It's just you.... or is it just me?
And of course, Politics is a form of Magick. It puts people under a spell, the idea that they have to give their power away to someone who can't use it effectively to fix what needs to be fixed, the idea that you can delegate your responsabilities to someone else. Even mages and witches have fallen under it.
These lines of thought, specifically how occultism distracts from class consciousness and can be directly compared to the power wielded by politicians echoes many of the conclusions James Frazer brings forth about the very earliest history of magic and magicians in his book 'The Golden Bough.'As for 'capitalist'… I see it as the prevalent state of affairs, not as a definite movement with a clearcut ideology. From what I've gathered from friends who had escaped from former Eastern Bloc countries, the Communist Parties there thought that occultism benefitted capitalism because it prevented workers from developing class awareness and rising up against their oppressors, and consequently banned every expression of it. I think they were mistaken, from what I gather from Forum discussions, many members are highly political, just not always in the way those post-war Communist Parties naively expected.
Scholars in the academic world, on the other hand, are woke to the extreme and appear to like nothing better than calling each other some kind of '-ist' or another and accusing each other of various '-isms' once they start argueing (I'm reading mostly scholarly books right now in the hope of finding more reliable information than in purely esoteric tomes); I frequently even have to look up some those '-isms' to understand what they're bickering about.
'Patriarchy': Many witches call themselves feminists, and I don't think I've ever read a modern male occult author pining for the old days where women knew their place (plenty of such authors in the past though!). In line with old-school Communist theory and second-wave feminists like , I guess you could call all occult books specifically directed at women and distracting them from their fight against the patriarchy 'fascist' (or some other kind of '-ist'); seen from this black-and-white perspective, all of occultism is a tool of the patriarchy to subjugate women. Fortunately, those days of top-down feminism are long past, and you have to decide for yourself if the contents of a book violates your personal value code.
I guess you could call even this reply 'paternalistic'. I can't help it, I'm a guy, and in the same way many writers probably 'serve the capitalist patriarchy' without even noticing; I don't think they're doing it on purpose though.
If you mean that magick has been turned into a "witchy" commodity for "witchtok" people where you can buy a "money spell candle" that doesnt even work for 20 dollars because most people would rather make excuses than do the work? Then yes, it is capitalism ridden. People try so hard to turn the occult into a shopping list because they cant fathom that even those people who know magick didnt get anything they have easily and see it as a shortcut for selfish desires.
Eh, you are correct mostly. However, magick to me is more about self mastery, wisdom, living to the fullest, etc. So to say that magick is ONLY about selfish desires is a little bit strange. You are correct that MOST people who get into it do it for selfish reasons.This has always been magic. Read an ancient or classical tome you see spirits, planets, and deities listed as "great patriarchs". Acquiring property, money, slaves, and women litters the most primeval sources we have. Invocations and prayers to deities, demons, and angels frequently request coming into station, power, kingship, authority. Then lets not forget the 1200 years of the grimoiric tradition that were developed under the auspices of the greatest institutional patriarchy the world has ever seen, the Catholic Church. This is called retro-casting. I can't tell if OP is trolling or ignorant because I think its ridiculously hard to find a tome that doesn't appeal to the magician through promises of wealth, kingship/authority, and the accumulation of women. There's maybe a period of 50 years starting in the 70's where occultists began writing about "feminist magic" but that's a drop in the pan compared to the thousands of years of magic aimed at wealth accumulation, dominator hierarchies, and patriarchal pursuits.
As pointed out earlier in the thread most of the modern occult cottage industry is progressive-left and the academics studying our tradition are as well. If anything, given the history of magic and the occult, it was co-opted by libertines and progressives starting with Crowley.
Then we move into the very obvious consumerism and materialism that is part and parcel of magic. The original hermeticists were dis-established egyptian priests that had to commodify their expertise on religion, philosophy, and ritual magic in order to survive when Rome shut down the egyptian temples. The tradition has always resembled an ayahuasca shaman or yoga retreat where monied students would travel to Egypt to pay out of work priests to "initiate" or teach them. Then you go into how the spells work and you have to acquire a list of ingredients that can number upwards of 28 different ingredients in order to craft an item for a spell to work?
There is nothing new here, it is the tradition.
Yeah I think thats the general mode of progression is towards there. First one conjures a hundred dollars, realizes it works, learn about themselves, and then hits a point "well if i can conjure a girlfriend i can probably conjure some humility?"Eh, you are correct mostly. However, magick to me is more about self mastery, wisdom, living to the fullest, etc. So to say that magick is ONLY about selfish desires is a little bit strange. You are correct that MOST people who get into it do it for selfish reasons.
I like that you mention Crowley as an example. I do agree, he did almost all of his work due to ego and not actual self mastery. However, i would like to add that even if not, he did create a great system to attain such mastery. I also very much liked his stance on not believing a word he says until you've tried it. (Along with other people) I most certainly would not have liked him had i met him crossing the street, but I respect his work.
I could not tell you whether self mastery and attainment were the original motives behind magick, but i can tell you with absolute certainty that magick is a great tool for such things when done right.
Edit: I would like to add that i may have also proven your point, actually. While attainment and self mastery are ideally the best motives for the use of magick, they are still selfish motives due to them serving oneself. So apologies.
Love that. Yeah, ill admit, even those practitioners that strive for attainment and humility and such usually started out for reasons a lot lower. I can surely say i did. I mostly just wanted to be different at first, then i realized that "different" and "same" are an illusion after i went farther.Yeah I think thats the general mode of progression is towards there. First one conjures a hundred dollars, realizes it works, learn about themselves, and then hits a point "well if i can conjure a girlfriend i can probably conjure some humility?"