The Temple of Set I

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The Temple of Set I Page 27

by Michael A Aquino


  the Judæo/Christian Bible. The absence of evidence is expected to be overcome by “faith”, e.g.

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  completely unsupported belief and trust in such a proclamation. Faith is antithetical to Setian

  philosophy.

  While atheists and agnostics tend to be unconcerned with what others think, the same

  cannot be said for faith-dependent religionists. Ostensibly because reliance upon faith is prima

  facie ridiculous, the faithful cannot easily endure being the objects of such ridicule. Hence

  “heretics” must be ignored, silenced, banished, or killed if not converted. In theocratic cultures

  such as the Christian middle ages or modern Islamic totalitarian regimes, torture and execution

  were and are not uncommon. In societies wherein conventional churches no longer have such

  power, lesser prejudice an ostracism substitute.

  Thus, while Setians may not regard themselves or their philosophy as actively threatening

  conventional religion, that is not at all the reciprocal perception, as most recently highlighted by

  the “Satanic Panic” witch-hunts of the 1980s.

  E. The Subjective Universe

  The Subjective Universe (SU) is each self-conscious being’s perception of the OU, blended

  with personally-generated overlays, selective impressions, and creative imagination as

  instinctive, indoctrinated, inspired, and/or initiated.

  Thus not even the most controlled physical scientist can claim to accurately and completely

  see the OU. What he sees is his filtration and distortion of it through his SU, which he has built

  up both consciously and subconsciously from innumerable sources since birth.

  More creative, artistic, mystical, etc. personalities may let their SUs run even more freely, to

  the point where the OU is of only occasional and necessary relevance to them. If some such

  persons reach a stage where their SUs have completely replaced the OU, they may be called

  “insane”; in this sense “sanity” is a measure of an individual’s suppression of his SU within

  socially-sanctioned boundaries.

  F. Subjective/Objective Interaction

  Once the simultaneous and permanent existence of the OU and SU is recognized, much of

  the mystery of human history and behavior is no longer mysterious. It just requires examination

  of each such individual, group, and/or event to identify the applicable OU forces and the various

  individual SUs through which they are being perceived and influenced, both subconsciously and

  consciously.

  At the subconscious level, for instance, an individual may assume that everyone else “sees

  the same reality” that he does, when in fact this is never completely the case.

  At the conscious level the SU can be both easier and more problematic to handle. Easier to

  the extent that the individual is making willful decisions about how much of his SU he can

  successfully apply. More problematic insofar as others with their differing subconscious and

  conscious SUs may be present and involved.

  G. Collective Subjective Universes

  When more than one SU is present and involved in any society or problem situation, it

  should be obvious that no two of them will coincide, both in terms of subconscious “reality

  perception” and conscious values, desires, and actions applied.

  Hence both human society and human history is most accurately understood as attempts by

  the involved humans to reconcile their conflicting SUs into one or more community-approved

  Collective SUs (hereafter “CSU”). Sometimes this is possible through peaceful means such as

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  education, reasoning, or argument. In other instances where conscious SUs are too passionate,

  or when subconscious SUs are too inflexible and intolerant, the individuals/groups may resort to

  coercion - aggressive and intensive indoctrination, conditioning, and reinforcement, along with

  the suppression or extermination of the offending “competitors” - to achieve the desired

  “reality”.

  In modern society, unsurprisingly, such coercion and intolerance are invariably attributed

  to “the enemy”, domestic outlaws, insurgents, revolutionaries, or other “alien” individuals or

  groups. It is assumed, without any need for argument or justification, that the community CSU

  into which its members have been conditioned since birth, is not just one among many options,

  but is “reality”. Questioning it thus goes beyond acceptable curiosity to “heresy”, “treason”, or

  “insanity”.

  This was most famously caricatured in George Orwell’s novel 1984, in which failure to

  accept the Party’s CSU not just at the conscious but at the subconscious “reality” level was

  condemned as the worst of all possible sins: “thoughtcrime” - correspondingly requiring not just

  punishment but “curing” by destroying the offender’s ability to see “reality” other than through

  the Party’s CSU.

  H. The Judæo-Christian Soul

  Judaism is most significant from a CSU standpoint for its introduction of the concept of

  “original sin”, according to which every human begins, lives, and ends his or her life under a

  curse and condemnation from Judaism’s God. This “greatest of all sins” resulted from Adam and

  Eve innocently and ignorantly eating a fruit in the Garden of Eden which gave them individual

  SUs: awareness of their freedom to assign meaning and evaluations of goodness and evilness

  according to their own intelligence and experience, not God’s. In effect they had ceased to be

  non-conscious components of the OU, and this separation was the “greatest sin”. Implicitly their

  OU-separation from their eating of the fruit was also passed along to all of their descendants,

  who similarly inherited the same inescapable sin.

  Consider the effect this CSU has had upon all of the civilizations in its grip: the entire Jewish,

  Christian, and Muslim world down through the centuries. Humanity is taught that it is

  inherently and inescapably evil, so much so that even the most strenuous of purging and

  punitive lifestyles, such as monasticism, nunnery, celibacy, etc., are futile. Only through the

  intercession of divine saviors such as Jesus Christ and Mohammed can a fortunate few humans

  hope for even posthumous relief. For everyone else this life is a journey of misery followed by an

  eternity of torture. In its original, pre-Christian “Hell” concept, ancientMesopotamians

  [including the Hebrews] considered the underworld ( Kur-nu-gi-a or Sheol) as a dim, dismal

  place in which the once-incarnate soul disintegrated. Hence their approach to life was fatalistic

  and pessimistic, with ethics considered in terms of Earthly consequences only.

  Contrast this with the culture of ancient Egypt, in which there was neither “original” nor

  “inherited” sin. Each individual was born a blank slate, so to speak, and had full discretion to

  pursue an incarnation of virtue or vice, after which, at the entrance to the Afterlife, the

  deceased’s heart would be “weighed against a feather” to fairly ascertain whether pleasure or

  penance had been earned.

  The Judaic soul, unlike anything in Egyptian metaphysics, was thus something shameful,

  reprehensible, and evil. What could families, communities, or nations composed of such flawed

  and doomed creatures hope to accomplish? If they could not save themselves in the greater

  sense,
of what value were efforts towards morality, virtue, and other behaviors supposed to

  please if not placate God?

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  It wasn’t until the late-17th/early-18th century CE “Enlightenment” that Judæo-Christianity

  ceased to be regarded as literal truth and became merely a propaganda tool for controlling the

  ignorant and superstitious. Thereafter, and to this day, it receives extensive lip service and

  ceremony, but without the intelligentsia or even its own cadre regarding it as anything more

  than a fairytale. Neither God nor Jesus nor Satan is regarded as anything more than a

  convenient symbolic myth.

  It therefore takes some effort to cast oneself back to pre-Enlightenment times when all such

  influences were held to be quite real indeed, and so the determinants of human actions. Once

  this is appreciated, the Crusades, religious wars, sect-persecutions, and “heathen” civilization

  exterminations are coldly understandable not as aberrations but as the God-sanctioned norm of

  human conduct.

  The Enlightenment relegation of Judæo-Christianity from truth to fiction was echoed in its

  concept of the soul. Previously the soul had been a real, tangible object of fear and self-hatred

  within each human. Now that it was eliminated, society had to develop new devices to entice or

  coerce the dominant CSU. We shall survey these devices as they were introduced and are still

  used today, but before doing so, we need to clear away the remaining wreckage from the popular

  notion of the soul, and return again to Egypt for completeness and clarity.

  From Webster’s International Dictionary:

  soul: (1) The immaterial essence or substance, animating principle, or actuating cause of life

  or of the individual life. (2a) The psychical or spiritual principle in general shared by or embodied

  in individual human beings or all beings having a rational and spiritual nature. (2b) The psychical

  or spiritual nature of the universe related to the physical world as the human soul to the human

  body ...

  While a superficially-impressive attempt, this definition finally falls back on empty

  circularity. What is an “animating principle”, and would the soul not exist if it did not animate

  externalities? What is meant by “psychical” and “spiritual”? As Robert Anton Wilson quipped in

  Schrödinger’s Cat: “Theology was a system for explaining things by coining words which nobody

  could understand and pretending that the words meant something.” 55

  I. The Setian Soul: MindStar

  How then can each soul find and see itself, since it is a singularity which each individual

  cannot “get outside of”? This harks back to philosophers such as Descartes, who sought, one

  might say Quixotically, to “prove” their conscious existence. “Proof” is of necessity external, as

  discussed above, so Descartes’ famous Cogito Ergo Sum (I think, therefore I am) is futile: It is

  impossible to describe a “thought” which is not the composite of external sensory input.

  No, conceptual thought (Kant’s “pure reason”, Plato’s nœsis, Nietzsche’s “horizon building”)

  begins from the pure, unsupported apprehension of one’s conscious self as an existential reality:

  the ba of ancient Egypt, the psyche of the Greeks, the Golden Flower of the Tao, the soul of

  Judæo-Christianity, identifying, in the words of Dr. Raghavan Iyer, “... not the shadowy self or

  false egoity which merely reacts to external stimuli. Rather there is that Eye of Wisdom in every

  person which in deep sleep is fully awake and which has a translucent awareness of self-

  consciousness as pure, primordial light.”

  Indeed as this “pure, primordial light” is brought fully into focus, none of the above labels

  seems completely adequate or accurate. Some, like Kant’s and Nietzsche’s, address expression

  rather than essence. The Egyptian realization of the complete essence was multifold: not limited

  55 Wilson, Robert Anton, Schrödinger’s Cat. New York: Pocket Books, 1979, page #98.

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  to the ba. For this discussion, therefore, I propose a fresh term, inspired by Dr. Iyer’s sublime

  description above:

  ... being the self-contained, self-sustaining concentration of essence which exists as the core of

  the conscious mind. This new term not only frees us from the limitations and

  preconceptualizations of old labels; it is a constant reminder that the present examination is a

  fresh, evolutionary one in which we cannot be content to coast on inaccurate or inadequate

  myths or stereotypes.

  Thus emboldened, therefore, let us return to anamnesis to address the question of the

  MindStar’s ability to interact with a temporary physical body while not itself containing any

  element of the OU. [In conventional conversation this is often referred to as the “mind/body

  problem”.] The key we bring to this lock is that of fields.

  J. Fields

  1. Definition

  What exactly is a “field”? When something occurs somewhere in the OU because something

  else happens somewhere else in the OU, by no detectible means by which the cause produces the

  effect, the two events are said to be connected by a “field” [well-known examples being gravity

  and magnetism].

  Understandably OU scientists don’t like fields. To the extent they remain fields in defiance of

  all attempts to connect their events, they are inconvenient and annoying refutations of one of the

  most sacred OU cows: the law of cause and effect. Science’s fallback excuse is that the law must

  apply to every field phenomenon too; the medium just hasn’t been discovered yet. Sometimes,

  even more desperately, scientists hypothesize completely fantastic “missing links”, such as

  “gravitons”, to emulate Robert Anton Wilson’s amusing explanation of conventional religious

  jargon. Leaving both scientists and theologians thrashing about in this terminological quicksand,

  let us proceed to a very special type of field: that integral with thehuman body.

  2. Life-Fields

  The human body is an electromagnetic machine. As such it both generates and is enveloped

  by electromagnetic fields (EMF), controlling everything from heartbeat and respiration to sleep

  and female menstrual cycles.

  To understand the significance of EMFs to the human body, it is first necessary to appreciate

  that each such body is not an inert, static clump of permanent matter. It is rather an organic

  complex in a constant state of reorganization and reconstitution. For instance, human liver and

  serum proteins are replaced every 10 days, and the whole of the proteins in the body about every

  160 days. Moreover these protein molecules are extremely complex devices, not mere raw

  material; not even a single amino acid can be out of place in the replacement.

  To put it another way, there are about 60 thousand billion cells in the human body, and every

  day about 500 billion of these die and are replaced and rebuilt.

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  Why? One possibility is that these molecules are so complex that they are inherently unstable

  and thus are continuously deteriorating. The metabolic system, including the liquid-based

  transmission of food and raw material throughout the body, is a raging furnace of consumption

  and regeneration.

  How does the body know precisely how to recreate each cell and molecule? It cannot be


  within the object itself, because an object cannot “organize itself”.

  The answer lies in the existence of an entire layered network of EMFs throughout and within

  the body, altogether comprising a “master plan” EMF for it. Dr. Harold Saxon Burr, Professor

  Emeritus of Anatomy, Yale School of Medicine, named this the L-Field (for “Life-Field”/LF). 56

  In the case of the human body, its organizing system cannot be chemical, because then that

  system itself would be subject to the same entropic process. Hence there is more to a human

  being than mere chemistry. It requires an organizing field, not merely an accidental

  accumulation of proteins; thus the notion of “gene randomness” is invalid.

  3. Telos

  Organization inherently requires preconception based upon purpose. Conventional

  academic doctrine is that living beings’ purpose is selectively the result of environmental survival

  needs: Darwinian “natural selection”: There is no inherent purpose to life-forms beyond passive/

  reactive survival, avoidance of pain, seeking of pleasure, and instinct to reproduce.

  Prior to Darwin’s theory of passive natural selection, the French biologist Jean Baptiste

  Lamarck (1744-1829), while not denying such passive evolution, augmented it with what he

  termed “soft evolution” (in modern parlance “Lamarckism”). According to this theory,

  characteristics developed or acquired by a given living being can be inherited by its progeny, thus

  adding the element of intentional purpose to evolution.

  If Lamarckism is allowed to operate according to human intellectual will, of course, then the

  principle of purpose on the individual human scale is established. This in turn suggests that

  there may be a greater element of purpose above and beyond the individual.

  While heretical to the Darwinian establishment, such a master-principle of purpose was

  neither unknown nor repugnant to the ancients, who by the time it had reached Greece from

  Egypt referred to it as telos.

  Teleology is the doctrine that final causes of phenomena exist. Further that purpose and

  design are a part of or are apparent in nature. Further that phenomena are not only guided by

  mechanical forces (e.g. passive natural seletion), but also move towards certain goals of self-

 

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