T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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106.1 | Masons are no ancient mystery | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Wed Apr 09 1986 16:23 | 6 |
| If you are looking for occult knowledge and experience, the Masons
are NOT the place to go. They have some secret rituals, but they
have nothing to do with magic. They are a social, mutual-aid, and
community-service club. They just happen to be a very old one.
Earl Wajenberg
|
106.2 | Mysterious, Indeed! | PEN::KALLIS | | Thu Apr 10 1986 08:14 | 19 |
| re .1:
Maybe the query didn't have to do specifically with magic.
re .0:
The mystery religions/cults were common during classical times around
the Mediterranean, particularly in Greece and Asia Minor. Some
descriptions of some of these are available in scholarly works,
but like most Secret Traditions, the shells are visible and the
meat is left out, for the most part.
The current masonic group has little to do with ancient mysteries,
though some have made a tenuous connection between it and the old
Knights Templars group, which was broken up on a (highly probably
trumped-up) charge of demon/devil worship.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
106.3 | Naqshbandi, Anyone? | CANYON::MOELLER | Dial 'M' for mm..mu...MUSIC! | Tue May 06 1986 20:06 | 17 |
| This is late. So what.
Check a book called 'The Sufis' by Idries Shah, avail in paperback
from E.P. Dutton. It pulls together all the guilds/brotherhoods
stuff from the Middle Ages on. Just EXCELLENT.
The original spiritual brotherhoods were craft guilds to the world.
The external appearance of the guild concealed the real work. In
many cases there is a basic built in metaphor - the metalworking
guild, for example, smelts metal from ore, then forms and finally
engraves a beautiful/functional piece. The metaphor being, of course,
creation of an evolved being from a base beginning.
Check out ANYTHING by Idries Shah. In a world of charlatans and
wannabe's, he's the REAL THING.
karl moeller sws tucson az
|
106.4 | Well... | INK::KALLIS | | Wed May 07 1986 09:31 | 9 |
| re .3:
I second the endorsement on Idres Shah (actually, his name is Sayeed
Idries Shah, but his book bylines drop the Sayeed). Highly worthwhile.
The _ancient_ mystery schools, however, were pre-Medieval.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
106.6 | From a poster seen on a wall | VIKING::HARDY | | Fri Aug 22 1986 20:49 | 27 |
| What Secret Powers
[Drawing of a lobster with light beams coming out of its eyes . . .]
Do These
Creatures Possess?
In the long process of evolution, most organisms have lost the secret
power formerly held by all living things - a power now shrouded in
mystery and preserved by only a handful of species, who have passed on
this priceless heritage from generation to generation. What is this
strange hidden process? Put simply, it is the amazing ability to
_regenerate lost limbs_, to literally grow new claws, legs, antannae,
from nothing more than the stumps of missing appendages.
THIS BOOK IS FREE
Once, all creatures had mastery of this ancient technique. Now it is
possessed solely by The Crustaceans (not a mutation), an age-old order
of principally aquatic animals, _who invite you to share the practical
benefits of their primordial wisdom_. Write today for a free copy of
the book, "The Mastery of Regeneration." Address: Lobster H.N.B.
The CRUSTACEANS (ARTHROPODA)
Grand Banks North Atlantic
|
106.7 | The Meaning of Masonry | LEZAH::TUCKER | | Thu Sep 04 1986 13:04 | 6 |
| One book i found interesting was The Meaning Of Masonry, by W.L.
Wilmshurst. it discusses the spiritual and philosophical underpinnings
of the group. the back cover also recommends reading The Spirit
of Masonry, by William Hutchinson for a "fascinating" look at the
history and philosophy of Freemasonry. it is supposed to be "the
classic study" on the subject.
|
106.9 | Original Witches... | EXIT26::KELLOGG | | Mon Sep 08 1986 19:23 | 10 |
| What's REALLY interesting is that the history of Freemasonary is very
closely related to the original Rosacrutians (the European Version,
not the guys from San Jose). There are threads throughout history
for the past 1500 years. What's even more interesting is that some
of the ancient rites were brought over to this country by a very
select group of DPs (Wehner Von Braun and company) in 1945 when
they were conscripted by NACA (now known as NASA) to re-engineer
the German A4 missile into the Redstone (the beginning of our space
program). I used to work with some of these guys and, believe me,
the author of the previous note is RIGHT ON!!! Very intense stuff!
|
106.10 | What were they into? | NEXUS::MORGAN | Garbage In, Gospel Out! | Mon Sep 08 1986 23:34 | 3 |
| Would anyone like to tell us what they were into or is that taboo?
Mikie?
|
106.12 | So What | BRAT::WALLIS | | Wed Sep 10 1986 13:47 | 11 |
|
re 11. Let us decide....eh what?
Curiosity killed the cat, but it had eight tries to get
smart :)
Sides, maybe they're wrong.......
Cheers Lora
|
106.14 | Why not share? | VLNVAX::DDANTONIO | DDA | Thu Sep 11 1986 14:30 | 18 |
| > < Note 106.13 by FRSBEE::CHRISTENSEN >
> -< Singing Pigs >-
>
> Never try to teach a pig to sing. It is a waste of your time and
> it just upsets te pig.
>
Are you speaking as teacher or as pig? :-)
Seriously, if you chose to decline the request, thats fine. But sharing
knowledge is the best way to advance the work. After all, if you keep it
all to yourself, its gone when you die! I get very curious and interested
when someone says they have "secret knowledge" that they refuse to share.
I always wonder WHY they won't share it. Could it be there it doesn't exist?
If not, why don't they just share it and we can work on it together...
Annoyed at "secret" societies,
DDA
|
106.16 | Scratching m'head | BRAT::WALLIS | | Fri Sep 12 1986 14:07 | 46 |
|
re .15
This is confusing for my peabrain.
Q: If a tree falls in the forest does it make a sound or not?
object reality says it does and it doesn't. Larry says it
mattering (is that a word?) or not mattering doesn't matter.
Is that correct?
situation:
If a tree falls on ME in thr forest I don't give a _ if
it makes a sound or not. So making a sound becomes irrelevant.
2nd Q:
Does this matter? To millions it doesn't. To me and the tree
(now dying) IT MATTERS.
Seems to me to take things out of context promotes separateness,
detachment and irresponsibility. For ex: Jane Doe isn't responsible
for the tree falling - sound or no - so it doesn't matter about
Jane.
Q: What if JD is with me when the tree lands on my person? If she's
spaced out on the sound aspect, I'm in deep sneakers!
If she recognized the whole of the the action maybe I got a
chance.
Oh my, Zen is too much for me...seems it's great for appreciating
things and not getting emotionally involved, but what about the
part pertaining to creative energy, creating one's own reality?
If Object Reality is 'it' then why bother in the first place.
If it does matter, I want to know why, if it doesn't then I want
to do something that does.....
Boy, I know I'm gonna get killed on this one :)
Lora
|
106.17 | No Sound | 8672::TAVARES | Stay low and keep moving... | Fri Sep 12 1986 17:56 | 14 |
| As one who has stood by as a tree falls in the forest, I can say
that my only thought was to move or not to move; in my case, I figured
it was a crapshoot, and stood still -- obviously, it missed.
But getting back to the koan, I thought that I had solved it when
I realized that the concept of sound was of the mind; obviously,
if no one was there to attach the concept of sound to the movement
of air associated with the real event, there was no sound.
I dunno, it made me happy. I do know, however that the old masters
had definite things that they wanted to hear in a student's answer
in a koan -- that the koan was designed to teach something, not
simply produce brain fade; though it was by passing through brain
fade that the answer came.
|
106.19 | <Sigh> | INK::KALLIS | | Mon Sep 15 1986 09:23 | 15 |
| re last few:
The "whether a tree makes a sound or not" was first recorded by
Bishop Berkeley.
The answer is how one defines "sound" or "noise." If you define
it objectively, as vibrations in the atmosphere capable of being
recorded (whether there is a recirder there or not), then the tree
makes a sound. If you define "sound" or "noise" subjectively, as
_perceived_ atmospheric disturbances, then it doesn't.
The second view is anthropocentric; the first isn't.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
106.21 | Enlightenment | INK::KALLIS | | Mon Sep 15 1986 11:44 | 33 |
| re n.20
> ... If I ,look at the Dejavu notes, generally
>I see people trying to find fascination in the non-ordinary. ...
Well, "no generalization is true; not even this one." Certainly,
those with an inrterest in the paranormal will migrate towards a
file dedicated to it.
>... It is as if most people\>want to avoid there everyday lives\
>and entertain themselves with the odd and unusual.
It's really not so psychological/escapist. _Many_ people throughout
history were fascinated with the (for them) odd and unusual; that's
the basis for modern science [restrictive as some people might think
that to be :-)] -- someone saw something inexplicable and investigated
it.
I generally see two threads running through a lot of replies: some
want to find out what's out there, and wonder about it; others seem
to believe that somehow they can individually or collectively _create_
what's out there by force of will, or some such. This is not the
place to get into that discussion, however.
"Fascination with the unusual" doesn't mean ignoring the normal.
a dear friend of my mother's (now deceased) once said to her, "I
don't understand how a rainbow is formed, and I don't _want_ to
understand."
The first statement's "understandable"; the second, unfortunate.
You can appreciate something better if you know more about it.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
106.23 | The Joy of Fantasy | BRAT::WALLIS | | Mon Sep 15 1986 18:13 | 19 |
|
re .23
< asked my mother what that was ...... she said somehting about
the sun reflecting on the raindrops....
Too bad she didn't tell you about how the leprechauns magically paint
paint those beautiful colors in the sky to point the way to the pot of
gold buried at the end.
You missed a lot more joy in your imagination.
lora
|
106.24 | Let's be specific: | NEXUS::DEVINS | 256K WOM | Mon Oct 06 1986 17:16 | 2 |
|
Was that the first or the second Bishop Berkeley? |:^)
|
106.25 | | INK::KALLIS | | Mon Oct 06 1986 17:36 | 17 |
| re .23:
Well, she was about 70 years of the age at the time, and a salty-vo-
cabularied woman. Had I spoken of leprechauns (she was of Irish
descent), I'm certain she'd have told me what to do with their
paintbrushes, brush by brush.
Imagination isn't quite the same as creative visualization; even
that has some limits, after all. While there is _great_ value in
fable, it should always be applied in context.
re .24:
The one born in 1685.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
106.26 | mystery schools alive and well | THE780::BABCOCK | | Sun May 03 1987 17:44 | 33 |
| I just read this note for the first time and it sure drifts a lot.
Is there a problem with replies getting connected to the wrong
messages??
Back to the subject of the mystery schools. I have never had anything
to do with Masons (they insist on being all male), but I have been
associated with the Rosicrucians(yes, the ones in San Jose) for about
a year and a half. So far I have found my studies with them to be
worth doing. At times they measure out information at a madningly
slow pace, but the information appears valid. I don't know if they
have all of the answers, but they at least have a lot of the questions
straight. They claim a direct line of desent from the Europien
Rosicrciansn and thus from the ancients. Their data appears to
support that claim.
Membership, which includes all home study material (they are not
a profit making group) cost $25 a quarter. Send me mail if you
would like more information about the group.
The thing that I like most about their aproach is that they require
no belief on my part. They expect the student to be sceptical of
everything presented, and to accept nothing on faith. Study,
experimentation and logic are the path to enlightenment, by their
definition. They do not call what they do magik, but I have seen
very similiar material in books like "The Golden Dawn", which does
call it magik. I think the line between magik and science is not
real sharp. The difference being how much of the underlying theory
you comprehend. The Rosicucians aim at comprehention, not just
ritual.
THE780::BABCOCK (don't blame me, I didn't name it)
Judy
|
106.27 | " Be True to Your School! " | CURIE::COSTLEY | | Wed Jun 24 1987 13:58 | 55 |
| One man's school readily becomes another man's coven, conveniently.
==================================================================
Let's consider that structurally, schools form to maintain a body
of knowledge by both internal & external means: practice & theory.
Some begin in practice, develop theory, & regenerate practice when
the membership lapses (or is purged). Their books are their means
of regeneration when the line-of-descent is broken (or is purged).
Others begin in a perception which is theoretical, practice its
implications, & retreat to theory if the experience is ungovernable
(or a practitioner dominates to an oppressive degree & isn't purged).
This is generically true of all religions, all disciplines, both the
religious & scientific. There is no serious difference between them,
since both infer, extrapolate, & demonstrate their tenets. Rather
than force some into oblivion for superstition, it's more useful
to measure their degree of noxiousness as their discreditor. Any
destructive effect is proof of serious imbalance as well as error.
Example: the destruction of millions of cats during the Dark Ages
as diabolical witches' familiars was noxious & helped spreading
The Plague by rats who had a slightly better reputation than the
cats. Whose religion was at stake? Science was hardly the issue;
cats would have saved literal myriads of lives, including theirs,
had they been understood as a means toward a beneficial end. QED.
One man's cat was another man's familiar; result: Everybody died.
For those of us reading these very notes, this is an exercise in
communication amongst equals that presupposes a mutual safety in
random numbers. As such, we are an informal school in ourselves.
Arguments that attempt to close discussion are abutted incrementally.
(cf. Topher vs Past Lives Regression). The school stays open.
In another time & in another place, we would be hauled away in carts
to be hanged by the necks until dead (Salem, 1692). Presently the
Fundamentalist Right (calling itself The Moral Majority, etc.) rages
equally vehemently against Secular Humanists and so-called Satanists.
Ironically, we are distributed over a range of both interests: the
Rationally Humane & the Perceptually Occult. We exist in a Modern Dark
Age that is contesting 19th century Science with 17th century Religion.
The conclusion is obvious: we are 20th century dwellers approaching
the 21st century with a range of interests that will carry us over
into it. Welcome to the Present perceptibly becoming the Presence.
We hardly need to call it The New Age, having seen others equally
New called by dramatic names: The Age of Faith, the Rennaissance,
the Age of Invention, the Age of Discovery, the Age of Analysis,
the Age of Anxiety (the 1st half of the 20th Century.
- Boleslaw
|
106.28 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed Jun 24 1987 14:23 | 11 |
| Re .27:
>We hardly need to call it The New Age, having seen others equally
>New called by dramatic names: The Age of Faith, the Rennaissance,
>the Age of Invention, the Age of Discovery, the Age of Analysis,
>the Age of Anxiety (the 1st half of the 20th Century.
So how about The Age of Obfuscation for the latter half of the 20th
Century and The Age of Relaxation for the 21st? :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
106.29 | Yes, Let's try to keep it open! | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Jun 24 1987 18:42 | 61 |
| RE: .27
I HAVE NEVER IN THIS NOTESFILE (or elsewhere to my recollection)
MADE AN ARGUMENT ABOUT PAST LIVES REGRESSION WHICH WAS INTENDED
TO CLOSE DISCUSSION. (and yes, I meant to shout).
Perhaps you are referring to the people who seemed to object to
my stating information (based on personal experience and extensive
experimentation by others) which conflicted with what they wanted
to be true. (To wit: that it is easy to generate in a hypnotized
subject counter-factual pseudo-memories which are vivid, absolutly
believable to the subject, and may even be useful to them; and that
it is unnecessary to directly make such suggestions).
Some people felt that my posting was premature, that by posting
it I might have discouraged people from coming forward with their
personal experiences, for fear that they might seem gullible. This
had not occured to me when I posted since I knew quite well that
gullibility has nothing to do with it. The characteristics most
commonly associated with good hypnotic subjects are intelligence,
openness to new experiences, vivid imagery and a type of concentration.
All characteristics which I would rate as positive. The only way
that a good hypnotic subject can distinguish pseudo-memories from
real ones is to know that vivid pseudo-memories can be generated
by hypnosis -- a "protective" fact which I was attempting to make
available. In any case, once it was pointed out that there was
a potential problem, I appologized for being so quick with my posting.
I welcomed (and still do) civil discussion, pro and con, both on the
sub-topic which I started, and on the original topic. I was rather
looking forward to some interesting notes describing people's
experiences with past lives regression, and I doubt that anyone
regrets more the possibility that some people may have been discouraged
from such postings.
Some people are unable to accept the fact that anyone can have a
contrary opinion and yet still respect theirs. I (respectfully)
suggest that those people work on the self confidence and self
esteem.
Some people claim a belief in the rights of everyone to express
their opinions -- until someone expresses an opinion which is contrary
to theirs. It is then convenient to invent a motivation for that
other person which justifies a suspension of their rights to
expression. This is a temptation we all must fight. I (again
respectfully) suggest that we all examine our own motivations before
attributing motivations to others. The Delphic Injunction (i.e.,
"Know Thyself") applies.
Some people react to information which appears contrary to their
beliefs by attempting to censor that information, rather than b
attempting to reconcile the information with their beliefs or by
legitimately discrediting it. These people I pity, but have no
respect for. One school of Tarot interpretation equates the card
The Devil with willful ignorance: this then is these peoples card.
In the mean time, I will continue to post on the assumption that
the majority of the readers of DEJAVU are interested in learning
by sharing with others whether or not they agree with them.
Topher
|
106.30 | The Fourth Way and Esotericism | WHAT::DOLLIVER | | Wed Jul 01 1987 18:27 | 132 |
| This reply is intended to introduce to a system taught by G.I.Gurdjieff and
(a student of his) P.D.Ouspensky in the early 1900's. This system appears to
qualify as a recent manifestation of the teachings of the ancient mystery
schools. All quotations presented here come from the book "The Fourth Way"
by Ouspensky, which is representative of the books on this system of teaching.
Please excuse the use of 'man' instead of 'person' in the quotations; let me
assure you that this system of teaching is open to any person.
Of course, the actual teaching covers a far wider range of topics than is
covered here, and in much greater depth. Here I will focus upon a general
introduction, an explanation of what is meant by the "Fourth Way", and an
attempt to define the term "esoteric".
Ouspensky always introduced the system to new students by saying:
"The most important ideas and principles of this system do not belong
to me. This is chiefly what makes them valuable, because if they
belonged to me they would be like all other theories invented by
ordinary minds - they would give only a subjective view of things."
After Ouspensky's death, one of his students related the following:
"This was a method by which certain essential truths were formulated
and passed on in such a way that the real understanding of them could
be reconstituted by others much later."
Ouspensky claimed that his teaching was a school based upon what he called
the "Fourth Way". The following passages introduce the Four Ways.
"The FIRST way is the way of the FAKIR. It is a long, difficult and
uncertain way. A fakir works on the physical body, on conquering
physical pain. The SECOND way is the way of the MONK. This way is
shorter, more sure and more definite. It requires certain conditions,
but above all it requires faith, for if there is no faith a man cannot
be a true monk. The THIRD way is the way of the YOGI, the way of
knowledge and consciousness." "When we speak about the three ways we
speak about principles. In actual life they are seldom met with in a
pure form, for they are mostly mixed.
"Although in many respects these ways are very efficient, the
characteristic thing about them is that the first step is the most
difficult. From the very first moment you have to give up everything
and do what you are told." "But there is a Fourth Way which is a
special way, not a combination of the other three. It is different
from the others first of all in that there is no external giving up
of things, for all the work is inner... So at first one continues to
live the same life as before, in the same circumstances as before.
In many respects this way proves more difficult than the others, for
nothing is harder than to change oneself internally without changing
externally."
"Then in the Fourth Way the first principle is that man must not
believe anything; he must learn; so faith does not enter into the
Fourth Way." "You cannot say this system IS the Fourth Way, the
Fourth Way is very big, and this system is very small by comparison."
Hopefully some will recognize aspects of "The Fourth Way" in what was
mentioned in .26 about the Rosicrucian teaching, namely that they "require
no belief on my part". Belief is related to the Second Way and is
inconsistent with the Fourth Way. One point to notice is that this system
describes how and why the other "Ways" operate as they do, and it is this
higher level understanding which exemplifies the "Fourth Way".
"The idea of the Fourth Way is that it discards from the three ways
all that is unnecessary in them, because besides the necessary things
the three ways have other things which have remained there purely
through tradition, imitation and so on. In the Fourth Way all the
sides that can develop, develop at the same time, and this makes it
different from other ways where you first develop one side and then
go back and develop another."
In the following passages, I will clarify what is meant by the term esoteric,
and some characteristics of an 'esoteric' school. This is in partial response
to .14 who is "annoyed at 'secret' societies".
"The word 'esoteric' means inner. Esotericism includes in itself the
idea of the existence of an inner circle of humanity. The idea of
esotericism implies transmission of knowledge; it presumes the
existence of a group of people to whom a certain knowledge belongs.
This must not be understood in some mystical way, but more definitely,
concretely."
".. Humanity can be regarded as divided into four concentric circles.
The three inner circles are called Esoteric, Mesoteric and Exoteric.
The fourth circle is the outer circle where (most people) live.
The outer circle is also called the circle of confusion of tongues,
for in this circle people cannot understand one another.
Understanding is possible only in the inner circles."
"A man who lives in the outer circle is under the law of accident,
or, if he has a strongly expressed essence, his life is more governed
by the laws of his type or the laws of fate. But when a man begins
to work towards consciousness, he already has direction... Only
individual effort can help man pass from the outer circle into the
Exoteric circle."
Throughout the Gurdjieff and Ouspensky teachings they stress the possibility
for change, the importance of work on oneself in order to change oneself.
These schools are 'secret' only to those outside of the system who have not
undergone the initial effort to progress at least to the 'Exoteric circle'.
Beyond this point, appropriate lessons for the inner circles are presented
in a concise language which must be learned by each person (internalized)
before they will understand the true meanings.
Thus, if this 'secret' knowledge of the inner circle were widely distributed,
it would not be properly understood, and would result in an extreme distortion
of the actual teaching. This would not be simply useless, but actually damaging
to both the individuals and the school (eg. see references to use of esoteric
magic by untrained 'inepts' instead of 'adepts').
Finally, the following question and answer may highlight the inevitable
separation between esoteric knowledge and the population at large.
"Q. Why is this system not widely known and popular?"
"A. It cannot be because of its negative character. We study the
way not of acquiring but of losing. People want positive things
without realizing what is possible. They want to know straight
away what they can attain. But first they must lose many things.
The ideas of this system can never be popular so long as they are
not distorted, because people will not agree that they are asleep,
that they are machines - people who consider themselves important
will always oppose this idea."
"The system does not want to offer ideas to people who do not want them.
If people have tried other methods and realized their futility, they
may wish to try this system. This system is only for those who need it."
I hope that I have not distorted the principals of the "Fourth Way" beyond
recognition in this initial introduction. :-)
Todd
|
106.31 | finding the G.D. | THE780::WOODWARD | Undoing myself... | Sun Oct 11 1987 19:49 | 17 |
|
> Does anyone know anything about "Ancient Mystery Schools" and
> groups (?) like "Masons" and "Rosicrucians" ? I am interested
> knowing more about what they were, their beliefs as well as their
> philosophies.
The Golden Dawn can be contacted through:
Christopher S. Hyatt, Ph.D.
c/o Falcon Press
3660 N. 3rd St.
Pheonix, Arizona 85012
-- Mike
|
106.32 | Aquarian Foundation | SHRBIZ::WAINE | Linda | Fri Nov 20 1987 16:13 | 11 |
|
There is a group known as the Aquarian Foundation that is in
the tradition of a mystery school. It takes off where Theosophy
and Blavatsky left off. It is the only group I know of that is
based on scientific proof & evidence, and they encourage you to
use your mental faculties - don't take anything at face value.
It was founded in Seattle in 1955 by a man named Keith Milton
Rheinhart. He is considered one of the most scientifically-tested,
physical-phenomena mediums in the world. They have branches & study
groups all over the U.S. & Canada, and in South Africa (I think
there is a study group starting up in Australia, also).
|