Ectophage by Studio Raziel
Transaeonic Metacosmology:
Counteracting
Archontic
Distortion
Bjorn Karlson, Order of the
Black Sun
Most magical
systems specifically describing themselves as relevant to ‘the New
Aeon,’ or some similar eschatological concept, only have contextual
significance within the particular cosmology which either produced
them, or was produced for them. The example likely to be most
familiar to readers of this journal, Crowley’s tripartate aeonic model
later expanded upon by Jones, Grant, Nema, and others, seems to provide
the most common framework for modern occult views on aeonics, although
most ancient mythological and cosmological systems have had some
version of ‘world-ages,’ most often cyclical, but sometimes (as in the
case of the Zoroastrian, and later Judaeo-Christian, eschatologies)
quite linear and often apocalyptic. Even rationalistic,
scientific conceptions of cultural development seem to cling to an
‘aeonic’ style of thinking in their tendency to describe various ‘ages’
or ‘epochs’ of history. The artistic world has its eras and
styles. Whether or not a view of progress, regress, or repetition
is introduced, it seems invariable that those concerned with spans of
time longer than ‘recent’ tend to evolve models that look like what
magicians would (hopefully) recognize as resembling aeonic
theories. Even psycho-neurological models of human development,
and some less mainstream views of evolution, tend to focus upon periods
of continuous experience marked by critical phase transitions at
particular moments in time. This quality, then, could be held as
an essential component of all aeonic models – the view that processes
of change have both continuous and catastrophic qualities, and that
these processes can be in some way studied, modeled, or even
manipulated.
Beyond this basic
quality, aeonic models vary profoundly as suggested above.
The ‘cyclic’
model of aeonics involves some kind of repeating pattern, which might
or might not involve some kind of progressive degeneration followed by
regeneration. The most famous of this type would be the
astrological model, while other would include Greek ages ranging from
Golden to Iron, or the Indian Yugas from Sattva to Kali, or possibly
the Teutonic model culminating in Ragnarok followed by a recreation of
the world; familiar examples of those that don’t might be Ramsey
Dukes’s suggestion of alternating influences of art, religion, science,
and magic through generations, or Peter Carroll’s model of competing
currents of the latter three, through an aeonic pattern. Of
course, it is also possible to have a premise of degeneration without
the idea of the ‘cycle,’ such as some shamanic models in which the
magic of each generation of shamans is weaker than the last (accounting
for why all the magicians were apparently more powerful in the
‘dreamtime’ or the local equivalent thereof), or the Christian
apocalyptic model in which the world becomes more and more corrupt
until eventually Earth becomes Hell as the faithful are raptured
away. Of course, sometimes such models also include a glorious
‘end of history’ wherein the faithful are rewarded in an eternal yet
physical paradise. The Zoroastrian model seems to have been the
first to involve a linear proposition involving an ‘end of history,’ an
innovation the Zoroastrians ascribe to their deity of wisdom who
tricked his enemy, the prototype of the familiar ‘Devil,’ into
accepting a limitation upon their otherwise eternal conflict.
This paradigm includes both phases of time marked by distinct
transitions – particular time-periods of the conflict between God and
the Devil – and an end-of-time described as the Renovation of the
world, when physical creation becomes perfect. Of course, not all
linear models are so moralistically inclined; the classic model of
“progress” with each generation gaining greater and greater insight and
power into the workings of the world, should be familiar to anyone with
a modern “scientific” education – although some versions of this model
also have an implied ‘end of time,’ such as the “Omega Point” now
considered archetypical to concepts of the future which are
increasingly benign, yet eventually reach a point of maximal
bliss. Some New Age models of aeonics also seem to be structured
in this way, with some kind of planetary ascension or mass
transcendence being the expected result of the proper alignment with
whichever sort of benign forces are being promoted by the system in
question. Crowley’s model, of course, is uncertain as to its
status, since it would be easy enough to regard the
Isis-Osiris-Horus-(Maat) model as being based upon either a popular
‘magical formula’ like IAO or IHVH, but it would be just as easy to
suppose that the model is intended as an eternal dialectic of
thesis-antithesis-synthesis. The latter supposition also provides
a reminder that classical Marxist socio-economic theory is effectively
structured like an aeonic model.
However, there is
one other quality which all of the cosmologies mentioned tend to have
in common; they are at least purporting to provide a glimpse beyond the
present moment into an objectively significant pattern in which the
present ‘time’ is located – thus, they are technically trans-aeonic
models, considering that they describe multiple aeons in a manner that
implies a view from ‘outside’ the series. Thus, a cosmology that
was only an aeonic model would restrict itself either to the assertion
that things appeared a certain way from the perspective of the present
time (aeonic theories dedicated to describing the ‘present aeon’ in a
particular way, such as the Thelemic commentaries on this being the
Aeon of Horus, or the various Satanic or Setian counter-assertions that
this is actually the Aeon of Satan or of Set, or those more post-modern
models in both magical and mundane circles insisting that the ‘present
time’ is a kind of dispersion in which ‘history’ no longer has
objective meaning at all), or would restrict itself to describing the
cosmology implied by one particular aeon (such as the various
commentaries purporting to identify the current era as, say, the
Wolf-Age of Teutonic myth, or as the End Times if one is a
Fundamentalist Christian). The first term in this article’s
rather abstruse title hopefully having been now satisfactorily
explained, the second concept in it must be addressed as point of
primary focus in this article. This is the quality which none of the
cosmologies so far mentioned in this article possess, being the quality
of being a metacosmology. What is meant by this, is that each
tends to promote either the idea that its aeonic model is actually
correct, or that it is the most useful, or (at the most non-dogmatic)
that it is merely a model, but is the only model that can be considered
from the perspective of the ‘current aeon’ being presented. In
order for a trans-aeonic model to actually be able to function as a
meta-cosmology it would have to be able to model within itself any view
of aeonics that might be proposed, without degenerating into a form of
relativism in which it – as a metacosmology – was no more inclusive or
useful than the more restricted cosmologies which it aimed to
include. As an example of what is meant, in a different but
related field, Joseph Campbell proposed the concept of the ‘monomyth’
neither as the ‘best possible myth’ nor as simply ‘one personal view on
how myth might be,’ but rather as a claim to having discerned something
of the structure of the ‘meta-myth’ through which other myths could be
explored. Whether or not one regards Campbell’s work as having
successfully fulfilled this purpose, it does provide a good example of
what is meant about meta-cosmology.
In order to
consider such a concept in more detail, it would either be necessary to
propose a trans-aeonic metacosmology as an example (which, although an
interesting possibility, is not the purpose of this particular article)
or to analyze what components and qualities are necessary to ensure
that any such metacosmology would be functional. One such quality
is a capacity for self-referentiality (an understanding of the point of
view upon which the cosmology is based) and another is a capacity for
at least situational objectivity (concepts can be accurate or not, from
the perspective of the model. That is, the model must have some
kind of rules or axioms which allow it to order perceptions of the raw
chaos effectively). For a trans-aeonic metamodel to be
self-referential, it must first of all be able to stand outside the
concept of ‘aeonics’ entirely; in the most generic sense, this means
that the model would have to be based upon something beyond merely a
concept of ‘phases of history,’ otherwise it would have no ability to
refer to or evaluate itself. The simplest way of doing this is to
base one’s model in a magical theory which functions independantly of
what ‘time’ it is. This is a quality the Crowleyan model
particularly lacks, since this model claims that magic functions the
way it functions because it is now the Aeon of Horus, and because it is
now the Aeon of Horus, magic functions in a certain way.
Basically, a meta-cosmology cannot really get away with being so
tautological, and rather will tend to suggest that, because magic
functions in a certain way, aeonic processes function in a certain
related way, and so eventually to the processes that pertain to the
current aeon (assuming the model is taken that far). As to the
quality of limited objectivity, the model needs to have some
truth-standard (even if that standard is only utilitarian skepticism
asserting that beliefs with no observable or testable significance
should be jettisoned) as well as a context in which it can describe –
yet not be contaminated by – the incompleteness, or even outright
errors, in other models. It does no good to have a metamodel
purporting to include the totality of aeonic processes, if one also has
to rationally consider the possibility that the Fundamentalists who
believe that the Rapture is 333 days away might actually be right in
some literal and observable sense. However, a metamodel that
cannot explain or account for the causes, conditions, origins, and
possible effects of such a colossally important belief as that in the
End of Time, is obviously limited as a cosmology, since such an
incomplete pattern would have to exclude, rather than assimilate or
subvert, a belief held by generations of religious extremists –
and in some eras, the masses as a whole!
Thus, the third
concept in the title of this essay, that of archontic distortion.
The term archon is Greek for ruler, but its usual magical connotation
is derived from the gnostic systems, in which the archons were the
tyrannical rulers of the ordered social (and sometimes, material)
cosmos, generally either ignorant and deluded, or overtly malicious
toward magicians, often both. The archons were frequently set in
opposition, or considered a sort of errant, inertial reflex, to the
aions, which to the gnostics were emanations of the inconceivable
absolute. Whether the aions were also understood by the gnostics
to be phases of time is uncertain, although the word does mean, in the
Greek, ‘an immeasurable span of time,’ but considering the close
relationship between Hellenic Gnostic ideas, and Persian occultism
(such as Zurvanism, a mystical and magical tradition dedicated to a
mythic system associated with Zurvan, the God of Time), it is certainly
a likely possibility.
In terms of
Gnostic cosmology, the archons were usually identified as the ruling
powers of religious, mystical, or magical systems hostile to the
gnosis. Thus, the vengeful God of the Jews was usually the
favored candidate for Chief Archon, although some Gnostics preferred a
composite terror called Ialtabaoth which seemed to combine the Hebraic
Sabaoth with indeterminate cthonic or Titanic forces, and others took a
more transcendentalist stance and considered a Satan figure to be the
actual Ruler of the World (these became the infamous Cathars and
Bogomils of medieval heresiology). The modern aeonist might
borrow from the methodology and consider the various traditions
inimical to a coherent aeonic meta-model to be, themselves,
archontic. Whether the egregores of these ‘counter-magical
currents’ are to be regarded as actually existing archons, or whether
the practitioners of such systems should themselves be regarded as
‘archontic’ (as various antinomian gnostics certainly regarded their
opponents in Church and State), is generally a matter of taste – but
the significance of including a concept of ‘distortion’ in a
transaeonic metacosmology is one of technique rather than mere
aesthetics.
Beyond the social
and cosmological value of being able to relate the pernicious influence
of such doctrines as eschatological fundamentalism to previous
magic-hating visions such as the infamously moralistic dualism of
Zoroastrian Persia (which later became the fanatic Messianism of the
Essenes which profoundly influenced world history by means of a certain
now notorious Jewish sect that subverted the Roman Empire only to later
contribute to dualistic forms of both anti-paganism and anti-Semitism
that have been a scourge to the modern world), the concept of aeonic
distortion has the function of explaining apparent tautologies such as
discerning a difference in the functioning of the magical patterns
behind the aeonic pattern, from age to age. Aeonic models lacking
this concept are at a loss to indicate how it can be the case, for
example, that (to once again use Crowley’s familiar pattern), the
“magical formulae” of the ‘Dying God’ were valid during the Aeon of
Osiris yet not valid during the Aeon of Horus – despite that the ruling
priests of this aeon were apparently the counter-magical tyrants of
Europe for over a millennium, while the gnostic heretics they crushed
at every available opportunity were generally favorable to occult
knowledge, and frequently ignored the ‘death of Christ’ as utterly
irrelevant to their gnosis. Indeed, it seems hardly likely that
most modern Thelemites would want to replace the former archons of
Christendom as the prime magical authorities of society, and thereby
fill the role of heresy hunter (although some seem to have taken on
that role rather well when their form of occult orthodoxy has been
questioned) – however, such a context is exactly what Crowley’s aeonic
model would imply, if it is to be taken literally that the aeonic
process is an inexorable march of one-idea-overthrowing-another.
The complex processes of assertion, innovation, and dissent that occur
in any society necessarily contradict over-simplistic models, and while
“the map is not the territory,” it is also the case that maps capable
of pointing out and compensating for their own inaccuracies tend to be
much more useful than those maps promoting the mis-impression that they
are the territory. Therefore, if it is possible to model within
cosmologies those factors which contribute to cosmology itself being
either obscure or positively ignorant, this possibility should be
embraced, as it allows the model to be not only a descriptive
mechanism, but a tool for directed social change in a manner befitting
the magician’s intent. This allows it to retain the potential of
accuracy even when the very aeonic pattern it proposes is being
diverted due to the process of inevitable human inertia – which both
produces and empowers tyrants of various disposition. Hence, one could
easily develop full cosmologies concerned with tracing the origin and
influence of various ‘archontic distortions’ which introduce otherwise
untenable concepts into the currents of belief.
Without
indulging the necessarily attractive tangent of following out various
specific examples, it may be useful to suggest a few possible
explanations for such distortion. The most generic is simply that
some aspect of ‘magical inertia’ is inevitable – otherwise there would
be no noticeable aeonic cycle at all; the primal aeon of either total
unconsciousness, or total magic, or whatever a given cosmology
indicates as ‘The Beginning,’ would have no reason to transmute into
anything else. This explanation supposes that the premise of
distortion is not only useful, but a quality intrinsic to aeonic
meta-models. Similar to this, but slightly more mythologized, is
the idea that, while not necessary to an aeonic meta-paradigm by
definition, archontic distortion of the pattern eventually occurs at
some point due to the tendency of magical thought toward the antinomian
– such that, in a condition of total magical coherence and ascendancy,
some magician will surely rebel against even that. Of course, one
would not have to suppose that there has been some aeon of magical
dominance in the past (although many myths do), but it does seem to be
a logical necessity that from the point of view of a magician, any aeon
in which magic was disregarded as the most inclusive and valid
metaparadigm, would be an aeon of profound ‘distortion’ since the very
means of discerning the nature of the aeon (magical insight) would be
being devalued in favor of some inferior truth standard such as ‘faith
in the book/deity/dogma’ or whatever.
A more structural
notion of distortion is that it arises from incoherence in the aeonic
pattern for reasons of socio-cultural interaction in a tangential
manner. This theory suggests that the combination of magical
currents or aeonic models in foreign contexts tends to produce
self-perpetuating ignorances or misapprehensions which become a kind of
‘noise’ that eventually self-perpetuates. An example of this that
has nothing to do with aeonics directly, but demonstrates a similar
process in a similar context, is millenarian crazes based upon
arbitrary calendar dates like 1000 or 2000 A.D. Indeed, dating
systems like Anno Domini are a slightly more aeonic example.
Whose lord? When was he supposed to have been born exactly?
And why are generations upon generations of Europeans dating their
calendar in the language of the people who crucified the supposed
god-man whose birth and career inspired the dating system,
anyway? Of course, this observation would be common to any
secular historian, and reminds the aeonist that simple models such as
‘first they worshipped Goddesses because humanity was infantile, and
then they worshipped Gods because it was time for humanity to develop
moralistic social structures, but now we worship the Child because it
is time for humanity to grow up and come into its own’ might well be
questioned very seriously by the magician. However, just as the
recognition that the birth of the Jew In Question has no essential
calendrical importance (contrary to events with objective calendrical
import, such as eclipses) in no way minimizes an understanding of the
real sociocultural and magical malaise wrought by the Christian system,
so the recognition of certain doctrines or magical systems as
distortionate, should not be taken as a license to disregard the real
influence of either their proponents, their egregores, or both.
Hence, the
article will conclude, not with suggestions toward a trans-aeonic
meta-cosmology (since it is far more interesting to see whether readers
might be inspired to consider such themselves), but rather with a few
indications toward a cosmology of the present aeon, since lack of a
reference point is a primary cause of all magical confusion. And
indeed, confusion could certainly be considered a potent quality of the
‘present moment’ if the globe as a whole is to be considered.
While various systems could be promoted for imposing some kind of
pattern recognition upon history or its various proposed cycles or
phases, it is clear that the ‘post-modern’ has already outstripped the
modern – but only in some modern contexts. Much as philosophy
proclaimed the death of God while people all over the world still
worship the Chief Archon in one form or another, those post-modernists
who have proclaimed the ‘death of history,’ the’information age,’ and
so on, can describe this phenomena only within the limited context in
which its terms are intelligible. For the fundamentalist
Christian or Islamist, it might be the End Times, but it is certainly
not a ‘post-historical reality.’ Thus, the present aeonic moment
is one of profound transition – not merely a transition from one
supposed ‘age’ to another, nor the usual case of one culture being in
some respects out of phase with another – but rather a catastrophic,
possibly cataclysmic, introduction of cosmologies of another order
entirely within the present system. That is, when only some of
the components of the ‘modern’ have become fully self-referential, and
as their own self-referentiality would describe, “post”-modern, this
generates a type of sociocultural strife that must be recognized as
profoundly significant (and possibly earth-shattering). Much as
the abyssal dispersion affects the magician’s personality by
introducing a discontinuity either disasterous or illuminatory, so the
introduction of this degree of discontinuity into the belief patterns
of an increasingly inter-communicative world can only indicate that
this is an aeonic transition of extreme importance and potential for
power – whatever one’s particular agenda might be. This
condition, of course, accounts for the profound dispersion reflected
even in the magical community’s perspective on aeonics. When
mundane society retains the profound incoherence that first world
intellectuals consider the demise of meaning while pre-pubescent
terrorists explode themselves inspired by the certainty that God will
reward their faith, it cannot be in any way surprising that 2000 year
long aeons are said to begin in specific times like 1904 only to be
multiply ‘superceded’ by the vision of any innovative magician who
happened to be born subsequent to this date. Hopefully it is not
too optimistic to promote the possibility that having a critical mass
of insight and coherence within present cultures would effect the
necessary transmutation of social perspective to afford success in the
ordeal of the Aeonic Abyss.