Tag: Age of Enlightenment

  • Satanism Rules,Church About

    The worship of forces classified as Evil has been among the Mankind since Memory.

    While I can say that the worship of the Evil Forces is not conducive to Human Life, be on earth, after Life( of which I have no personal experience),I do believe that these forces do exist for I have witnessed experiences of these forces.

    Hinduism do accept these forces are real and they are not to entertained.

    One can Master them and even use them for advantage , if one is spiritually advanced.

    I will not be posting on this subject in detail as I believe it to be dangerous.

    I will of course post philosophical interpretations of this phenomena.

    However I am posting some information on Satanism.

    Story:

    Theory:

    1. Satan represents indulgence instead of abstinence!

    2. Satan represents vital existence instead of spiritual pipe dreams!

    3. Satan represents undefiled wisdom instead of hypocritical self-deceit!

    4. Satan represents kindness to those who deserve it instead of love wasted on ingrates!

    5. Satan represents vengeance instead of turning the other cheek!

    6. Satan represents responsibility to the responsible instead of concern for psychic vampires!

    7. Satan represents man as just another animal, sometimes better, more often worse than those that walk on all-fours, who, because of his “divine spiritual and intellectual development,” has become the most vicious animal of all!

    8. Satan represents all of the so-called sins, as they all lead to physical, mental, or emotional gratification!

    9. Satan has been the best friend the Church has ever had, as He has kept it in business all these years!

    The Eleven Rules.

    1. Do not give opinions or advice unless you are asked.

    2. Do not tell your troubles to others unless you are sure they want to hear them.

    3. When in another’s lair, show him respect or else do not go there.

    4. If a guest in your lair annoys you, treat him cruelly and without mercy.

    5. Do not make sexual advances unless you are given the mating signal.

    6. Do not take that which does not belong to you unless it is a burden to the other person and he cries out to be relieved.

    7. Acknowledge the power of magic if you have employed it successfully to obtain your desires. If you deny the power of magic after having called upon it with success, you will lose all you have obtained.

    8. Do not complain about anything to which you need not subject yourself.

    9. Do not harm little children.

    10. Do not kill non-human animals unless you are attacked or for your food.

    11. When walking in open territory, bother no one. If someone bothers you, ask him to stop. If he does not stop, destroy him.

    Source:

    http://www.churchofsatan.com/Pages/index.html

    Points Number 1,2,3,5,6,8 and 9 are the also the rules in Hinduism.

    History of Satanism:

    Satanism is a broad term referring to a group of Western religions comprising diverse ideological and philosophical beliefs. Their shared features include symbolic association with, or admiration for the character of, Satan, or similar rebellious, promethean, and, in their view, liberating figures. There were an estimated 50,000 members in 1990. There may be as few as a few thousand in the world.[1]
    Particularly after the European Enlightenment, some works, such as Paradise Lost, were taken up by Romanticsand described as presenting the biblical Satan as an allegory representing a crisis of faithindividualismfree will,wisdom and enlightenment. Those works actually featuring Satan as a heroic character are fewer in number, but do exist; George Bernard Shaw, and Mark Twain (cf. Letters from the Earth) included such characterizations in their works long before religious Satanists took up the pen. From then on, Satan and Satanism started to gain a new meaning outside of Christianity.[2]

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satanism

    Black Mass.

    A growing interest in witchcraft and satanism in the 1960s inspired the creation of two recordings, both made in 1968, and both called “Satanic Mass“:

    • The first was a 13 minute recording of a full-length “Satanic Mass” made by the U.S. band Coven. Coven’s Satanic Mass, part of their stage show in 1968, was included on their 1969 record album “Witchcraft Destroys Minds & Reaps Souls“,[12] together with the full published text. On the album cover, it is stated that they spent a long time researching the material, and to their knowledge it was the first Black Mass published in any language. The result was eclectic, drawing chants and material from numerous sources, including two medieval French miracle playsLe Miracle de Théophile and Jeu de Saint Nicolas, which both contain invocations to the Devil in an unknown language.[13] These chants, along with other material on the album, could be found in books on witchcraft popular in the 60s, notably Grillot de Givry’s Witchcraft, Magic and Alchemy(originally published in France in 1929).[14] A large portion of the English dialogue was taken verbatim from Dennis Wheatley‘s 1960 occult novel,The Satanist, in which the female protagonist is initiated into a Satanic cult. Additionally, the recording, while using a couple of the Latin phrases the Church of Satan was already making popular, also added a substantial amount of church Latin, in the form of Gregorian chants sung by the band, to create the genuine effect of the Catholic Latin Mass being inverted and sung to Satan.
    • The second was a record album of readings in Satanic ritual and philosophy by the Church of Satan, called “The Satanic Mass”,[15] which contained material later to appear in their Satanic Bible (published in 1969). In spite of the title and a few phrases in Latin, this album did not deal with the Black Mass.(wiki)
    • Black Mass,
      Black Mass symbolhttp://500photographers.blogspot.in/2011_07_01_archive.html

    Images related to Satanism.

    Satan
    Satan, as drawn by Gustave Doré, in John Milton’s Paradise Lost.
    Satanism
    Baphomet,album cover: JAMRA: The Second Coming (1972)
    Satanism Symbol
    Satanism Symbol
  • Isaac Newton Scientist,Sorcerer or Noetic Scientist?

    Isaac Newton still remains one of the enigmas of Science.

     

    He was a Scientist par excellence.

    'Isaac newton ,the Scientist 'Jpg.
    Sir Isaac Newton

     

    But unlike some of the other Scientists, he believed  in Intuition along with Reason.

     

    Not for him the empty rhetoric of ‘only Reason’

     

    He was a seeker of Truth, how he obtained them was of no concern of his.

     

    So long as the results are verifiable , it was fine with him.

     

    How many of us know that he was a Free Mason of a very high Degree and a Member of The Illuminati?

     

    A recent article on this area has appeared in The Raw Story.

     

    Excerpts:

    Often wrongly portrayed as a cold rationalist, Isaac Newton is one of history’s most compelling figures. It is true that he was capable of the most precise and logical thought it is possible for a human to achieve: his three years of obsessive work that gave birth to the Principia, containing his theory of gravity, stand as the greatest achievement in science.

    Just as certainly, though, he was also consumed with what we would now view as completely unscientific pursuits: alchemy and biblical prophesy.

    Alchemy was a major passion of Newton’s. In a footnote on page 21 of Richard Westfall’s meticulous biography, Never at Rest, the author states: “My modes of thought are so far removed from those of alchemy that I am constantly uneasy in writing on the subject … [Nevertheless] my personal preferences cannot make more than a million words he wrote in the study of alchemy disappear.”

    Historian and novelist Rebecca Stott wrote in her novel Ghostwalk that with those words, “Westfall admitted to wishing that he could make those million words disappear.” That may be stretching it somewhat but clearly Newton’s alchemy is a bit of an embarrassment to modern scholars.

    Then there was Newton’s biblical prophesy. In almost the same years that he was working on the Principia, he also wrote a treatise on Revelation in which he talked about souls burning in lakes of fire. With talk like that, he could have been the lyricist for Iron Maiden. (He had the hair too.)..

    In Newton’s time, the natural philosophers had turned their backs on astrology and with it, the idea that influences could simply leap across empty space. Instead impulses had to be transmitted through things touching one another. So, if there was a force coming from the Sun that moved the planets, then it had to do so through a medium.

    Perhaps it was a fluid, driven to circulate by the rotation of the sun, which carried the planets around. This was the thinking of French philosopher René Descartes.

    Yet Newton could not make the mechanical solution of Descartes work. The vortices simply could not reproduce the changes in speed of the planets as they approached the sun.

    Alchemy offered a way out by having as a philosophical underpinning that non-material influences – spirits – existed. These needed no physical contact and could induce transformations or movement through the triggering of “active principles” within an object.

    Primed to believe in these ideas, Newton discovered a simple, elegant mathematical equation that described the behaviour of gravity without the need for an intervening fluid. Gravity apparently worked across empty space. He called this principle “action at a distance” and instead of “spirit” began using the word “force” to better reflect its mathematical character.

    His equation also reveals the “active principle” that governs an object’s response to gravity. It is mass. With such direct analogies to spirits and active principles, Newton must surely have felt some sort of vindication for his alchemical beliefs.

    The theory of gravity was so successful that it became one of the triggers for the Age of Enlightenment. Although hardly anyone now believes in the concept of alchemy, we do still believe that gravity can exert an influence across empty space. Engineers still use Newton’s maths to launch satellites and send spacecraft to distant planets.

    So was Sir Isaac a scientist or a sorcerer? In truth, he was a bit of both. And that was why he could succeed where others had failed.”

    http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/09/22/was-isaac-newton-a-scientist-or-a-sorcerer-or-both/?utm_source=Raw+Story+Daily+Update&utm_campaign=c4bd4fddb7-9_22_129_22_2012&utm_medium=email

    To me he was a Noetic Scientist of the first order.

    For centuries, philosophers from Plato forward have used the term noetic to refer to experiences that pioneering psychologist William James (1902) described as:

    …states of insight into depths of truth unplumbed by the discursive intellect. They are illuminations, revelations, full of significance and importance, all inarticulate though they remain; and as a rule they carry with them a curious sense of authority.

    The term noetic sciences was first coined in 1973 when the Institute of Noetic Sciences (IONS) was founded by Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell, who two years earlier became the sixth man to walk on the moon. Ironically, it was the trip back home that Mitchell recalls most, during which he felt a profound sense of universal connectedness—what he later described as a samadhi experience. In Mitchell’s own words, “The presence of divinity became almost palpable, and I knew that life in the universe was not just an accident based on random processes. . . .The knowledge came to me directly.”

    It led him to conclude that reality is more complex, subtle, and mysterious than conventional science had led him to believe. Perhaps a deeper understanding of consciousness (inner space) could lead to a new and expanded understanding of reality in which objective and subjective, outer and inner, are understood as co-equal aspects of the miracle of being. It was this intersection of knowledge systems that led Dr. Mitchell to launch the interdisciplinary field of noetic sciences.

    Why Consciousness Matters

    con•scious•ness: In our work, personal consciousness is awareness—how an individual perceives and interprets his or her environment, including beliefs, intentions, attitudes, emotions, and all aspects of his or her subjective experience.Collective consciousness is how a group (an institution, a society, a species) perceives and translates the world around them.

    This is precisely what Indian Philosophy’s stand.

    http://noetic.org/about/what-are-noetic-sciences/

    http://noetic.org/