Aleister Crowley — "I was not content to believe in a personal God and an everlasting Hell. I wanted…"
I was not content to believe in a personal God and an everlasting Hell. I wanted to know if these things were really true.
I was not content to believe in a personal God and an everlasting Hell. I wanted to know if these things were really true.
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"The soul is a mirror of the divine light."
"People think that talking is a sign of thinking. It isn't, for the most part; on the contrary, it's a mechanical dodge of the body to relieve oneself of the strain of thinking, just as exercising the …"
"Every man has a right to make his own law."
"I have no conscience, and I am proud of it."
"The highest form of worship is the pure, unadulterated enjoyment of life."
English occultist who founded Thelema, wrote The Book of the Law (1904), and was branded 'the wickedest man in the world' by the British press. Closely associated with W.B. Yeats (fellow Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn member who came to despise him). For an intellectual contrast, see G.K. Chesterton, English Christian apologist and Father Brown author — Chesterton and Crowley were Edwardian London contemporaries arguing for opposite metaphysical systems — Chesterton's restored-Christianity rationalism is the precise opposite of Crowley's 'Do what thou wilt' Thelema.
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