Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
www.brill.nl/arie
Magic Naturalized?
Negotiating Science and Occult Experience in Aleister
Crowley’s Scientific Illuminism
Egil Asprem
M.A. Religious Studies, University of Amsterdam
Abstract
La Magie “naturalisée”? De la négociation entre science et expérience occulte dans l’illuminisme
scientifique d’Aleister Crowley.
L’une des questions centrales qui se posent en matière d’ésotérisme occidental moderne porte sur
l’attrait persistant de la magie; comment la magie a-t-elle survécu au “désenchantement du
monde”? Une explication tentante a été que l’émergence de la “magie occultiste“, fondée sur les
écrits d’Eliphas Lévi (1810-1875) et les enseignements de l’Ordre Hermétique de la Golden
Dawn (créé en 1888) en particulier, ont eu pour effet une “psychologisation“ de la magie. Le fait
d’interpréter les pratiques magiques comme des techniques psychologiques, et le commerce avec
des entités ésotériques comme une manipulation d’états intérieurs, psychologiques, plutôt que
comme un commerce avec des êtres spirituels existant réellement, a permis à des modernes possédant une bonne culture et appartenant à une classe supérieure à la classe moyenne, de maintenir à la fois leur croyance à la magie, et leur intégrité rationnelle.
En présentant une étude de cas, celui d’un des occultistes modernes ayant exercé le plus
d’influence, à savoir Aleister Crowley (1875-1947), cet article cherche à montrer que “la thèse de
la psychologisation“ ne résiste pas entièrement à l’examen. Feront l’objet d’une mention particulière le système magique de Crowley, présenté comme un “Illuminisme scientifique“, ainsi que le
rôle et à l’attrait de la science dans ce système. Contrairement à la thèse de la psychologisation,
laquelle, comme on en traitera, représente une sorte d’ “escapisme psychologique“, Crowley ne
cherchait pas à dissocier ses croyances magiques de ses croyances rationnelles en les faisant passer
dans le champ de la psychologie et des états intérieurs; au lieu de cela, influencé qu’il était par les
idéaux du naturalisme scientifique il a cherché à concevoir une méthode naturaliste permettant
de critiquer, de tester et de raffiner rationnellement la pratique magique. En somme, on s’attachera à montrer que le système de Crowley représente un pas en direction de la naturalisation
plutôt que vers la psychologisation de la magie.
On présentera une lecture serrée de certaines des idées de Crowley portant sur le rapport entre
science et magie, et on procédera aussi à une contextualisation historique dans laquelle on
s’attachera spécialement à traiter des rapports entretenus par Crowley avec des courants intellectuels marquants au sein desquels on s’intéressait à cette question (notamment, la Society for
Psychical Research, Sir James Frazer, ainsi que des philosophes naturalistes—de T.H. Huxley à
Henry Maudsley).
Keywords
Crowley, Aleister; Ritual magic; Scientific naturalism; Psychical research; Occultism; Psychology
© Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2008
DOI: 10.1163/156798908X327311
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E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
0. Introduction
In spring 1909 the first issue of a new esoteric journal, titled he Equinox, was
published in London. he Editorial signalled the launch of a new magical
Order, referred to only as “he Brothers of the A∴A∴”. heir new occult
paradigm was called “Scientific Illuminism”, and their motto was proudly
declared as ‘he Method of Science—the Aim of Religion’.1 Behind the journal and the mysterious A∴A∴ was a small group of occultists coming mostly
from the shattered remains of the Golden Dawn, and was led by Aleister
Crowley2 (1875-1947). Crowley saw the formation of his Order as a watershed in the history of occultism. In his view, occultism was now to be saved
from “charlatanism” and “obscurantism”, and finally be founded on a strictly
scientific basis.3
“Science” is a term which became increasingly inflated when adopted by
occult and new religious discourses in the second half of the 19th century and
onwards.4 In this article I will set out to explore how it is used and what it
means in Crowley’s Scientific Illuminism. I will show that unlike most positions within the modern esoteric community, Crowley had marked affinities
with naturalistic science, and for this reason sought to negotiate science with
occultism in a different way than most other occultists allowed. Especially I
will focus on how Crowley’s emphasis on science led to a different regard for
one of the other major legitimising factors in the occult revival: the appeal to
personal experience. hese considerations go hand in hand with a theoretical
discussion related to an aspect of the so-called secularisation of esotericism.5 It
is commonly held that modern ritual magic, as a part of the secularisation of
esotericism, has mainly become “psychologised”. I will take a brief look at
what this assumption means, and, by bringing together the observations made
from the questions mentioned, argue that in the magical system that Crowley’s
1
Crowley, ‘Editorial’, 2.
Crowley has recently started to receive wider attention from academic scholarship. Apart
from the standard biographies, such as Richard Kaczynski, Perdurabo and Lawrence Sutin, Do
What hou Wilt, Hugh Urban has explored Crowley’s sexual magic in the light of contemporary
discourses on sexuality, and Marco Pasi has analysed his ambiguous attitudes to politics. See
Urban, ‘Unleashing the Beast’; Urban, Magia Sexualis; Pasi, Aleister Crowley und die Versuchung
der Politik. For a nice summary of the current state of research on “Crowleyana”, see Pasi, ‘he
Neverendingly Told Story’, and the first chapter of Pasi, Versuchung.
3
Crowley, ‘Editorial’, 2.
4
See especially Olav Hammer’s rhetorical study of modern esoteric movement texts: Hammer, Claiming Knowledge.
5
One of the main themes of Wouter Hanegraaff groundbreaking study in New Age Religion
and Western Culture..
2
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
141
Scientific Illuminism presents, psychologisation is at best secondary. Instead, I
will argue that Crowley’s work represents primarily a move towards the naturalisation of magic.
1. Magic in Modernity: A heoretical Preface
1.1
he Secularisation of Esotericism, the Psychologisation of Magic
hat the rise of scientific naturalism in the 19th century profoundly influenced
the direction in which esoteric and occult ideas and movements later evolved
has been pointed out several times.6 A subset of this line of research is the
study of magic’s relation to modern science and society; how did magic “survive” the Enlightenment, the Scientific and Industrial Revolutions, secularisation, disenchantment and so on, and continues to have appeal in occult
communities even in the 21st century?7
In a quite recent article, Wouter Hanegraaff propounds the idea that modern ritual magic, as a part of esotericism in general, presents a dominant tendency towards psychologisation when confronted with modern secular and
scientific thought.8 It should be noted that this tendency of psychologisation
could take on several meanings. Broadly considered, it represents the increasing tendency to incorporate terminology and theories borrowed from the new
psychological discourses so prevalent from the beginning of the 20th century,
and to use these in the interpretation of occult theories and practices. But
this terminological psychologisation can still take numerous directions,
depending on the kind of psychological theory adopted, the intentions of the
occultist in adopting it, and so on. It is to be noted that psychology was, and
still is today, far from being a unified discipline. In Hanegraaff’s version of the
psychologisation thesis of magic, however, it seems that a more specific type of
psychologised interpretation is implied. According to this view, modern magicians feel a strain of “cognitive dissonance” when their magical practices are
faced with the “rational and scientific ideology” of the modern world, which
See for instance Hanegraaff, New Age Religion and Western Culture; idem, ‘he New Age
Movement and the Esoteric Tradition’; Hammer, Claiming Knowledge.
7
A particularly indispensable study from an anthropological perspective is Tanya Luhrmann,
Persuasions of he Witch’s Craft. See also Hanegraaff, ‘How magic survived the disenchantment of
the world’. My own sociological study of contemporary ritual magicians in Norway also touches
upon this; see Egil Asprem, ‘helema og ritualmagi—med magi som livsholdning i moderne
vestlig esoterisme’.
8
Hanegraaff, ‘How magic survived’, especially pp. 366, 368-71.
6
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E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
they consequently feel the need to deal with. As a result, a certain type of psychologisation of the techniques, ontology and efficacy of magic takes place,
whereby magic in the end is thought to operate in a ‘separate-but-connected
“magical plane”’, existing on a different level of reality, accessible with the
cultivation and use of the imagination.9 he function and effect of this psychological interpretation is to insulate magical practice from rational critique,
thereby legitimising it. Hanegraaff writes that ‘[t]he dissipation of mystery in
this world10 is compensated for by a separate magical world of the reified imagination, where the everyday rules of science and rationality do not apply’.11 he
psychologisation of magic is seen as a way for magicians to suspend their disbelief by confining magic to a place outside the empirical realm of verification,
evidence and rational criticism. his version can be said to propose a kind
of psychological escapism: psychologisation is a way for the magician to hide his
or her beliefs and practices from the threatening natural scientific tribunal
of truth.
I do not dispute that this tendency exists, and perhaps especially prevalent
in the particular sources examined by Hanegraaff.12 In my view, however, psychologisation in this escapist sense is only one possible way of negotiating
magic with a modern scientific worldview, among several others. I furthermore suspect that the focus of this study, Crowley’s Scientific Illuminism, represents a different strategy altogether.13 Whereas the psychological escapist
attempts to withdraw magic from critical inquiry by confining its validity to a
realm of merely subjective experience, Crowley is seen to embrace natural
scientific inquiry and tirelessly pursue such critical assessment of magical techniques, practices and results, reclaiming the subjective experiences for intersubjective scrutiny.14 As I will try to demonstrate as we go along, whenever
Crowley psychologises it is not as a means to escape scientific inquiry, but
rather as an instrument of his broader naturalistic approach.
9
Ibid., 370.
I.e. after the “disenchantment of the world”.
11
Hanegraaff, ‘How magic survived’, 370. Emphasis added.
12
Especially Israel Regardie, who himself practiced as a psychiatrist influenced by the Reichian
and Jungian schools.
13
Perhaps surprisingly, academic studies of Crowley’s magic are scarce. he most notable
studies are Pasi’s as of yet unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, La notion de magie dans le courant
occultiste en Angleterre (1875-1947), and his ‘Lo Yoga in Aleister Crowley’. Another recent work
that includes a discussion of Crowley’s occult and magical ideas is Owen,Place of Enchantment.
14
he title of this paper should be read as a reference also to Willard van Orman Quine’s
famous article ‘Epistemology Naturalized’, which argued that the philosophical discipline of
epistemology has more to learn from the naturalistic scientific method, than science has to learn
10
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
143
1.2 Experience and “Scientism” as Legitimating Strategies in the Victorian
Occult Revival
It has become commonplace to see the Victorian interest in heterodox religious currents such as spiritualism, heosophy and occultism in general as a
response to the struggle between religion and natural science in the Victorian
era.15 One could perhaps say that the dominant position conquered by naturalism in the 19th century changed the habitat of the religious ecology. he
religious uncertainty spurred by a science that increasingly challenged fundamental beliefs prompted a reaction where the strategies for legitimising one’s
religious views had changed.
In his study of strategies of legitimating esoteric positions in modernity,
Olav Hammer observes three basic features: appeal to (constructed) tradition,
appeal to science and appeal to experience.16 For the present purpose, the latter two are of primary importance. In spiritualism for instance, which took the
Western world largely by surprise in the 1850s, after the Fox sisters had made
contact with “the other side”, the appeal to experience became the main strategy to validate one’s belief in the afterlife. Anybody could attend a séance and
judge from the “proof ” offered by the mediumistic phenomena displayed
there. Indeed, the idea was widespread among spiritualists that the “unholy
alliance of atheism and materialism” was to be battled with what was perceived
as the methods of science itself: demonstration by proof.17 Spiritualism saw
itself as capable of providing this proof of the supernatural through the rock
of experience, thus also providing a “scientific” basis to combat the crisis of
faith that naturalistic science had brought about.
he appeal to science in a crusade against science is also clearly present in
the two magna opera of heosophy. he subtitle of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky’s first major work, Isis Unveiled (1877), was A Master Key to the Mysteries of
Ancient and Modern Science and heology, and that of her later Secret Doctrine
(1888), he Synthesis of Science, Religion, and Philosophy.18 hese very titles
signify the expressed motive of her occult writings to find a “middle ground”
from traditional epistemology. My thesis is that Crowley develops a parallel attitude towards the
relationship between magic and science: magic has more to learn from science than vice versa.
hus magic should be naturalised.
15
A key study of this struggle in 19th century Britain is Turner, Between Science and Religion.
See also Webb, Flight from Reason. For a standard overview of the development of many of the
key occult currents of this age, see Godwin, heosophical Enlightenment.
16
See Hammer, Claiming Knowledge.
17
Oppenheim, he Other World, 63.
18
See Blavatsky, Isis Unveiled; Blavatsky, he Secret Doctrine.
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E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
between science and religion, and her ultimate, great campaign to reconcile
the two.19 Blavatsky seemed less interested in the methods provided by naturalistic science than with their results, however. Both books mentioned above are
full of references to discoveries and concepts that had quite recently appeared
and acquired value in the scientific literature, such as “evolution”, “energy”,
“atom”, and so forth.20 he appeal to science is still clearly present as a way of
legitimising one’s religious claims.
1.2.1 Science in the Service of Religion: he Society for Psychical Research
Another interesting child of this cultural climate is the Society for Psychical
Research (SPR). he society, created at Trinity College, Cambridge in 1882 by
a handful of agnostic academics, some of a very respectable stature, is most
symptomatic of the Victorian crossroads of science and religion. Similarly to
the spiritualists, this group felt the impact of religious doubt and sought a way
out through the evidence of experiment and demonstration. However, while
the spiritualists’ “scientific demonstrations” generally did not convince anybody familiar with scientific methodology,21 the SPR encouraged a more
strictly scientific approach. he hope was that the inquiries which were made
by the SPR into the fields of telepathy, mesmerism, hypnotism, hallucinations, mediumistic “trances” and the like could support the hypothesis that
the soul existed independently from the body, thereby opening the door for
acceptance of life after death and other comforting religious doctrines.22 For
one prominent psychical researcher, Henry Sidgwick, professor of moral philosophy and the first president of the SPR, such proof was even seen as necessary in order to uphold any convincing system of ethics.23
Despite the SPR’s obviously biased foundation, it considered itself “a
scientific society”. his claim is not to be dismissed offhand. In its early years
the SPR attracted many members with a solid scientific grounding, and their
more or less naturalistic approach seems to have been considerably more
authentic from a scientific perspective than that of the common spiritualist.24
Oppenheim, he Other World, 194.
In Olav Hammer’s terms, this can be seen as the rhetorical strategy of “terminological scientism”. See Hammer, Claiming Knowledge, 226ff.
21
Among the cases where naturalists actually were persuaded, one of the most interesting
examples is perhaps Alfred Russel Wallace, co-founder with Darwin of evolutionary biology,
who turned away from scientific naturalism at the benefit of spiritualism. See Owen, Place of
Enchantment, 35-6; Oppenheim, he Other World.
22
Oppenheim, he Other World, 120-121.
23
Ibid., 113.
24
Oppenheim, he Other World, 136.
19
20
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
145
It is also to be remembered that, at this point, psychology was still in its
infancy, and the research programme of psychical research was seen by many
as a promising field of inquiry for a future science.25 he idea that science and
religion could be reconciled was, generally, far from belonging merely to the
marginalised fringe of Victorian society. Rather, as Janet Oppenheim has
noted, the goals of the SPR placed the organisation ‘squarely amidst the cultural, intellectual, and emotional moods of the era’.26
2. Crowley, Psychical Research, Scientific Naturalism and the Occult
2.1
A Rendezvous at Trinity College
It was this very same cultural, intellectual and emotional mood that Aleister
Crowley encountered when he left home in 1895 to attend Trinity College,
Cambridge, where the SPR had been established thirteen years earlier. he
presence of the SPR was still very much felt at Trinity. Its headquarters were
there, and the founder Henry Sidgwick was still a fellow at the College.27 We
cannot positively ascertain whether Crowley at this point met with any of the
psychical researchers, but the thought that he might very well have attended a
lecture with Sidgwick is a tempting one. At any rate, given the SPR’s solid
presence at Trinity, it seems quite certain that Crowley would have been
exposed to their agenda during his College years.
Another prominent figure whom Crowley might have encountered during
these years was James George Frazer, the first edition of whose Golden Bough
had been published only five years earlier. his is a fact to be noted, since Frazer
would continue to have a considerable influence on Crowley in his post-Golden
Dawn years, when, to a large extent, he would adopt Frazer’s intellectualist
interpretation of magic, as well as his evolutionary view of human culture.
2.2
Crowley and the Golden Dawn
It was, however, in the legendary Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn28 that
Crowley would be introduced to occultism and magic. During his short but
25
Ibid., 4.
Ibid.
27
I am indebted to Marco Pasi for sharing this observation with me.
28
Some standard historical surveys of the Order and its activities include Gilbert, Golden
Dawn; Gilbert, Golden Dawn companion; Gilbert, Golden Dawn Scrapbook; Howe, Magicians of
the Golden Dawn; Regardie, he Original Account.
26
146
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
intense stay with the Order between 1898 and 1900 Crowley learned basically
everything on which he would later come to build his own system and interpretations. But it was also his first encounter with the social milieu of occultism, and this was not a milieu that particularly impressed him. Crowley later
described the community he encountered as consisting of ‘for the most part
muddled middle-class mediocrities’29 and as ‘an abject assemblage of nonentities; the members of the Order were as vulgar and commonplace as any other
set of average people’.30 Only very few people were to his liking, notably
George Cecil Jones, the Welsh analytical chemist who introduced Crowley to
the Order in the first place, and Allen Bennett, a very renowned, accomplished
and even feared magician and mystic, who would be Crowley’s informal tutor
of ritual magic.31 As for the rest of the members, Crowley found that they ‘possessed no individuality; they were utterly undistinguished either for energy or
capacity’.32
It is important to note that Crowley seems to have thought that the ‘vulgar
and commonplace’ members and the social aspects of the lodge were direct
threats to the magical and mystical work that the Order was supposed to be all
about. It possessed a social structure that invited poseurs and pretenders to magical attainment. In this connection it is perhaps interesting to note Crowley’s
own proposal to MacGregor Mathers, the chief of the Golden Dawn, in the
midst of the turmoil of reforming and reconstituting the Order in 1900. To
prevent the presence of insincere members claiming magical attainments only
with a view to gaining social status, a practice of anonymity through the wearing of masks during meetings and rituals was to be installed.33 he ideal was
that every new candidate would only know for sure one other person among
the members: the one that introduced him or her to the Order. I suggest that
these proposed measures signify something important about Crowley’s attitudes towards the occult subculture. Crowley strongly resented the occult pretenders, a resentment that prompted his attempts at improving the way occult
and magical techniques ought to be studied and practiced.
2.3
Crowley and Scientific Naturalism
In an early autobiographical piece published in he Equinox in 1912, Crowley
touches upon his intellectual convictions during the years after he parted with
29
30
31
32
33
Crowley, he Confessions of Aleister Crowley, 176.
Ibid., 177.
Ibid.
Ibid.
Ibid., 195.
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
147
the Order.34 Here he stresses time and again that he found himself comfortable
with a certain scepticism, finding that ‘his mind was more and more attracted
to materialism’.35 Studying the world religions, he came to reject the ‘folly of
all this supernaturalism’,36 preferring to look for the answers to ultimate questions in philosophy and metaphysics instead. It is notable that he mentions
some of the most important names of British scepticism and scientific naturalism as being those he would now consult. Among those mentioned are the
radical empiricist David Hume, the scientific naturalist Herbert Spencer,
“Darwin’s bulldog” homas Henry Huxley, the Irish naturalist John Tyndall,
and the pioneering English psychiatrist Henry Maudsley.37
Here, it is fitting to mention an interesting anecdote concerning Maudsley.
Crowley ran into him on a ship that took them from India to Egypt in 1904.38
In his autobiography, Crowley expresses great sympathy and curiosity for the
man. In describing their encounter, Crowley says of Maudsley that he ‘was a
profound philosopher of the school which went rather further than Spencer in
the direction of mechanical automatism. . . . He was the very man I wanted’.39
he reason why Crowley wanted to talk with such a staunch materialist and
psychological reductionist as Maudsley was that he wanted to discuss his own
reductionist theories about the meditative “states” of yoga, particularly the one
called samâdhi. Crowley was convinced that these states were completely
dependent on ‘physico- and chemico-physiological conditions’, and could
hypothetically be induced solely by pharmaceutical stimuli.40 According to
Crowley himself, Maudsley had agreed with all of Crowley’s theories. Furthermore, and this is important, Crowley was convinced that any non-reductionist
explanation of mysticism was bound to lead one back to ‘the whole discarded
humbug of the supernatural’.41 Luckily, he himself was ‘armed in the panoply
of the positive natural philosophy of modern science’.42
here are two major points to be made about this. he first concerns Crowley’s conception of himself as being ‘armed in the panoply of the positive
natural philosophy of modern science’: Maudsley and Crowley actually shared
34
Crowley, ‘Temple of Solomon the King’.
Ibid., 359.
36
Ibid., 360.
37
Ibid.
38
his happened just before Crowley’s famous prophetic reception of Liber Legis in Cairo
later that spring (Crowley, Confessions, 386).
39
Ibid.
40
Ibid.
41
Ibid.
42
Ibid.
35
148
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
similar convictions, and there is indeed some accuracy in this self-conception.
Secondly, it is important to note that this is how psychologisation usually
presents itself in Crowley’s work.43 Crowley is ready to “psychologise” mysticism only in a reductionist or ultimately naturalistic sense. What he clearly
would not allow is any sui generis understanding of these phenomena. his
would immediately rule out the sort of psychological escapism discussed earlier, which bases itself first and foremost on a notion of an irreducible mind,
or a kind of “magical solipsism” (“as long as I think it, it is real”).
2.4
Crowley and Psychical Research
In the years to come, Crowley would also have more contact with certain
influential figures of the SPR. His relationship to them sheds some interesting
light on Crowley’s self-positioning between science, occultism and psychical
research. One of the most notable connections in this respect is Crowley’s
friend Everard Feilding, the secretary of the SPR between 1903 and 1920 and
one of the SPR’s most active inquirers. Fielding is an interesting link, since it
is documented that he was a member of Crowley’s magical Order, the A∴A∴,
even from the very beginning.44 He is therefore the most definite link between
psychical research and Scientific Illuminism.
In his autobiography Crowley recounts an interesting series of events concerning Feilding and his fellow SPR researchers W.W. Baggally and Hereward
Carrington.45 Carrington was another friend of Crowley’s, and an influential
psychical researcher.46 In 1908 the three were given an assignment by the SPR
to explore the famous and successful Italian medium Eusapia Palladino. hey
concluded that some of her spectacular phenomena could not be attributed to
trickery, and thus made Palladino’s claims to extraordinary powers and her
continued popularity considerably easier to maintain.47 Having read Feilding’s
stunning report about Palladino, but still remaining sceptical, Crowley went
to Naples in 1912, and attended a séance with Palladino himself. Although he
did not doubt that the report had been written by capable and trained scientific
minds, Crowley’s still intended to check the claims first hand and with an even
43
Another example of it is his introduction to the Goetia, written in 1900 (see Crowley, ‘he
Initiated Interpretation’).
44
Kaczynski, Perdurabo, 149-51.
45
Crowley, Confessions, chapter 70.
46
Carrington was for instance the co-writer, together with S.J. Muldoon, of the very successful he Projection of the Astral Body.
47
Oppenheim, Other World, 151-152.
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
149
more critical attitude: ‘Feilding and the rest are clever, wary, experienced and
critical, but even so, can I be sure that when they describe what occurs they are
dependable witnesses?’48
It is intriguing to see how Crowley deals with his experience of the séance
with Palladino, since he ends up criticising the credibility of his own immediate perceptions during the event. He notes that at one point he became aware
that Palladino’s wrist had escaped from his handgrip without him even noticing. Crowley adds some further reflections on this, and notes how easy it is for
even the most perceptible person to be tricked in such settings. his is where
he finds the probable source of error in the work of the other psychical
researchers.49 In the end, what is most puzzling to Crowley is not the phenomena studied by psychical research, but rather the credulity of the psychical
researchers themselves, ‘the adhesion of so many prominent men of science to
spiritism’, as he puts it.50
he thing to be noted about this passage is, once again, Crowley’s selfunderstanding. It seems clear that he conceives his own scepticism and methodological naturalism with regard to occult phenomena as going further than
that of the SPR, who in his opinion ended up becoming a society of mere
advocates for spiritualism.
3. A New Dawn of Magic: Aleister Crowley’s “Scientific Illuminism”
3.1
Magic in the Age of Science: Crowley’s Frazerian Evolutionism
Crowley’s magnum opus on magic, Magick in heory and Practice, opens with
two lengthy quotations from Frazer’s Golden Bough.51 By means of these
quotes, Frazer provides the reader with his intellectualist interpretation of
magic, including a hint towards the evolutionary idea that magic “paved the
way for science”, although it was itself a failed precursor to it.52 hese evaluations are very much in tune with Crowley’s own position on magic. Adopting
Frazer’s evolutionism, Crowley firmly believed that the modern age had
evolved beyond religion and “magic” in the traditional sense, and towards a
superior age of science. Modern science had superseded both traditional magic
48
49
50
51
52
Ibid., 682.
Ibid.
Ibid., 685.
Crowley, Magick: Book Four, 123-124.
Frazer quoted in Crowley, Magick, 124.
150
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
and religion. But in Crowley’s view, this did not mean that magic was simply
a “survival” that should be abolished. Rather it meant that magic must be
updated to suit the new age of science. He consequently presents himself as
someone who has come to destroy ‘that unscientific . . . MAGICK (of tradition)’.53 In the age of science, magic must be naturalised.
3.2 he Rise of the Brothers of the A∴A∴: he Formation of
“Scientific Illuminism”
In July 1906 Crowley discussed the possibility of establishing a new Magical
Order together with his old tutor from the Golden Dawn, George Cecil
Jones.54 During the next year, Crowley and his small circle of magical companions worked towards this goal, writing rituals, texts and instructions to be used
in their magical and mystical work.55 he watershed finally occurred in 1909,
with the publication of the first volume of he Equinox, signalling the launch
of the Order A∴A∴ and its Scientific Illuminism.
As mentioned in the introduction, the Editorial expressed the Order’s intentions to get rid of “charlatanism” and “obscurantism”.56 his resonated not
only with the common scepticism against spiritualist mediums, but also with
Crowley’s bad experiences from his time in the Golden Dawn. he “social posing” of the old Order was to be expelled with the motto of the new A∴A∴:
‘he Method of Science—the Aim of Religion’.57 In Crowleys mind,
he Equinox was the first serious attempt to put before the public the facts of
occult science, so-called, since Blavatsky’s unscholarly hotch-poch of fact and
fable, Isis Unveiled. It was the first attempt in history to treat the subject with
scholarship and from the standpoint of science.58
his positive view of science and scientific methodology is very evident from
the Editorials in the following issues of he Equinox, which put particular
emphasis on the notion that an appeal to personal experience in itself is
insufficient for elaborating such a methodology. Rather, they call for exact
measurements and quantitative studies:
We require the employment of a strictly scientific method. he mind of the seeker
must be unbiased: all prejudice and other sources of error must be perceived as
such and extirpated.
53
54
55
56
57
58
Crowley, Magick, 135.
Sutin, Do What hou Wilt, 172.
Ibid., 181.
Crowley, ‘Editorial’, 2.
Ibid.
Crowley, Confessions, 604.
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
151
We have therefore devised a Syncretic-Eclectic Method . . . to attack the Problem, through exact experiments and not by guesses.59
But what were the implications of this new scientific approach? In the following sections I will explore this question through a closer analysis of some of the
practical instructions written by Crowley, in particular those published in he
Equinox and intended as official study material for the A∴A∴. In so doing, I
will mainly explore three aspects: the careful use of a magical record to stress
the externalisation of personal experience which makes inter-subjectivity possible, the conception of rituals as scientific experiments, and the idea of testing
the obtained results through inter-subjectively verifiable methods. I will end
with a comparison between Crowley’s instruction for one specific type of magical operation—astral travel—and instructions for the same operation in the
Golden Dawn. By means of such a comparison I hope to show the practical
import of the alterations Crowley made in the name of Scientific Illuminism.
3.3
he Magical Record: Magical Rituals as Scientific Experiments
A scientific experiment is much like a recipe. he experimenter sets up a clear
and distinct list of “ingredients”, and sets down a rigid procedure for how to
do what, and when. Relying on an understanding of causality according to
which “like causes produce like effects”, it is assumed that when such an experiment is conducted in exactly the same way, under the exact same conditions,
it will always produce exactly the same results, regardless of who conducts the
experiment, when he does it, or where.60 In the magical instructions published
by Crowley in he Equinox we see a tendency towards conceiving of magical
rituals in a similar experimental fashion. he necessity of thorough planning
and concise descriptions is emphasised. An excellent example of this concept
of magical practice as experiment is evident already from the very first practical manual of Scientific Illuminism that has been published, known as “Liber
Exercitiorum” (“Book of Exercises”). Its first section concerns the magical
record or diary:
1. It is absolutely necessary that all experiments should be recorded in detail
during, or immediately after, their performance.
2. It is highly important to note the physical and mental condition of the
experimenter or experimenters.
59
Ibid. My emphasis.
For an account of how science progresses through the accumulation of such experimental
effects rather than through novel predictive theories, see Gooding, Experiment and the Making of
Meaning.
60
152
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
3. The time and place of all experiments must be noted; also the state of the
weather, and generally all conditions which might conceivably have any result upon
the experiment either as adjuvants to or causes of the result, or as inhibiting it,
or as sources of error.
...
7. The written record should be intelligibly prepared so that others may benefit
from its study.
...
9. The more scientific the record is, the better.61
hroughout, the emphasis is on expelling vagueness in the interest of clarity.
It is interesting to note that this emphasis is incompatible with the usual
appeal to personal experience. he fact that “sources of error” have to be taken
into account, and the precise procedure of the operation or experiment must
be recorded so that it may be replicated and tested by others are clear examples
of this. he underlying assumption is that immediate experiences can be misleading, and that a scientific epistemology must go beyond such personal
experiences. Furthermore, the appeal to “intelligibility” stems from a recognition that the prevailing obscurantism of magical and occult texts must be
rooted out in order to establish the new scientific paradigm of magic. he
necessity of such clarity in experimental prescriptions is stressed in another
essay by Crowley published in the same issue of he Equinox, where he gives
two examples, one of a scientifically valid procedure description, and another
of a nonsensical and obscure one:
“I concentrated my mind upon a white radiant triangle in whose centre was a
shining eye, for 22 minutes and 10 seconds, my attention wandering 45 times” is
a scientific and valuable statement. “I prayed fervently to the Lord for the space
of many days” means anything or nothing. Anybody who cares to do so may
imitate my experiment and compare his result with mine. In the latter case one
would always be wondering what “fervently” meant and who “the Lord” was, and
how many days made “many.”62
“Scientific” precision in the use of the magical diary or record is crucial to the
programme outlined by Crowley. he instructions in “Liber Exercitiorum”
give a couple of good examples of how this should be applied in practice.
Being primarily a training manual for aspiring students of Scientific Illuminism, it gives specific exercises in some elementary magical and mystical techniques. here are training programmes in “physical clairvoyance” (i.e. the art
of prediction by divination), the yogic disciplines of âsana (positions or pos-
61
62
Crowley, ‘Liber Exercitiorum’, 25-26. My emphases.
Crowley, ‘he Soldier and the Hunchback’, 123.
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
153
tures), prânâyâma (control of breath) and dhâranâ (control of thought and
imagination), and of the general physical aptitude of the student.63 In all these
tests and exercises, the careful recording of what has been done and what has
happened is emphasized. For instance, in clairvoyance one should train one’s
occult ability of prediction by guessing tarot cards, and carefully note how
many one gets right and how many wrong. By making such quantitative
figures it can be estimated on thoroughly scientific grounds whether the results
are statistically significant or not, and Crowley himself gives sound statistical
figures for showing what kind of results would count as merely coincidental.64
In training âsana, which takes a lot of static strength and endurance, one
should carefully note ‘the severity of the pain (if any) which accompanies it,
the degree of rigidity attained, and any other pertinent matters’.65 Similarly, in
the prânâyâma exercise it is noted that ‘various remarkable phenomena will
very probably occur’ during the practices, which ‘must be carefully analysed
and recorded’.66 In the dhâranâ exercise, which focuses solely on mental phenomena, this is stressed as well, and becomes perhaps even more important. In
these exercises one should focus one’s mind on various mental images, and
then in increasingly more difficult exercises “manipulate” these images, include
moving objects in various constellations ‘such as a pendulum swinging, a
wheel revolving’, or ‘a piston rising and falling while a pendulum is swinging’.67 he point of these exercises is to discipline the mind, through concentrating and visualising, but also through keeping all other thoughts out of the
mind. For this purpose, the magical record is employed again: ‘Note carefully
the duration of the experiments, the number and nature of the intruding
thoughts, the tendency of the object itself to depart from the course laid out
for it, and any other phenomena which may present themselves’.68 In other
words, some sort of scientifically appropriated introspection seems to be implied.
Since these exercises are considered official instructions from the A∴A∴,
they should also be viewed as tests. his means that when the students feel that
they master the exercises, they should be officially tested in them by their more
accomplished superiors.69 While Crowley does not explicitly say here what
63
Crowley, ‘Liber Exercitiorum’, 26-31.
Ibid., 26-7.
65
Ibid., 28.
66
Ibid., 29.
67
Ibid., 30.
68
Ibid.
69
All the exercises end with comments like ‘When you feel that you have attained some success in these practices, apply for examination, and should you pass, more complex and difficult
practices will be prescribed for you’ (ibid., 31).
64
154
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
these “tests” would involve, it seems likely that special attention would be
given to the records kept by the student. Especially in exercises like dhâranâ,
which concerns processes which are completely “iinternal” and therefore not
directly observable (as would be the case with exercises in maintaining yogic
postures), this would undoubtedly be the case.
3.3.1 “he Aim of Religion—he Method of Heterophenomenology”?
As appeals to “science” and scientific nomenclature by new religious or occult
spokespersons have usually been interpreted as a “rhetorical” or “discursive
strategy” (and, more often than not, rightly so), it seems to me that the question whether the methods prescribed by Scientific Illuminism can in any way
be called sound from a scientific perspective deserves some scrutiny.70 Was
Crowley’s appeal to science merely a rhetorical strategy, a faddish way to express
and sell one’s religious ideas in a society where naturalistic science had replaced
religion as the main institution of truth? Or was his expressed wish to apply
scientific ways of inquiry to magical phenomena more sincere? I believe Crowley’s re-evaluation of the magical diary indicates the latter.
We have already seen that the prescriptions given in “Liber Exercitiorum”
stress the “experimental” aspects of magical and mystical work. Here the
understanding of the nature of experimentation seems to be more consistent
with that of the naturalistic sciences than one would perhaps expect. here is
an emphasis on clarity of procedures, there are detailed descriptions of the
circumstances and phenomena encountered, and there also seems to be a conception that the same causes produce the same effects. As Crowley writes in
another magical manual: ‘By doing certain things certain results will follow’.71
here is, of course, no doubt that the effects produced by the experiments
hitherto considered are of a radically different kind than those usually considered by naturalistic science. In “Liber Exercitiorum” it seems clear that the aim
is to produce certain mental and/or sensual phenomena in the experimenter, i.e.
the magician. Certainly this way of experimenting is different from the one in
physics or chemistry, where the experimenter should be as little involved as
possible. On the other hand, the situation would not be entirely alien to
experiments in psychology.72 One could even argue that the importance Crow70
See for instance Hammer, Claiming Knowledge, which includes an entire section (V) called
‘Scientism as a language of faith’.
71
Crowley, ‘Liber O vel Manus et Sagittae’, 13.
72
As Dr Ulrike Popp-Baier has pointed out to me, Crowley’s use of a kind of “experimental
introspection” is strongly reminiscent of the early establishments of experimental psychology
represented by figures such as Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920) and Oswald Külpe (1862-1915),
and also the appropriation of these methods by early proponents of the psychology of religion,
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
155
ley assigns to the keeping of magical (or scientific) records constitutes a
response to one of the standard methodological problems of psychology,
namely the problematic epistemological relationship between personal experience and third-person access to it. Two historically significant answers to this
problem have been based on the supposition that the two cannot be reconciled. On the one hand, behaviourism, represented in its earliest period by
figures such as John Watson (1878-1958) and later, famously, by B. F. Skinner
(1904-1990), would deny the importance or even existence of something like
subjective experience and mentality, while focusing solely on measurable external behaviours (i.e. “input and output”) in order to conform to the rigidity of
naturalistic scientific methods. On the other hand, phenomenology, represented
in psychology by William James (1842-1910) (another prominent member of
the SPR, it might be added), among others, would stress the importance of
introspection to unravel the mysteries of mind.73 We have already seen Crowley’s enthusiasm for the naturalistic approach of Maudsley, which, although it
admittedly came before behaviourism, still is significant in its insistence on
methodological naturalism in the study of the human mind.
It is tempting to contend that the emphasis in Crowley’s writing upon the
inter-subjective availability of the magically induced experiences through rigorous and carefully written records is reminiscent of another method insistent
on scientific methodology, namely the heterophenomenology formulated in
recent decades by Daniel Dennett.74 his method has been proposed to overcome the perceived distinction between subjective qualia (if these exist at all)
and what can be measured and tested quantitatively. Instead of the first-person
methodology of ordinary phenomenology, Dennett proposes a third-person
view on the same issues, based upon a rigorous inter-subjective method. Dennett writes about the problems of ordinary phenomenology, that it
is in even greater need [than ordinary hard sciences] of a clear, neutral method of
description, because, it seems, no two people use the same word the same way,
and everybody’s an expert. It is just astonishing to see how often “academic” discussions of the phenomenological controversies degenerate into desk-thumping
cacophony, with everybody talking past everybody else.75
i.e. the so-called Dorpat school. See Wulff, ‘Experimental Introspection and Religious Experience’, 131-150.
73
It is perhaps also interesting to note that this split seems to parallel the old Diltheyian distinction between “Verstehen” and “Erklären”, and between qualitative and quantitative approaches.
For more on this, see von Wright, Explanation and Understanding.
74
See Dennett, Consciousness Explained, especially chapter 4.
75
Ibid., 66.
156
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
his could just as well have been a description of the states of affair in modern
occultism. Furthermore, Dennett claims that heterophenomenology represents a
neutral path leading from objective physical science and its insistence on the
third-person point of view, to a method of phenomenological description that can
(in principle) do justice to the most private and ineffable subjective experiences,
while never abandoning the methodological scruples of science.76
I certainly do not intend to argue that Crowley’s methodology for a Scientific
Illuminism was a forerunner of what has been articulated in cognitive psychology in recent decades. he objects and agendas are, of course, completely
different, and the traces of heterophenomenological methodology in Crowley’s work, although rigorous, are clearly only a shadow of the kind of rigidity
and thoroughness called for by Dennett. However, I think there is something
to this comparison. Crowley’s emphasis on carefully noting all available facts
of the matter concerning one’s own mental processes as well as all external
influences (both pertaining to the ritual itself and otherwise) represents, I
would argue, a genuine drive towards “naturalizing” the study and practice of
magic in the sense of keeping ‘the methodological scruples of science’. In seeking to reconcile the domain of magical experience, which had been so dominated by subjectivity and unverifiable claims, with a scientifically sound
methodology, one sees Crowley struggling with an analogous problem, and
finding an analogous answer.
3.4
he Testing of Astral Experience: Two Methods
While the above method, reminiscent of heterophenomenology and intending to make subjective experience inter-subjectively available and open for
critical scrutiny, is the underlying epistemological base for Scientific Illuminism, it is still not the end of the story. In the following section I will consider
some more concrete methods designed to “test” the veracity and validity of
magically induced visionary experiences. his testing takes on two forms: verifying factual claims made by spiritual entities in visions, and applying a kind
of kabbalistic exegetical technique in order to judge the “spiritual” validity of
the visions according to magical correspondences.
3.4.1 Verifying Factual Claims
It should be quite clear what the first category implies. If a spirit makes some
claims about the external world, this spirit immediately stands before the
76
Ibid., 72.
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
157
empirical tribunal of truth. he importance of conducting tests for verifying
such claims is stressed by Crowley time and again. In a short note published
in he International in 1917, Crowley expresses amazement over the fact that
so many occultists are uninterested in checking such claims even when it could
easily be done. About occultists dabbling with the ouija board, he has this to
say: ‘Every inanity, every stupidity, every piece of rubbish, is taken not only at
its face value, but at an utterly exaggerated value. he most appallingly bad
poetry will pass for Shelley, if only its authentication be that of the planchette!’77 When a spirit poses itself as Shelley, you would expect it to have
some literary skills. his is an empirical prediction which lends itself to a
scientific approach.
A nice example is to be found in a letter dated June 19, 1919, where Crowley “corrects” his student Jane Wolfe.78 Wolfe had claimed to be in contact
with an entity named Fee Wah, which appeared to be of Chinese origin.
Crowley suggests that this entity should be expected to speak Chinese. he
test of truth could therefore be to bring a copy of some classical Chinese literature, and ask the spirit to translate. he accuracy of the translation could
then easily be checked, and judgement be made about the claims of the spirit.
3.4.2 Kabbalah as Scientific Method: Golden Dawn and Scientific
Illuminism juxtaposed
Even more intriguingly, Scientific Illuminism applies an appropriated Kabbalistic method to check both the validity of spirits encountered, and of the
visionary experiences themselves. Already in the Golden Dawn system of
magic, Kabbalistic doctrines were reinterpreted and given new functions to fit
the new system of occult syncretism. Elements of the Kabbalah, especially the
so-called Tree of Life with the ten sephirot and the twenty-two letters of the
Hebrew alphabet were utilised as the very foundation of an elaborate system
of correspondences, to which all other systems were connected.79 In a ritual
setting, this whole body of correspondences was employed and manipulated
in order to invoke certain forces that the set of symbols was thought to represent. One discipline in which this was deployed was “astral skrying” or “astral
travel”, where the symbols would be deployed to “guide” the magician to particular places in the “Astral Light”. In order to show how Crowley adopted the
basic framework of this practice from the Golden Dawn, but adapted the use
77
Crowley, ‘he Ouija Board: A Note’, 319.
Letter to Jane Wolfe, dated June 19, 1919.
79
I have argued elsewhere that this is a central function of Kabbalah in modern occultism
(Asprem, ‘Kabbalah Recreata’).
78
158
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
of Kabbalah to get a more elaborate system of testing the experiences, I will
now turn to a comparison between the two.
A Golden Dawn Instruction
Influenced by earlier occult philosophers, particularly the French occultist
Eliphas Lévi,80 the magicians of the Golden Dawn worked with an occult
cosmology that supposed the existence of a subtle, “astral plane” or “Astral
Light”, situated behind or beyond the phenomenal world. his world could be
reached and interacted with by virtue of a properly cultivated and disciplined
use of the magical imagination.81
An introduction, with examples of such astral work, is provided by Moina
Mathers,82 writing under the magical pseudonym of soror V.N.R..83 his
instruction describes the meditative use of certain symbols taken from Hindu
traditions, known as “Tattwas”, which, according to the teachings or “knowledge lectures” of the Order, correspond to the elements, and thus to different
realms in the astral world.84 Soror V.N.R. describes how, for instance, one can
use the Tattwa known as Apas-Prithivi, which is formed like a silvery crescent
lying horizontally with its back downward, corresponding to the element
water.85 Since the nature of this symbol, and the astral realm to which it is a
key, is of water, the other ritual paraphernalia, symbols and gestures one should
employ must also be of the watery kind. hus, when ritually invoking the
forces before the visualisation itself takes place, one should principally use the
cup (the “elemental weapon” corresponding to water), draw the “invoking
pentagrams” of water, and so on. After these preliminary ritualistic acts have
been performed, the magician starts employing the imagination in a more
active way. First, one should stare intensely at the image of the Tattwa, so as to
form a vivid representation of it in one’s own mind that would remain clearly
even when the eyes are shut. hen, ‘having succeeded in obtaining the thought
vision of the symbol’, one should ‘continue vibrating the Divine Names [i.e.
those kabbalistically corresponding to the element in question] with the idea
80
An especially influential book of his was Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie. See the latest
English translation, Lévi, Transcendental Magic.
81
Owen, Place of Enchantment, 150-152.
82
MacGregor Mathers’ wife and, interestingly, the sister of French philosopher and one-time
president of the SPR, Henri Bergson.
83
Moina Mathers, ‘Of Skrying and Travelling in the Spirit-Vision’, reprinted in Regardie,
Golden Dawn, 467-473.
84
See also Regardie, Golden Dawn, 456-466.
85
Moina Mathers, ‘Skrying and Travelling’, 469.
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
159
well fixed in your mind of calling before you on the card [i.e. the Tattwa] a
brain picture of some scene or landscape’.86 his ‘scene or landscape’ is supposed to be a place in the Astral Light that belongs to the element invoked
through the symbols and ritual acts.
At this point a very vivid picture of a landscape should appear in one’s
imagination: ‘For example, I perceive appearing an expanse of sea, a slight
strip of land—high grey rocks or boulders rising out of the sea. To the left a
long gallery of cliffs jutting out some distance into the sea’.87 Here we notice
an interesting aspect of the procedure. Having obtained the visionary experience, it becomes necessary to test its authenticity. hat is, one has to make sure
that this vision is not merely a figment of one’s mundane imagination, but an
actual and (in a more objective sense) “real” location within the astral realms.
his testing is done by drawing up certain “test symbols”, taken from the vast
system of correspondences. In this example, Moina suspects that among the
sources of error concerning the veracity of the vision are memory recollections
on the one hand, and constructs of one’s own imagination on the other. To
“check” these influences, she draws up the Hebrew letters tau and kaph.88
hese should correspond with the planets Saturn and Jupiter, which in turn
are said to govern memory and mental image construction respectively.89 If
these landscapes were only taken from memory or constructed by one’s own
mental creativity, the false visions would now be banished or expelled. If that
does not happen, but the visions remain, the magician may safely go on to
explore the astral landscape s/he has discovered, and be confident that they are
not merely figments of one’s own psyche.90 One may then astrally “project”
oneself into the landscape, interact with it and the spiritual creatures one may
encounter there. Once again, these creatures should be “tested”, in the sense
that one should ask them to give signs or ritual gestures corresponding to the
“right” elements.
Crowley’s Adaptations and Applications of Kabbalah as a Test System
In Crowley’s system, the kabbalistic system is expanded and put to use as a
more elaborate way of testing the visions. In 1909, the same year that Scientific
Illuminism was presented for the first time in he Equinox, Crowley published
86
87
88
89
90
Ibid.
Ibid., 470.
Ibid.
Ibid., 474 n.10.
Ibid., 470.
160
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
a highly idiosyncratic work on Kabbalah, which went under the title Liber 777.91
his book is really an elaborate diagram, where all the lines are made up by the
ten Kabbalistic sephirot and Hebrew letters, while the almost 200 columns
correlate them with concepts borrowed from various religious and esoteric
systems from all over the world. he result is a neatly arranged system of correspondences, showing the “hidden connection” between Roman gods, Taoist
concepts, Buddhist meditations, concepts from Christian mysticism and so
on, within the framework of the Kabbalistic Tree of Life. As already mentioned, this was a continuation of a project already present in the Golden
Dawn. Even explicitly, Liber 777 is the expansion of a Book of Correspondences
which MacGregor Mathers worked on in the 1890s together with Crowley’s
old friend and tutor from the Golden Dawn, Allan Bennett.92
A couple of years later, another innovative Kabbalistic compendium, Sepher
Sephirot, was published as a supplement to he Equinox.93 his book is really
a kind of dictionary of certain Hebrew words. But rather than being based on
an alphabetic listing, the words are here listed on a numeric basis. By exploiting the alphanumeric structure of the Hebrew language (i.e., each letter also
has a numerical value) it becomes possible to calculate the numerical sum
of words. his corresponds with the specific exegetical technique known in
kabbalistic mystical hermeneutics as gematria. By adding up words in this
manner, it becomes possible to see hidden structures and correspondences
whenever two words add up to the same number. Traditionally, this tool has
been used to expand the possibilities of interpretation of scripture beyond the
usual range of semantic meanings. In Scientific Illuminism, however, this
gematrical method, combined with the correspondences of the sephirot presented in Liber 777, also becomes one of the most important methodological
tools for testing visions.
In the instruction “Liber O”,94 Crowley explains thoroughly how one
should set up a complete magical ritual, among other things for exploring the
astral planes. he beginning of such astral work is similar to what we find in
91
he whole title being 777 vel Prolegomena Symbolica ad Systemam Sceptico-Mysticæ Viæ
Explicandæ, Fundamentum Hieroglyphicum Sanctissimorum Scientiæ Summæ (“777, or symbolical
prolegomena to the system for the explication of the sceptico-mystical path, the hieroglyphical
fundament of the supreme science of the most holy”). See Crowley, Liber 777 and Other Qabalistic Writings of Aleister Crowley.
92
Sutin, Do What hou Wilt, 64.
93
he Equinox vol. 1, nr 8(1912). For a reprint, see Crowley, Liber 777 and Other Qabalistic
Writings, part three. Interestingly, also this work was initially conceived by Allen Bennett. As
Crowley writes in his Confessions, he only expanded on lists Bennett had already written in his
magical notebooks (Crowley, Confessions, 213-214).
94
Crowley, ‘Liber O’, 13-30.
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
161
the Golden Dawn. One should compose a ritual with a set of symbols carefully chosen from the correspondences one knows, such that all things invoked
correspond to the particular force one wants to deal with. In Crowley’s system,
Liber 777 becomes the guide for picking such symbols, and thereby becomes
a “periodic table of magic” of sorts, telling the practitioner which “elements”
to use in the experiment:
Let us suppose that you wish to obtain knowledge of some obscure science. In
[Liber 777] column xlv [“Magical powers”], line 12, you will find ”Knowledge of
Sciences.” By now looking up line 12 in the other columns, you will find that the
Planet corresponding is Mercury, its number eight, its lineal figures the octagon
and octagram, the God who rules that planet hoth, or in the Hebrew symbolism
Tetragrammaton Adonai and Elohim Tzabaoth, its Archangel Raphael, its choir
of Angels Beni Elohim, its Intelligence Tiriel, its Spirit Taphtartharath, its colours
Orange (for Mercury is the Sphere of the Sephira Hod, 8) Yellow, Purple, Grey
and Indigo . . .
You would then prepare your Place of Working accordingly.95
he principle, in other words, is the same as in the Golden Dawn, but it has
been made more elaborate, and, when one can rely on a complex but concise
table, more rigidly structured.
his is how the Kabbalistic system is employed for the purpose of invocation. But what then about the visionary experience in itself, induced by the
invocation—the “effect”, as it were, of the experiment? We remember that
Moina Mathers in her instruction emphasised the role of testing visions during
the experience. In order to be sure that what the magician saw was actually
something conjured up by the magic, and not just a product of ones own
mundane imagination or memory, certain symbols were to be used to “banish” the sources of error. his element is also present in Crowley’s writing, but
he takes it a step further. As he writes in a later essay on astral travel:
Apart from the regular tests—made at the time—of the integrity of any spirit, the
Magician must make a careful record of every vision, omitting no detail; he must
then make sure that it tallies in every point with the correspondences in Book 777
and in “Liber D” [Sepher Sephirot]. Should he find (for instance) that, having
invoked Mercury, his vision contains names whose numbers [by gematria] are
Martial, or elements proper to Pisces, let him set himself most earnestly to discover the source of error, to correct it, and to prevent its recurrence.96
he occult correspondences, which appear only in the tables of 777 and in the
numerical value of words and names (as listed in Sepher Sephirot), are utilised
95
Ibid., 15-16. My emphasis.
Crowley, ‘Notes for an Astral Atlas’, 505. Emphases added. his piece was originally written in 1921 at the “Abbey of helema” in Sicily.
96
162
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
for checking or verifying the authenticity of spirits invoked. But a striking
aspect of this quote is that, while one follows the procedures of the Golden
Dawn, the emphasis is placed once again upon the record to be kept, and the
checking of one’s experiences in hindsight. In other words: the experience itself
can never be the final word. here is still the possibility that when going through
the records and checking up the names and symbolic correspondences that
have been given in the visions, one will discover that one has indulged in selfdeception (that is to say, if the names or symbols do not seem to show any
pattern), or even been tricked by a “foul spirit” intruding the operation (that
is to say, if the correspondences follow a wrong pattern, for instance signalling
Mars when one had invoked Mercury). Only by discovering such “errors” is
progress possible. In this sense, Kabbalistic hermeneutics has been transformed
from being a tool opening up for expansive interpretations of a text into a
“scientific” formalism which (allegedly) makes it possible to quantitatively
assess certain visual experiences and say something about their validity.
As Crowley writes in his Confessions, the Kabbalah provided him with a
method that was totally compatible with ‘the agnosticism of Huxley’:97 the
method it posited was “scientific” in the sense that it was concerned with the
sceptical criticism of “facts”, arrived at by empiricism (in this case, occult experiences).98 Furthermore, Crowley saw in it a procedure for criticising and overcoming ‘the historic claim of mystics’ that their experiences were ineffable.
Crowley insisted that he found the idea of inherently “inexpressible” ideas
repugnant, because of its ‘confession of incompetence and its denial of the
continuity of nature’.99 herefore, Crowley claims to have
subsequently developed a complete system, based on the Cabbala, by which any
expression may be rendered cognizable through the language of intellect, exactly
as mathematicians have done: exactly, too, as they have been obliged to recognize
the existence of a new logic. I found it necessary to create a new code of the laws
of thought.100
hus, along lines that are similar to those of his heroes in the fields of naturalistic science, Crowley conceives of himself as expelling “ineffability”, obscurantism and the like by inventing a quantitative method, based on a formal
system (akin to logic and mathematics, in his view) derived from Kabbalistic
hermeneutics.
97
Which, it is to be noted, had a much more sceptical tone than what is commonly meant
with “agnosticism” today.
98
Crowley, Confessions, 511.
99
Ibid., 511-512.
100
Ibid., 512.
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
163
Concluding Remarks: Psychologisation vs. Naturalisation in
Crowley’s Magic
In conclusion, I want to make a final remark concerning the relation between
psychologisation and naturalisation. Having seen that Crowley does indeed
use psychologised language to explain magical concepts at some points (see
especially the discussion of the meeting with Maudsley, and the interpretation
of yoga),101 and relies heavily on the concept of an astral world which is accessible through the psyche, one could perhaps wonder why I think that the term
“psychologisation” does not apply well to Crowley’s system. In this respect,
one should not forget that the kind of psychologisation of magic observed by,
for instance, Hanegraaff, represents a sort of escapism from the threat of
rational criticism. It will be noted that while this kind of psychologisation
must rely upon certain sui generis and/or irreducible conceptions of the psyche, Crowley’s view on psychology was mainly one designed to remain within
the confines of purely naturalistic approaches. hus, when he theorises about
the “psychological nature” of spiritual attainment, it is in a quantitative manner, with emphasis on test and experiment and the possibility of inducing the
same states by the paraphernalia of science instead of magic. Effectively, this
sort of psychologism places magic within the continuum of scientific naturalism, and does not provide for an escape from it. In fact, the possibility of such
psychological escapism represented by doctrines of magic that emphasise subjective experience is something which, as we have seen, Crowley abhors,
actively attacks and seeks to prevent. Far from accepting that the magical realm
was a “separate reality” which science could not touch, he struggled to devise
scientific methods for reaching it. Whether his attempts were successful or not
is a different question, but I see no reason to doubt the sincerity of Crowley’s
ambition in this direction. In this sense, then, Crowley’s system can be seen as
representing a naturalisation of magic, and the psychologisms which do show
up from time to time are merely secondary, and subject to his more fundamental scientific naturalism.
Acknowledgements
I wish to thank Dr Ulrike Popp-Baier and Dr Marco Pasi for valuable conversations and suggestions early on in the process of researching and writing this
article. hanks also to Kjetil Fjell, Wouter Hanegraaff and Antoine Faivre for
101
For a closer discussion of this, see Pasi, ‘Lo Yoga in Aleister Crowley’.
164
E. Asprem / Aries 8 (2008) 139-165
additional suggestions, proof readings and corrections. Any inaccuracies and
fallacies remaining are solely my own.
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