Aleister Crowley
Many believe that they influence the world, some in greater ways than others, some for better some for worse, but none quite like Aleister Crowley, none hated and slandered more than he and his silent truth. Aleister Crowley, often associated with various groups, had come to know L. Ron Hubbard when he had learned about Hubbard’s friendship with Jack Parsons, who at the time was Master of Agapé Lodge No. 2, one of the American lodges of Aleister Crowley’s Ordo Templi Orientis. Hubbard and Parsons had started a business together and began the ridiculous Babalon Working. Crowley was right to be frantic, the business partnership ultimately ended in shambles, Hubbard ran off with Parsons’ boat, and went on to start his sci-fi religion, Scientology, yes, the creator of Scientology in which famous actor Tom Cruise is a member of, was in fact a dear friend, as Hubbard would like to believe, of Aleister, who never really thought much of Hubbard. Among his diligent work at advancing his wisdom in life Aleister was often known for being quite the comedian. Aleister Crowley’s best humor was often at someone else’s expense, but overall he had a kind heart and a deep concern for the well-being of every man, woman, and child alive. Indeed, in 1924 he dedicated his life to serving humankind, and from then on he worked tirelessly and exclusively for the cause of human liberty. It would be impossible to survey Crowley’s extraordinary wit in this small space. Suffice to say, all of his prose is packed with humor. Aleister Crowley’s original writing is far funnier than any of the parodies of his work, “One would go mad if one took the Bible seriously; but to take it seriously one must be already mad.” — Liber ABA, Part II, Chapter ...
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...n life, not dependent on what others perceive. Making his life, or what we were able to observe of it, a positive impact and contribution in my eyes and life.
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Crowley, Aleister, John Symonds, and Kenneth Grant. The Confessions of Aleister Crowley: An Autohagiography. London: Arkana, 1989. Print.
In order to break the cultural norms of psychics, con artists, paranormalist and faith healers, James Randi debunks frauds by criticizing religion. As a debunker, Randi emphasizes that trusting fakers give them superiority to control a spectator’s
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(-- removed HTML --) An influential figure among occultists and popular culture still to this day is Aleister Crowley. Originally born as Edward Alexander Crowley, and also know as both Frater Perdurabo and the Great Beast, he was an affluential English occultist, mystic, ceremonial magician, writer, poet, mountaineer, and was responsible for establishing the religious philosophy of Thelema. In his role as the creator of the Thelemite philosophy, he came to see himself as the prophet who was entrusted with the task of informing humanity that it was entering the new Age of Horus in the early 20th century. (-- removed HTML --)
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of how he should live and how people should perceive him. His entire adult life rested on
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Cohen, Daniel. The Encyclopedia of the Strange. New York: Dodd, Meod & Company, Inc., 1985.
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Boyer, B., Boyer, R., & Basehart, H. 1973. Hallucinogens and Shamanism M. Hamer, Ed.. England: Oxford University Press.
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O'Keeffe, Timothy J. "An Analogue to Milton's 'Sin' and More on the Tradition." Milton Quarterly 5 (1971): 74-77.
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