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Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea. Blog, Internet resources, online reading groups, articles and interviews, Illuminatus! info.

Friday, July 26, 2024

Mike Gathers interviewed on the Eight Circuit model

 

 

As promised in an earlier announcement, the latest Hilaritas podcast, above, features Mike Gathers as the person being interviewed, by guest host Zach West. It's the Maybe Day release. The topic is the Eight Circuit model, as created by Timothy Leary and developed by Robert Anton Wilson and Antero Alli; Mike relates in the course of the interview how he's studied it for years. I thought the podcast was quite interesting. 

Mike is a therapist who says the model's main usefulness for him is as an overarching framework that he can use in incorporating the various psychological theories and forms of therapy he has studied. (As an aside, I enjoyed the description of what it was like to attend Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado.) Listening to the podcast, I better understood why Mike is such a Grateful Dead fan.  There was no discussion of James Heffernan's book, and I wondered if Mike had read it. 

Toward the end, Mike mentions wanting to write a book about the model. I hope he does. I hope someone offers him a book contract, or that he offers himself a contract, so to speak, and gets to work. I would buy it. 

Here are some Mike Gathers links.   And also here is a playlist for Mike's Eight Circuit videos posted on YouTube. 




Thursday, July 25, 2024

Oz Fritz on the 23 enigma


Oz Fritz' contribution to the Maybe Day celebrations is a new blog post, "The 23 Enigima & The Western Lands by William S. Burroughs."  Here is a paragraph that might perhaps give you the idea:

"The 23 Enigma – encountering a network of synchronicities and coincidences related to the number 23 – seems quite familiar to many readers of Robert Anton Wilson. He laid out his experience with this phenomenon in Cosmic Trigger – the Final Secret of the Illuminati. Multiple listings to Twenty-three appear in the Index beginning with William Burroughs telling him about it and recurring frequently until nearly the end of the book. The importance of this engima to Wilson's Hermetic development cannot be overstated. He compared it to the flash of insight Dr. James Watson received walking down a spiral staircase leading him to consider DNA as spiral-shaped, an intuitive hunch that led to cracking the DNA code. This opened up the world of Science and applied Technology to all kinds of new beneficial healing advances for humanity. '23 was my spiral staircase, my intuitive signal.' ( CT I p. 46, Hilaritas). The 23 Enigma served as an entry point for Wilson to crack, actually more like construct, the code of numerology and correspondence found in the science of Cabala. I contend that this also brought beneficial healing advances for some parts of humanity through his writing and teaching."

The new blog post is the third in Oz' "on contemporary and ancient Books of the Dead." Links to the first two posts are at the top of the post. 

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Please support the Kickstarter for 'Tales of Illuminatus'


There's a lot to absorb in all of the material posted yesterday for Maybe Day at the Maybeday.net website. I read and listened to quite a lot, and I expect to write about some of it during the next few days.

I read the first section of Tales of Illuminatus pretty much right away, and it's a very promising start. And I want to talk for a moment about the new Kickstarter launched for the first issue of the projected series of comic books covering the entire trilogy. 

I've made a pledge and I'm hoping many of you will join me.

We can all hope that someday there will be a TV miniseries adaptation of Illuminatus! on Netflix or Apple or Amazon Prime or some other video streaming service, and that it will be artistically and commercially successful, boosting a work many of us believe deserves wider attention. There have been efforts to get that done that haven't come to fruition yet. As of right now, the Tales of Illuminatus project by Bobby Campbell and his collaborators, which they are obviously working very hard on, is what we've got as a way to draw attention to the original work.  The new Tales of Illuminatus Substack is a good place to find out more about what's going on. 

The guy helming the project, Bobby Campbell, has spent many years promoting everybody else's projects, for example at his Maybe Day website (which has an archive of past Maybe Day collections) and at his Robert Anton Wilson account on X/Twitter, which has more than 6,000 followers. I personally owe Bobby a lot for his support and generosity, and the new Kickstarter is -- maybe -- a way to pay him back a little bit. 

UPDATE: Help in getting the word out would also be useful. If you are on social media, or you have a blog, or some other way of reaching people, please consider providing a signal boost. 

Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Happy Maybe Day!


Today, July 23, is Maybe Day. Please go to Maybeday.net for many of this year's offerings and for an archive of past Maybe Day celebrations put together by Bobby Campbell. You'll get a release of the first part of Tales of Illuminatus, the new graphic novel adaptation of Illuminatus! Please check out the Kickstarter page to support the project. 

Steve "Fly" has released The First Trip, the music album supporting the Tales of Illuminatus project. 

Here's a great new interview with Michael Johnson about Illuminatus! And you also get a Bobby Campbell interview with Eric Wagner!

Oz Fritz has a new blog post up, "The 23 Enigima & The Western Lands by William S. Burroughs."

See also, at Maybeday.net, new articles by Iain Spence and Don Dulchinos! 

Please see also, below in a separate post, my own contribution to Maybe Day. 


Maybe Day special: Robert Shea on Illuminatus!


Bobby Campell's illustration for the Illuminatus! online reading group. 

[I am working on an anthology of Robert Shea's nonfiction pieces and of interviews with Shea, similar in format to many of the Robert Anton Wilson anthologies. In light of the focus on Illuminatus! for this year's Maybe Day celebration, I thought I would share an excerpt from the work-in-progress: Shea's thoughts about Illuminatus!, culled  from his zines. Many of these thoughts are mailing comments, made to other members of The Golden Apa. The Management.]

[In a mailing comment to Robert Anton Wilson] I was stunned by your comment [to] Kevin, wherein you say you brooded over why you couldn’t finish a long book and then, collaborating with me, finished one. You see, I’ve been going around telling people that I never completed a book project before writing Illuminatus! and it was my collaboration with you, and your example of joyful productivity that taught me how to write and finish novels. I never realized that Illuminatus! was a breakthrough book for both of us. I guess I sort of assumed that you had never before written a book simply because you hadn’t gotten around to it, whereas I, who had started a number of novels and never finished any, had a “problem.”                                                             

                                                                     ***

TODAY IS JUNE 22, 1988, FEAST OF THE MARTYRDOM OF ST. JOHN DILLINGER. HAIL ERIS. ALL HAIL DISCORDIA. 23 SKIDOO.

                                                                     ***

Bob Wilson on the myth of John Dillinger’s penis – Wilson may answer this, too, but I can’t resist – ah – inserting my own recollections. We first heard the myth about the Smithsonian keeping Dillinger’s penis stashed away when a Playboy reader queried the “Advisor” about it. One of our researchers called the Smithsonian and said, “What I’m about to ask  you may sound ridiculous, but we’ve received a serious question from a reader about it.” Before she could continue, the man on the other end said, “No, we do not have John Dillinger’s penis here.” He went on to say that people called to ask about it several times a year. 

As for it being 23 inches long – when Dlllinger was cruelly assassinated and murdered a photograph of him lying on a tilted morgue table was published in the Chicago Daily News. He was covered with a sheet and seemed to have an enormous erection. Actually, the sheet was thrown over him and a lever that controlled the tilting of the table, but in the photograph the lever looked like part of Dillinger. Some Chicago papers published the photo retouched, with the sheet flattened out. 

                                                                ***

There is and always has been an awful lot of  hokum around everything to do with the uncanny, esoteric, the occult, the paranormal, the supernatural, the mystical.  Throughout this century and in past centuries as well. That is why I appreciate, as a needed corrective, even the knee-jerk skepticism of such groups as the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal.

But it also happens to be true that people can get useful philosophical and moral ideas from dubious sources. I’ve quoted Robert Anton Wilson’s observation that Buddhism would still be valuable even if the Buddhist texts turned out to be forgeries. A lot of people have the same feeling about Castaneda; it doesn’t matter whether Don Juan ever really existed.

I hope it won’t seem too immodest to say that there are people who claim to have gotten a lot, philosophically, out of Illuminatus! and Shike, even though both novels are clearly labeled fiction. It seems to me that ideas have a life of their own, and that it may be important, in evaluating an idea, not to consider the source, but rather to consider its possible usefulness to one’s own belief system.

But ideas are ideas and facts are facts (yes, I know this is a terribly stodgy Aristotelian/Newtonian/Cartesian way of looking at things, but there it is: I seem to be struck with it).

                                                                    ***

Do you still read/like Korzybski? Wilson says Korzybski’s ideas, though absorbed by him many years ago, are still influential in his thinking. Mine, too.

                                                                  ***

Indeed Jim Frenkel does have good taste; he was one of the five editors at Dell who worked on Illuminatus! He’s the one who described it as, “The anarchist acid-rock answer to Lord of the Rings.”

                                                                       ***

I’ve run into a fair number of people who believe world events are manipulated by the Illuminati or some similar conspiracy. This always poses a moral dilemma for me, because I want to be honest and tell them novel was intended to spoof such notions, but I don’t want to take away their reason for buying the book and recommending it to their friends. 

                                                                       ***

The Masons have always been pretty open about being behind the U.S. government. Look at the eye and the pyramid on the dollar bill. They’re so brazen they even put their headquarters on 23rd Street. 

                                                                     ***

Re: Fans wanting to be disembodied intelligences: It strikes me as interesting in this connection that there are a number of sf stories on the theme of brains in boxes or brains removed from people and installed in machines, or minds or brains transplanted from one body to another, sometimes to an alien body. And higher intelligences are sometimes portrayed as beings of pure energy. We used this idea in Illuminatus! – but note that it was the Illuminati who wanted to get rid of their bodies, not our heroes and heroines.

I’m a student of Zen, and Zen teaches that mind and body are one. 

I don’t feel knowledgeable enough to comment on Judaism’s attitude towards the body, but Catholics are taught that the body is “the temple of the Holy Spirit,” and that they are obligated to take good care of it. The obligation to  maintain good health comes under the Fifth Commandment, “Thou shalt not kill.” This is interpreted to mean that it is forbidden to injure oneself. My sense is that many Catholics don’t give much thought to this obligation, or to the rest of the Fifth Commandment. 

                                                                 ***

Another thing I want to make perfectly clear, to quote a famous Illuminatus, that, as I have said again and again and again, to quote another one, that I am not only not an expert on conspiracy theory, I don’t even believe in the damned things. I cannot speak for Bob Wilson on this point, but I know one of my intentions in writing Illuminatus! was to poke fun at the conspiracy paranoia besotting both Right and Left in the U.S. in the late 60s and early 70s.

                                                                  ***

Bob Wilson and I once had a bit of a run-in with Roger Ebert at a press party at the Biograph Theater promoting a book called Dillinger, Dead or Alive, which asserted that Dillinger had not been killed at the Biograph in 1934 but is, in fact, still living. Since this idea had also occurred to the authors of a Certain Trilogy, we showed up to express our support of the proposition that Dillinger lives. Ebert got the notion that we were making fun of his friend’s book. A contretemps ensued. Hail Eris! [Dillinger: Dead or Alive? by Jay Robert Nash and Ron Offen was published in 1970]. 

                                                               ****

Your essay caused me to think some more about how I feel about people masturbating to sex scenes I have written, and I’ve decided my attitude is more complicated than just being flattered that I had written something sexy enough to turn somebody on. I definitely would not be embarrassed and would be rather pleased, but it’s occurred to me that I did have different intentions in writing the two scenes you refer to. In writing Illuminatus! Bob Wilson and I agreed that we would incorporate some out-and-out pornographic writing into the novel, and pornography is meant to turn people on sexually. So that was what I was trying to do when I wrote the cocksucking scene between George and Mavis on the beach, which is what drove my actor friend to bring himself off.

When I was writing Shike I was trying to bring to life on paper an imaginary world and its people. I was thinking more about clearly expressing what was in my imagination than about how it might affect the reader. Jebu and Taniko’s first erotic encounter was something happening between them, and it was my job to describe it as well as I could and not to manipulate the reader’s sexual feelings. The George-Mavis scene was written somewhat in the crude style I recall  from the typewritten pornographic stories that were passed around in my high school classes. Even after passing through Bob Wilson’s typewriter, it retains that flavor. The Jebu-Taniko scene was written in what I  hoped was a subtle, delicate style that seemed appropriate for the Japanese characters. Which is to say that while I wouldn’t mind somebody being moved to masturbate – or to look for some  nice person to have sex with – after reading the Jebu-Taniko scene, it would seem to me that the reaction wasn’t all that relevant to my intention. After all, I wouldn’t want to write anything that would make people want to stop reading.

                                                                      ***

Last September, Yvonne and I saw the Lyric Opera’s production of The Magic Flute. I’m becoming more and more of a lover of Mozart’s music, and this has certainly done much to hasten the process. Of the libretto of Die Zauberfloete, no less an illuminated being than Goethe declared its “high meaning will not elude the initiated.” Besides the music, I was entertained by the sets, which were, of course, full of pyramids. One pyramid had the word “WEISHEIT” over its entrance, which I at first misread as “WEISHAUPT.” At the end, an orange sun arose and appeared centered in a gigantic triangle. The evening would have been complete if the sun had opened a bright red eye and winked at me. Highly recommended, in whatever form you might have access to it. Die Zauberfloete was first presented in Vienna on Friday, Sept. 30, 1791, fifteen years after the founding of the Bavarian Illuminati and six years after its suppression by edict of the King of Bavaria. 

                                                                      ***

It is relatively easy when you are writing a wild book like Illuminatus! to come up with funny stuff. But most historical novels tend  not to lend themselves to a lot of humor although there are exceptions, and when my head is in the historical novel mode it does not produce much humor – except in minor ways, like a couple of Perrin’s songs in All Things. 

                                                                    ***

Yes, there really is a Fernando Poo. It is named after the explorer Fernando Poo, who landed there in 1492. Whence comes the well-known rhyme, “In fourteen hundred ninety-two, Fernando Poo discovered Fernando Poo.” Some people spell his name Po, but they are just spoilsports. 




Monday, July 22, 2024

My ten best books of the century (so far) list

From my list. 

The New York Times recently put out a list of the 100 best books of the century (e.g., the first quarter century, of course). And here is a list of "ten best" books by Stephen King and other authors.   Here is the list compiled from reader favorites. 

Here isTyler Cowen's ten best list

Here is Freddie Deboer on the Times' list. 

 I don't know that my list would necessarily be any worse than anyone else's, so here is my ten best list (in no particular order):

Email to the Universe, Robert Anton Wilson.

Anathem, Neal Stephenson.

Ha'Penny, Jo Walton.

Surface Detail, Iain Banks.

Somnium, Steve Moore.

Too Like the Lightning, Ada Palmer.

The Scythian Empire, Christopher Beckwith.

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, Susanna Clarke.

The KLF: Chaos, Magic and the Band who Burned a Million Pounds, John Higgs.

The United States of Paranoia, Jesse Walker. 

Bonus culture link: My new Substack piece on classical music on Hoopla. 



Sunday, July 21, 2024

'Magick Show' Kickstarter continues


The Kickstarter for Magick Show, the Richard Metzger "documentary collection," is continuing. See the website for updates. As of today, $27,757 was pledged toward the $65,000 goal, and there were 29 days to go.

Here is a profile of Grant Morrison from the Times (of London) that mentions Magick Show. ("Morrison has now offered to share his skills, agreeing to cast spells and create personalised magical symbols to donors to a Kickstarter fundraising appeal for Magick Show, a documentary on modern occultism created by Richard Metzger, the American broadcaster and author.")

The Dangerous Minds website has been doing daily "Magick Show Diary" pieces with various guests; scroll down for Douglas Rushkoff interviewing Metzger about the project. Sign up for a newsletter at the website.





Saturday, July 20, 2024

Steve 'Fly" Pratt paints the van to promote Illuminati Records Ltd.



Steve "Fly" Pratt has painted a van in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, to publicize his launch of Illuminati Records Ltd., his music project to support Bobby Campbell's Tales of Illuminatus project.

In his latest Substack newsletter, Steve writes, "I recently found some spray paint on the street while biking and decided to use it to construct some art. I like the challenge of not choosing the colour scheme, using what I was gifted from some unknown painter who probably ditched the Montana Black aerosol after some street activity. 

"Over three days, and in all weather conditions I decorated the guest caravan at Green Tribe Amsterdam: a self-sustaining community of alternative culture, art, and agriculture based in Amsterdam."

Steve also posted images, of which the above is one. 


Maybe Day is Tuesday! 




Friday, July 19, 2024

New 'Tales of Illuminatus!' newsletter points to Maybe Day


Bobby Campbell issues a new Tales of Illuminatus newsletter, and the title of the newsletter, "Tuesday! Tuesday! Tuesday!," is a reminder that Tuesday is Maybe Day:

"So this Tuesday (7/23) is the big Maybe Day launch of the TALES OF ILLUMINATUS! overture :))) We’ll have the first 12 pages of issue #1 available for your bewilderment, along with a smorgasbord of other maybe logical novelties, and also the kickstarter pre-sale for the print & digital editions of our sense shattering first issue will open and run from July 23rd - August 23rd."

The Kickstarter page has been prepared and is ready for launch. 

More here. 

Thursday, July 18, 2024

Prop Anon update


Jaime Reynolds of the Klaxons 

Prop Anon has put out his latest newsletter. There's no announcement yet on the Robert Anton Wilson biiography; he writes:

"Some great things are in the works with my book Chapel Perilous: The Life and Thought Crimes of Robert Anton Wilson. I will have more news for you soon about that."

Also, the promotional website for the book has been revamped, Prop interviews Jaime Reynolds of the band The Klaxons  and Prop offers a RAW quote and some political thoughts. More here. 

Wednesday, July 17, 2024

New Hilaritas podcast will turn tables on Mike Gathers

The first episode of a Mike Gathers video series on the Eight Circuit Model of Consciousness, about 18 minutes long. 

Mike Gathers is usually the guy asking the questions when the Hilaritas Press podcast is released every month. But when Maybe Day is celebrated on July 23, next week, he'll be on the podcast answering questions.

"Our next podcast,  coming on Maybe Day July 23rd,  will feature Zach West interviewing Mike Gathers about the 8 Circuit Model," Rasa reports. "They had an amazingly good discussion on the subject."

Rasa also says he's been looking at videos on YouTube on the Eight Circuit Model of Consciousness, and says the ones by Mike are reliably good. Here is a playlist. 

As for the other videos, Rasa remarks, "Some are certainly better than others, but it’s interesting to see the differences." Here is one of the others. 


Tuesday, July 16, 2024

RAW and Lucretius on selective perception


Photo by Ochir-Erdene Oyunmedeg on Unsplash

Robert Anton Wilson asked, "Who is the master who makes the grass green?" He explained, "Our brain receives millions of signals. We select a small portion and call it reality. That's what a Reality Tunnel is!" 

I am reading an old book-length poem, On the Nature of Things by the Roman poet Lucretius, and I ran across a passage that makes the same point:

"Since images are tenuous, the mind cannot see them distinctly, other than the ones it makes an effort to perceive, and thus, except for these, they all perish, apart from those for which the mind itself has been organized by its own efforts. The mind, then, makes itself ready, hoping things will take place so that it can perceive what follows on from each particular thing." 

(From Book Four; I am quoting the Ian Johnston translation. I read a lot of books about Epicureanism). 

 

Monday, July 15, 2024

New book on brain change

 


The June issue of BookPage,  a free publication handed out in public libraries, has a review of a new book by a neurologist that purportedly offers brain hacks based on science for making changes in your life. Rewire: Break the Cycle, Alter Your Thoughts and Create Lasting Change is by Nicole Vignola. The review quotes her as saying, "The brain is your hardware, and the memories, thoughts, habits and behaviors within it are the software."

The official page for the book says that Vignola explains "The principles of neuroplasticity."