Friday, January 27, 2006

Ewige Blumenkraft!

From the Illuminatus! trilogy written by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson.
www, torrent 1, torrent 2


Every society actually passes through the five stages of Verwirrung, or chaos; Zweitracht, or discord; Unordnung, or confusion; Beamtenherrschaft, or bureaucracy; and Grummet, or aftermath. Sometimes, to make comparison with the exoteric Hegel-Marx system more pointed, the esoteric Illuminati system is defined as: Thesis, Antithesis, Synthesis, Parenthesis, and Paralysis. The public Hegel-Marx triad is also called the tricycle, and the arcane latter two stages are called the bicycle; one of the first secrets revealed to every illuminatus Minore is "After the tricycle it comes always the bicycle."

The first stage, Verwirrung or chaos, is the point from which all societies begin and to which they all return. It is, therefore, also the fundamental Thesis. The Illuminati associate this with Eris—with the Female Principle, yin, in general. Typical Aquarians who have manifested Verwirrung values are Charles Darwin, Lewis Carrol, James Joyce, Lord Byron

The second stage, Zweitracht, begins with the appearance of a ruling or governing class. This is the Antithesis of chaos, of course, and leads directly into discord when the servile class discovers that its interests are not the same as the interests of the ruling class. This correlates with Osiris, Jehovah, and all masculine deities. Naturally, a Zweitracht period is always replete with "internal contradictions," and somebody like Karl Marx always arises to point them out. Zweitracht associates with 3 numerologically because 3 is the totally male number, because all-male Trinities (Brahma-Vishnu-Siva, Father-Son-Spirit, etc.) are invented in such ages, and because the discord always has a minimum of 3 vectors, not merely 2. Since all Illuminati with any academic leanings at all are encouraged to major in history, the tendency in most textbooks is not only to black out Verwirrung periods but to glorify Zweitracht periods as ages of Light and Progress.

The third stage, Unordnung or confusion, occurs when an attempt is made to restore balance or arrive at the Hegelian Synthesis. Typical Cancerians who exemplified Unordnung are Julius Caesar, Emma Goldman, Benjamin Peret, Vladimir Mayakofski, Henry David Thoreau, Durrutti, P-J Proudhon, Calvin Coolidge (who issued the classically muddled Cancerian statement "Be as revolutionary as science and as conservative as the multiplication table")

The fourth stage, Beamtenherrschaft or bureaucracy, represents the Parentheses that occur when the Hegelian Synthesis does not succeed in reconciling the opposites. In Beamtenherrschaft ages there is ceaseless activity, all planned in advance, begun at the scheduled second, carefully supervised, scrupulously recorded— but inevitably finished late and poorly done. The burden of omniscience on the ruling class becomes virtually intolerable, and most flee into some form of schizophrenia or fantasy. Great towers, pyramids, moon shots, and similar marvels are accomplished at enormous cost while the underpinnings of social solidarity crumble entirely. Illuminati historians, of course, describe these ages as glowingly as Zweitracht epochs, for, although control is in the hands of homo neophobe types, there is at least a kind of regularity, order, and geometrical precision about everything, and the "messiness" of the barbaric Verwirrung ages and revolutionary Unordnung ages is absent.
Theoretically, an Age of Bureaucracy can last until a paper shortage develops, but, in practice, it never lasts longer than 73 permutations.
—WEISHAUPT, Königen, Kirchen and Dummheit
The fifth stage, Grummet or aftermath, represents the transition back to chaos. Bureaucracy chokes in its own paperwork; mind is at the end of its tether; in desperation, many begin to deny the logogram and follow the biogram. The age of Grummet begins with an upsurge of magicians, hoaxers, Yippies, Kabouters, shamans, clowns, and other Eristic forces. Charlie Parker, Antonin Artaud.

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

mehr Kittler...

Der Eintrag Friedrich Kittler: Aufschreibesysteme 1800/1900 wird läufend ergänzt.

Thursday, January 19, 2006

Ludwig Wittgenstein: ur Tractatus-förordet

Denna bok kommer kanke att förstås bara av den, som redan själv en gång tänkt de tankar den uttrycker – eller åtminstone likartade tankar. – Det är alltså ingen lärobok. – Dess nöje vore uppnått om den skänkte någon förstående läsare ett nöje. Boken behandlar de filosofiska problemen och visar – som jag tror – att formuleringen av dessa problem beror på ett missförstånd av vårt språks logik. Man kunde sammanfatta bokens hela mening i ungefär följande ord: Vad som alls låter sig sägas, kan sägas klart; och vad man icke kan tala om, därom måste man tiga.

Boken vill alltså dra en gräns för tänkandet, eller snarare: icke för tänkandet utan för tankarnas uttryck. Ty för att dra en gräns för tänkandet måste vi kunna tänka bägge sidorna om gränsen (vi måste alltså kunna tänka vad som icke kan tänkas).

Gränsen kommer alltså endast att kunna dras i språket, och vad som ligger bortom gränsen, är helt enkelt nonsens.

I vad mån mina strävanden sammanfaller med andra filosofers, skall jag icke bedöma. Ja, vad jag här har skrivit, gör överhuvudtaget inget anspråk på originalitet i enskildheterna. Därför anger jag icke heller några källor, eftersom det är mig likgiltigt om någon annan redan tänkt vad jag har tänkt.

(...)

Wien 1918.

L.W.