This is to wrap up the review found back on this thread: A look into Franz's Initiation into Hermetics that I started.
Franz Bardon, along with many traditional esoteric systems, elevates the so-called Law of Silence—the principle that one must not reveal their magical practices, attainments, or ambitions. This is often justified as necessary to protect the sanctity of the work, preserve inner equilibrium, avoid interference by profane or hostile forces, and honor the subtlety required for certain types of spirit work.
However, a modern reassessment challenges the universality of this law:
Franz Bardon’s Initiation into Hermetics remains a landmark work in Western occultism, offering a detailed and disciplined roadmap to magical development. However, as this reassessment has shown, the system is neither flawless nor universally applicable in its original form.
By critically examining Bardon’s assumptions—about moral prerequisites, the necessity of strict linear progression, the nature of imagination and plasticity, and the criteria for physical manifestation—we uncover opportunities to refine, adapt, and modernize his teachings.
The integration of contemporary psi research confirms that Bardon’s stages align in meaningful ways with documented phenomena like remote viewing and micro-psychokinesis, grounding his work partially in empirical possibility.
Meanwhile, the lens of postmodern chaos magick invites a pragmatic and flexible approach—emphasizing belief as a tool, modular practice, symbolic resonance, and personal gnosis. Techniques such as sigilization, servitor creation, and paradigm shifting offer powerful accelerants and alternatives to some of Bardon’s more time-consuming or cognitively demanding steps.
The personalized training routines outlined here provide a balanced framework that honors Bardon’s spiritual architecture while empowering practitioners to innovate according to their unique cognitive styles, cultural backgrounds, and practical goals.
Ultimately, the modern magician benefits most by embracing both tradition and innovation, cultivating discipline without rigidity, and maintaining a rigorous commitment to results, well-being, and ethical integrity.
This postmodern reassessment is not an endpoint but an invitation: to continue evolving magical practice through dialogue between the past’s wisdom and the present’s discoveries.
Stage 1: Foundational Awareness
Review aside Step 4 of the Magical Schooling of the Spirit was actually quite easy at least as far as it went for transferring my consciousness to a place and not a person or an object. Funny thing is, given my experiences I may have accidentally achieved a feat in this before. Then again, given the spontaneity of that event if Bardon were here today he'd likely say that it doesn't count, duration of the event aside. Next week will mark the end of my journey with Franz's Initiation into Hermetics that is unless I find something else of value or rather of interest to me. Don't get me wrong. I have little to no interest in completing Franz's course, all 10 lessons that is nor do I find it necessary to abide by Franz's system in order to be a true magician. Will I then still keep practicing the lessons I do find an interest in? For now and like I said, even if I complete a step or so I’ll still go over it again for a week, maybe more to ensure retention.
And to address a certain someone, gnosis as it pertains to chaos magick is less of a state of mind vacancy of which it's arguably not even that as it is to a single purpose of focus. In other words, by entering a state of gnosis your mind isn't made empty, no. Instead you focus, in an active sense, all or most of your thoughts to one thing, ambition, ideal or what have you with minimal to no other thoughts that are entertained at least to the degree of the one target of focus unless they are closely related in the sense of being complementary. You don't make your mind empty, not literally nor even metaphorically. You instead concentrate on your target(s) while either ignoring or generally paying little mind to nontargets. Of course since belief is a tool, you may choose to believe that when you enter a state of gnosis you are emptying your mind and just like how some may view a vacant mind, whether literally or metaphorically, as necessary for magick, I do not.
🕯 Reevaluating the Law of Silence
Franz Bardon, along with many traditional esoteric systems, elevates the so-called Law of Silence—the principle that one must not reveal their magical practices, attainments, or ambitions. This is often justified as necessary to protect the sanctity of the work, preserve inner equilibrium, avoid interference by profane or hostile forces, and honor the subtlety required for certain types of spirit work.
However, a modern reassessment challenges the universality of this law:
- Situational Efficacy: Some magical operations or spirits may indeed benefit from secrecy, especially those rooted in pacts, initiations, or egregoric bindings where disclosure violates a metaphysical contract or disrupts symbolic alignment.
- Not All Spirits Are Averse to Noise: Even in traditional lore, numerous spirits are invoked with trumpets, bells, chants, and fanfare. Public ritual and spectacle were a part of many magical traditions, from Eleusinian mysteries to shamanic theatre. Silence, then, is not a metaphysical necessity—it is a stylistic choice based on context.
- Modern Openness and Shared Gnosis: In postmodern magical communities, especially within chaos magic, openness can function as a strategy of memeplex distribution—spreading new magical frameworks and breaking hierarchical gatekeeping. Sharing experiences doesn't necessarily destroy efficacy unless doing so undermines one’s own symbolic power or belief structure.
- Advice, Not Absolute: Rather than treating the Law of Silence as an immutable commandment, it may be more accurate to view it as prudent advice: not everyone is ready to hear, understand, or respect magical truths. Discretion becomes tactical rather than metaphysical.
Silence is not a law; it is a protective veil. Use it where needed, lift it where growth demands it.
XIV. Conclusion: Synthesizing Tradition and Innovation for Modern Magical Practice
Franz Bardon’s Initiation into Hermetics remains a landmark work in Western occultism, offering a detailed and disciplined roadmap to magical development. However, as this reassessment has shown, the system is neither flawless nor universally applicable in its original form.
By critically examining Bardon’s assumptions—about moral prerequisites, the necessity of strict linear progression, the nature of imagination and plasticity, and the criteria for physical manifestation—we uncover opportunities to refine, adapt, and modernize his teachings.
The integration of contemporary psi research confirms that Bardon’s stages align in meaningful ways with documented phenomena like remote viewing and micro-psychokinesis, grounding his work partially in empirical possibility.
Meanwhile, the lens of postmodern chaos magick invites a pragmatic and flexible approach—emphasizing belief as a tool, modular practice, symbolic resonance, and personal gnosis. Techniques such as sigilization, servitor creation, and paradigm shifting offer powerful accelerants and alternatives to some of Bardon’s more time-consuming or cognitively demanding steps.
The personalized training routines outlined here provide a balanced framework that honors Bardon’s spiritual architecture while empowering practitioners to innovate according to their unique cognitive styles, cultural backgrounds, and practical goals.
Ultimately, the modern magician benefits most by embracing both tradition and innovation, cultivating discipline without rigidity, and maintaining a rigorous commitment to results, well-being, and ethical integrity.
This postmodern reassessment is not an endpoint but an invitation: to continue evolving magical practice through dialogue between the past’s wisdom and the present’s discoveries.
B. Suggested Training Routine
Here is a simplified, postmodern-compatible training structure:Stage 1: Foundational Awareness
- Develop mindfulness (observation without judgment)
- Learn breath control and physical stillness
- Record subtle sensations or psi impressions
- Practice multimodal imagery (sound, texture, smell, etc.)
- Begin consciousness transference exercises
- Keep a dream journal
- Learn basic bioenergetics (qigong, energy ball, etc.)
- Experiment with influencing random systems
- Attempt micro-PK exercises
- Work with different magical paradigms (elemental, servitor, Enochian)
- Challenge beliefs to enhance magical adaptability
- Incorporate chaos magic tools like sigils and gnosis
Appendices
Recommended Reading
- The Chaos Protocols by Gordon White
- Condensed Chaos by Phil Hine
- Real Magic by Dean Radin
- The Field by Lynne McTaggart
- The Psychology of the Psychic by David Marks and Richard Kammann
- Hands of Light by Barbara Brennan
- Remote Viewing Secrets by Joseph McMoneagle
- Initiation Into Hermetics by Franz Bardon (for comparison)
- Marco Schlosser et al. (2019)
- Britton et al. (2020)
- Ironic Process Theory (Daniel Wegner)
Troubleshooting Common Issues
- Aphantasia – Use conceptual modeling, kinesthetic cues, and emotional resonance instead of visualization.
- No Results? – Review your brainwave state; check for exhaustion or overexertion.
- Spontaneous Fear or Chaos? – Ground with sensory routines or sigils of containment.
- Doubt or Cynicism – Use it as fuel. Challenge your disbelief experimentally.
Review aside Step 4 of the Magical Schooling of the Spirit was actually quite easy at least as far as it went for transferring my consciousness to a place and not a person or an object. Funny thing is, given my experiences I may have accidentally achieved a feat in this before. Then again, given the spontaneity of that event if Bardon were here today he'd likely say that it doesn't count, duration of the event aside. Next week will mark the end of my journey with Franz's Initiation into Hermetics that is unless I find something else of value or rather of interest to me. Don't get me wrong. I have little to no interest in completing Franz's course, all 10 lessons that is nor do I find it necessary to abide by Franz's system in order to be a true magician. Will I then still keep practicing the lessons I do find an interest in? For now and like I said, even if I complete a step or so I’ll still go over it again for a week, maybe more to ensure retention.
And to address a certain someone, gnosis as it pertains to chaos magick is less of a state of mind vacancy of which it's arguably not even that as it is to a single purpose of focus. In other words, by entering a state of gnosis your mind isn't made empty, no. Instead you focus, in an active sense, all or most of your thoughts to one thing, ambition, ideal or what have you with minimal to no other thoughts that are entertained at least to the degree of the one target of focus unless they are closely related in the sense of being complementary. You don't make your mind empty, not literally nor even metaphorically. You instead concentrate on your target(s) while either ignoring or generally paying little mind to nontargets. Of course since belief is a tool, you may choose to believe that when you enter a state of gnosis you are emptying your mind and just like how some may view a vacant mind, whether literally or metaphorically, as necessary for magick, I do not.