You bring up a distinction that I think really matters and hasn’t been fully fleshed out yet: Magick and a magickal system are two different things.
A system is a vehicle. Magick is the current itself.
Shamanism is a great example. There’s no structured progression, no multi-year textbook crawl. The shaman was just “the one who sees.” They weren’t initiated by doctrine or by system, they were recognized for their capacity. No curriculum. Just the ability to interact with unseen forces. Just magick.
I am curious as to the source of your information . You should look up 'Shanar ' ( Shamanism ) and 'recognition of power ' .
Structured progression ? Curriculum ?
- Apprenticeship: An initiate (neophyte) typically trains under an experienced elder shaman. They act as assistants during rituals, of handling ritual objects, chanting, and through observation and service.
- The Nine Initiations: The Shanar is not a one-time event. There are nine distinct levels of initiation. A shaman must perform a new Shanar ceremony to progress to each higher level, gaining more spiritual authority and complex tools (like the orgay horns) at each stage.
Of course this does not apply to some dude on the internet who has decided he is a Shaman or teaches 'Shamanism ' , or other cultures that ripped the name off .
if you are interested in the subject, here is the real deal ;
'' In Siberian shamanic traditions (as in Bön and Buddhism) all techniques and teachings have their own precise source and are passed down through a line of authentic masters. Thus the principle of lineage is of great importance and has mechanisms safeguarding the purity of its transmission against external interference or corruption from within. It is precisely thanks to this principle of lineage that these traditions have come down to us today in good working order.''
Outlier? Sure. But that makes the point even stronger.
Magical systems are lenses, not sources. They can train and refine, but they can’t install what isn’t already there in some form.