Press, 1962. (TS-3) MA: "This book was begun as a good-humored effort to
- debunk the neo-witchcraft theories of Margaret Murray and Gerald Gardner
- [which it does rather conclusively]. Rose went a good deal further and
- straightened out many misconceptions concerning medieval witchcraft accounts
- as well. Yet he argues for the essential value of the concepts of 'pure'
- Satanism. This was another book of prime importance to the original design
- of the Church of Satan, and it helps to explain the strong anti-
- neopagan/Wiccan attitude of that institution. It says something for popular
- tastes [and the memory of P.T. Barnum] that Wiccan literature continues to
- flourish while #6C is usually found only in university libraries."
-
- 6D. _Seven Footprints to Satan_ by A. Merritt. NY: Avon Books #28209, 1942
- [reprinted 1976]. (TS-5) MA: "Written ca. 1928, this novel contains many
- passages describing the central philosophies of Satanism, as well as many
- episodes exemplifying them. Since the book was ostensibly fiction, Merritt
- did not have to mince words. Harmless to non-Initiates, it is a Satanic
- manifesto for Adepts of the Left-Hand Path. And the character of 'Satan' in
- the story bears a remarkable resemblance to Anton Szandor LaVey ~ in more
- than one way."
-
- 6E. _Asimov's Annotated Paradise Lost_ by John Milton and Isaac Asimov. NY:
- Doubleday, 1974. (TS-4) MA: "The creative aspects of Satanism are
- beautifully portrayed in _Paradise Lost_, and this edition has the added
- attraction of extensive notes by the brilliant and witty Asimov. [Missing,
- sadly, are the famous Dore illustrations, which enthusiasts will have to
- seek in other editions.] Milton, who lived and wrote during the Cromwellian
- Commonwealth, observed due subtlety in his portrayal of the virtues of Satan
- and the vices of YHVH. Asimov is under no such constraint, and he overlooks
- no opportunities to identify and explain the hidden material."
-
- 6F. _The Unholy Bible_ by June K. Singer. NY: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1970
- [Harper & Row paperback edition available]. (TS-4) MA: "This is a
- psychological interpretation of the Satanism of William Blake, prepared for
- the C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology. Included are plates,
- quotes, and detailed commentary on _The Marriage of Heaven and Hell_ and
- _The Bible of Hell_, as well as a short biography and psychological profile
- of Blake himself."
-
- 6G. _The Hell-Fire Club_ by Daniel P. Mannix. NY: Ballantine Books #01625,
- 1959. (TS-3) MA: "This is an extensive, sensationalistic account of 18th-
- century England's notorious Friars of St. Francis of Wycombe, a Satanic
- society organized by Sir Francis Dashwood and including such prominent
- personalities as the Prime Minister and the First Lord of the Admiralty.
- Benjamin Franklin was a noted visitor from the Colonies. [The Dashwood
- estate is open to visitors.] See also #6T & #6AC, which are progressively
- less colorful but probably more accurate."
-
- 6H. _Witchcraft: Its Power in the World Today_ by William Seabrook. NY:
- Lancer Books #78656, 1968. (CS-3) (TS-3) AL: "Witchcraft discussed in terms
- of suggestive psychology." MA: "Originally published in 1940, this book was
- the forerunner of the occult revival of the 1950s. Although personally a
- skeptic, Seabrook admitted the psychological effectiveness of witchcraft. He
- was among the close friends of Aleister Crowley at the time of the latter's
- attainment of the grade of Magus. This book is now somewhat dated, but it
- may be acquired for its scholarship and its value as a classic."
-
- 6I. _The Magus_ by John Fowles. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1965 [revised
- edition 1977]. (TS-4) MA: "A novel of an arrogant/selfish/sensitive/
- intellectual British schoolteacher who becomes enmeshed in the schemes of a
- modern magician. An excellent illustration of the use of psychological magic
- as a control device [as opposed to a mere research tool]. The characters of
- Nicholas (the schoolteacher) and Conchis (the magus) exemplify aspects of
- the _Nemo_ and _Aristos_, principles in Fowles' own brand of existentialism
- as set forth in his incisive theoretical work _The Aristos_ (NY: Signet
- Books #Q4280, 1964). Fowles describes the revised edition of _The Magus_ as
- less fantastic/more realistic than the original edition, but after several
- readings of comparing the two I am inclined to favor the revised edition as
- a richer experience from which the magic has definitely not been excised.
- _The Magus_ is one of those books whose every re-reading brings new
- impressions and adventures. I was strongly tempted to rate it TS-1, but feel
- that greatest benefit will be derived from a reading of it when the Setian
- has first mastered the basics of the included philosophical concepts and of
- Lesser Black Magic."
-
- 6J. _The Powers of Evil_ by Richard Cavendish. NY: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1975.
- (TS-3) MA: "While preparing #4C and editing #4E, Cavendish was intrigued by
- certain recurring themes relative to the notion of 'evil' in cross-cultural
- contexts involving death, darkness, sex, disorder, etc. This book is his
- effort, as an acknowledged skeptic and agnostic, to deal with these themes.
- The result is not a full survey of the philosophy and theology of 'evil',
- but it is a good introduction. The book's defect is that Cavendish, as a
- consequence of his detachment, is forced to rely upon second-hand sources
- for his data and so can only report others' direct impressions [which can be
- somewhat less than objective]. Much of the book's 300 pages are weighted
- down with the usual, tiresome collection of occult anecdotes and
- mythological stories."
-
- 6K. _The Satanic Bible_ by Anton Szandor LaVey. NY: Avon Books #NS44, 1969
- [hardcover edition from University Books, 1972]. (CS-1) (OT-1) (TS-3) MA:
- "This book summarizes the social and magical philosophy of the Church of
- Satan at the time of its writing, but it is not a compendium of all C/S
- doctrines of subsequent years. LaVey was the founder and High Priest of the
- C/S and Magus V* of the Age of Satan (1966-1975 CE). Included are
- instructions for a 'basic' Satanic ritual, as well as LaVey's 'Satanic'
- version of the Enochian Keys of John Dee [see category 11]. Introduction to
- the hardcover edition by M.A. Aquino, then IV* C/S. Introduction to the most
- recent Avon edition by Burton Wolfe, author of #6M. Chapter 4 of #6N reviews
- #6K in detail."
-
- 6L. _The Satanic Rituals_ by Anton Szandor LaVey. NY: Avon Books #W359, 1972
- [hardcover edition from University Books, 1972]. (CS-1) (OT-1) (TS-3) MA:
- "Companion volume to #6K, this book contains a discussion of ritual theory
- and a selection of rituals (French, German, Russian, Persian, and Church of
- Satan) adapted and/or written by LaVey for the Church. The historical claims
- for the texts are improbable, although each text does incorporate ethnic
- and/or historical images of interest to the magician. A theoretical essay on
- H.P. Lovecraft and two accompanying Lovecraftian rituals were contributed by
- M.A. Aquino. Chapter 21 of #6N reviews #6L in detail, and #6N also contains
- uncensored/original/authentic versions of some of the rituals published in
- #6L. Performances of early (ca. III/1968) versions of a C/S Black Mass, the
- Stifling Air, and other ritual sequences may be seen in the film _Satanis_
- [see comments under #6M]. See also #6AA & #6AB."
-
- 6M. _The Devil's Avenger_ by Burton H. Wolfe. NY: Pyramid Books, 1974. (CS-
- 1) (TS-3) MA: "A biography of LaVey and an account of the Church of Satan's
- San Francisco operations from I/1966 to III/1968, including profiles of some
- early C/S members. The book brings out the impressive scope of LaVey's
- exposure to the art, history, and institutions of occultism and to many
- colorful personalities on the fringe of contemporary society. Unfortunately
- the book is also extremely propagandistic, advancing many 'facts' which are
- either questionable or known to be false - for example the chapter
- recounting a supposed LaVey/Marilyn Monroe affair, and the final chapter
- with several distortions concerning the post-III Church of Satan. Moreover
- the personality profiles are unrepresentative of the mainstream of post-III
- Satanists both within and without the San Francisco area. Specific details
- may be checked with III*+ officials, or with any II*+ Setian owning a copy
- of #6N. An interesting photo section is included in #6M. [See also _Satanis:
- The Devil's Mass_, a commercial film of the I-III era available for mail-
- rental from Budget Films, 4590 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90029.
- This film is a documentary of the Church in its earliest years and includes
- ritual sequences, interviews with Anton, Diane, and Karla LaVey, and footage
- of the premises of the original Central Grotto house on California Street in
- San Francisco.] Burton Wolfe also wrote another book which is of interest,
- if only as a curiosity, to collectors of C/S memorabilia: _The Devil and Dr.
- Noxin_ (San Francisco: Wild West Publishing House, 1973). This paperback is
- a political-satire play picking generally on Richard Nixon but incidentally
- on several other political personalities of that time. Ritual sequences and
- philosophical principles from the I-III Church of Satan are included as a
- running theme throughout the play, and are favorably/seriously treated.
- Oddly enough _The Devil and Dr. Noxin_ was not publicized nor promoted by
- LaVey at the time of its publication or, as far as I know, thereafter."
-
- 6N. _The Church of Satan_ by Michael A. Aquino. San Francisco: Temple of
- Set, 1983. (TS-3) (OT-1) MA: "A detailed analytical and documentary history
- of the Church of Satan from I/1966 to X/1975. 34 chapters, black/white and
- color photograph section, 140 appendices, and topical index, all totalling
- approximately one million words [about 3/4 the length of the unabridged
- Crowley Equinox (#9G)]. In order to strictly conform with copyright law
- covering published material, this volume is not for sale to the public. It
- is available within the Temple of Set and to legitimate research & academic
- institutions only. For further information, write to: Temple of Set, Post
- Office Box 4507, St. Louis, MO 63108."
-
- 6O. _Houses That Kill_ by Roger de Lafforest. NY: Berkley Medallion Books
- #425-02620-125, 1972. (TS-5) (OT-5) MA: "Anton LaVey originally intended to
- follow #6L with a collection of essays entitled _From the Devil's Notebook_.
- Among these was to be an essay on Satanic architecture in general and the
- Law of the Trapezoid in particular [discussed in #6N]. Mention of #6O was
- censored from the Church of Satan's newsletter by LaVey because it appeared
- to preempt the planned FTDN essay. #6O suffers from a certain amount of
- sensationalism, but it is a first step into the unexplored region of
- 'negative architecture'. Chapters on open/closed air, types of afflictions,
- cancer, waves and currents, walls, retention of memories ('haunted houses'),
- and remedies & precautions. Certain infamous case studies are offered."
-
- 6P. _Hollywood Babylon_ (San Francisco: Straight Arrow Books, 1975) and
- _Hollywood Babylon II_ (NY: New American Library, 1984) by Kenneth Anger.
- (CS-1) (TS-3) MA: "Anger is an 'underground film maker' [whose style
- anticipated today's 'music videos' by about 20 years] who became fascinated
- with Aleister Crowley and with Anton LaVey during the early days of the
- Church of Satan. [Anger's films _Scorpio Rising_ and _Inauguration of the
- Pleasure Dome_ contain Crowley themes, while _Invocation of my Demon
- Brother_ includes a cameo appearance by Anton LaVey. The most recent version
- of _Lucifer Rising_, despite its title, includes no C/S themes.] Anger's
- view of Hollywood is characterized by savage, decadent nostalgia - captured
- to perfection in _Hollywood Babylon I/II_. Anton LaVey was gripped by many
- of the same emotions in the VIII-X period, with a resultant influence on the
- Church of Satan as discussed in #6N. [For a 'tourist guidebook' to many of
- the sites discussed in HBI/II, see Richard Lamparski's _Lamparski's Hidden
- Hollywood_ (NY: Simon & Schuster, 1981). It contains capsule biographies,
- addresses, and photos of the various stars of HB vintage, among which is a
- misleading account of Marilyn Monroe derived in part from Anton LaVey.] [See
- also _The Movie Lover's Guide to Hollywood_ by Richard Alleman (NY: Harper &
- Row/Harper Colophon Books #CN1262, 1985) for an excellent on-site guidebook
- complete with addresses, descriptions, photos, and maps. Another good guide
- is Ken Schessler's _This Is Hollywood_ (Los Angeles: Southern California
- Book Company, 1984): 'Hundreds of exciting and unusual places to visit,
- including historical sites, landmarks, murders, suicides, graves.']"
-
- 6Q. _The Second Coming: Satanism in America_ by Arthur Lyons. NY: Dodd,
- Mead, 1970. (CS-3) (TS-3) AL: "Discusses our Church from an objective
- standpoint, shows how the media have maligned our Order, and gives concise
- comparisons with the beliefs of some of the 'Satanic cults'." MA: "A
- 'lightweight' historical survey of Satanism, concluding with 'magazine-
- story' coverage of the Church of Satan. Lyons was a I* C/S whose active
- participation in the Church was limited to San Francisco ca. IV. Lyons has
- recently published an updated version of this book entitled _Satan Wants
- You_, to be discussed in the next update of this list."
-
- 6R. _Rasputin_ by Colin Wilson. London: Panther Books, 1966. (CS-3) AL: "An
- insight into the workings of a truly Satanic magician." MA: "Anton LaVey was
- strongly impressed by Rasputin both as an individual and as a social
- influence. This is most evident from the 'Russian' section of #6L."
-
- 6S. _Pedlar of Death: The Life of Sir Basil Zaharoff_ by Donald McCormick.
- London: Macdonald & Co., 1965. (TS-3) MA: "Zaharoff [see photo, category 16]
- was a European munitions agent from 1877 to his death in 1936. He was also a
- behind-the-scenes manipulator of politics [towards war] and a British
- knight. Though never included on a Church of Satan reading list, this book
- was the primary source of Anton LaVey's fascination with Zaharoff as a
- skilled, Machiavellian Lesser Magician. LaVey also admired Zaharoff's Howard
- Hughes-like avoidance of public scrutiny - to the point of deliberate
- sabotage of records concerning him. McCormick's research is careful,
- exhaustive, and convincing, making this book the definitive one on the
- subject. McCormick is also the author of #6T."
-
- 6T. _The Hell-Fire Club_ by Donald McCormick. London: Jarrolds Publishers
- Ltd, 1958. (TS-3) MA: "McCormick (also author of #6S) argues that the long-
- standing image of the Hellfire Club as an elite Satanic [in the strict,
- theological sense] society is erroneous. His research leads him to the
- position that the club was neither diabolist nor decadent, but simply an
- example of 'rakemanship' common among British clubs of the day. His evidence
- and argument are [regrettably] convincing. This thesis is explored in
- greater depth in #6AC."
-
- 6U. _The Family_ by Ed Sanders. NY: E.P. Dutton, 1971. (TS-3) MA: "The
- definitive study of the Manson Family, with extensive treatment of its
- alleged exposure to such occult organizations as the Process Church of the
- Final Judgment [see also #6AD] and the Solar Lodge of the O.T.O. While the
- public was quick to brand Charles Manson a 'Satanist', his own Family
- considered him Jesus Christ. To prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi, Manson's 'evil'
- was easy to identify & condemn. This book is by no means an apology for
- Manson; if anything, it paints him in even more horrific colors than _Helter
- Skelter_. But the picture also emerges of a far more complex individual than
- generally seen by the public. For Manson's own version of his life and the
- development of the Family, see Nuel Emmons, _Manson in his Own Words_ (NY:
- Grove Press, 1986). In this narrative Manson downplays the legends that grew
- up around him and rationalizes his actions in terms of his personal
- alienation from and antagonism towards society in general. [See also
- 'Distant Echoes of Helter Skelter' in _Runes_ #III-3.]"
-
- 6V. _Rosemary's Baby_ by Ira Levin. NY: Random House, 1967. (TS-3) MA: "In
- the words of Roman Castevet: 'To 1966 - the Year One!'"
-
- 6W. _The Circus of Dr. Lao_ by Charles G. Finney. NY: Viking Press, 1935
- [reprinted paperback: Avon #19190, 1974]. (CS-1) (TS-3) AL: "A tale that
- tells it all; every human foible is dissected. It is the epic of man's
- desire and futility: Zarathustra under canvas - an excursion to the highest
- Llamasery of the Red Monks for those who can read it." MA: "This is the
- story of a traveling circus which arrives suddenly in a small town in the
- Arizona desert. It is a very unusual circus, including among its attractions
- a satyr, Apollonius of Tyana, a Gorgon, a mermaid, a roc, a chim~ra, a sea-
- serpent, and a werewolf. Its main show includes such exotica as a witches'
- sabbath, complete with personal appearance by Satan. Dr. Lao, the enigmatic
- Chinaman who ringmasters this show, is one minute a bumpkin, the next an
- intellectual, and always a magician - in short, a kind of Chinese ASLV. No
- turn back on him preeze!" [See also the film _The Seven Faces of Dr. Lao_,
- available on VHS cassette.]
-
- 6X. _The Omen_ by David Seltzer. NY: New American Library, 1976. (TS-5) MA:
- "Revelation 13:18."
-
- 6Y. _Damien - Omen II_ by Joseph Howard. NY: New American Library, 1978.
- (TS-5) MA: "I John 4:3."
-
- 6Z. _The Final Conflict_ by Gordon McGill. NY: New American Library, 1980.
- (TS-5) MA: "Revelation 13:11."
-
- 6AA. _Devil Worship: The Sacred Books and Traditions of the Yezidiz_ by Isya
- Joseph. Boston: Richard G. Badger/The Gorham Press, 1919. (TS-3) MA: "This
- rare little book was Anton LaVey's source for the Yezidi section of #6L,
- including the ritual texts quoted. As noted in #6N, Joseph bases these
- rituals and his own conclusions upon an 'Arabic manuscript presented to me
- by my friend Daud as-Saig ~ a man of culture, in sympathy with western
- thought, etc.' When Joseph's book was assessed in 1967 by Royal Asiatic
- Society anthropologist C.J. Edmonds, he noted that it remained
- unauthenticated. Fellow R.A.S. scholar Alphonso Mingana considered the
- ritual texts offered by Joseph as simple forgeries, based upon Mingana's
- analysis of their grammar & syntax. These evaluations and objections were
- apparently unknown to [or ignored by] Anton LaVey when he included the
- Joseph material in #6L. The Temple of Set's texts of the Yezidi rituals in
- question are included as appendices to #6N, and are based upon current
- doctoral papers at the University of California, Los Angeles, obtained
- through the Anthropology Library at the University's Berkeley campus. At the
- very least, the UCLA papers reveal Joseph's account and analysis to be
- significantly incomplete and factually suspect. If you are curious about
- Yezidi culture, your best starting point is #6AB."
-
- 6AB. _A Pilgrimage to Lalish_ by C.J. Edmonds. London: Royal Asiatic Society
- of Great Britain and Ireland, 1967. (TS-3) MA: "This small, concisely-
- written book remains the most coherent and reliable published book
- concerning Yezidi culture to date. It does not contain any of the Yezidi
- religious or magical texts, however. The authentic text of the Yezidi Book
- of the Revelation [corrected and expanded from the Joseph version contained
- in #6L] is reprinted as Appendix 65 of #6N. The other principal Yezidi text,
- the _Mashaf-a Resh_ (Black Scripture), is not reprinted in #6N because of
- its length, but a copy is available in the archives of the Temple of Set."
-
- 6AC. _Dashwood: The Man and the Myth_ by Eric Towers. London: Crucible
- (Aquarian Press/Thorsons Publishing Group, 1986. (TS-4) MA: "This is the
- definitive account of Sir Francis Dashwood and his Medmenham Abbey, complete
- with extensive photo sections. This continues and reinforces the thesis of
- #6T, offering evidence that Dashwood's 'occult' activities consisted largely
- of revels in honor of Apollo and Bacchus in West Wycombe Park, with the only
- possible Satanic element being hearsay rumors about a 'closed room/chapel'
- in Dashwood's Abbey. This room was reputed to be accessible only to the
- 'monks' of Dashwood's group, and to be decorated with obscene/blasphemous
- pictures. If, so, the decor was removed later, for the Abbey today shows no
- trace of it in any room. An interesting side-note is that the Dashwood group
- never called itself the 'Hellfire Club'. That name actually belonged to a
- club of libertines formed in London many years earlier (1719) by the Duke of
- Wharton, which became so scandalous that the crown shut it down with a
- proclamation denouncing 'certain scandalous clubs or societies of young
- persons who meet together, and in the most impious and blasphemous manner
- insult the most sacred principles of our Holy Religion, affront Almighty God
- himself, and corrupt the minds and morals of one another'. By contrast the
- frolics at West Wycombe seem to have been rather less extreme. Towers' book
- includes an interesting discussion of how rumors about Dashwood's doings
- multiplied over the centuries until it was taken for granted that he
- presided over every kind of depravity at Medmenham, to include Dennis
- Wheatley-style Black Masses. Over the main entrance to Medmenham can still
- be seen the inscription FAY CE QUE VOUDRAS from Dr. Francois Rabelais'
- 'Abbey of Theleme' in his novel _Gargantua_, which Aleister Crowley would
- later borrow for his 'Do What Thou Wilt' Law and for his own Abbey in
- Sicily."
-
- 6AD. _Satan's Power: A Deviant Psychotherapy Cult_ by William Sims
- Bainbridge. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1978. (TS-4) MA: "The
- definitive account of the 'Process Church of the Final Judgment', a quasi-
- Satanic movement that existed in the late 1960s-early 1970s. It was more the
- product of the 'Jesus Freak' atmosphere of the time than of authentic
- Satanism, as it was a 'hippie' religion that acknowledged four deities -
- Jehovah, Christ, Satan, and Lucifer - in a complementary relationship.
- Predictably it was the 'Satanic' component of the Process that attracted the
- most attention - from aspirants and external critics alike - and the Process
- proved unable to come to grips with this symbolism and its implications.
- Bainbridge shows how the organization was erroneously linked to the Manson
- Family in Sanders _The Family_ (#6U), and how its failure to successfully
- dispute and reject this linkage resulted in the breakdown and eventual
- dissolution of the group. Theologically/philosophically the Process was
- ignorant of Satanism, so the primary value of this account is as an account
- of the dangers faced by an unskilled group perceived by society as 'Satanic'
- in the conventional/evil sense. [Principal name disguises: Process =
- 'Power'. Processean = 'Powerite'. DeGrimston = 'de Forest Jones'.]
- Bainbridge is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of
- Washington."
-
-