Technological
Paradigms for the Modification of Consciousness and Reality in Magick
Stuff
that works:
Gods,
demons, memetics and the rise of Transhumanism
From hypnosis and NLP to electromagnetic brain stimulation
From lucid dreaming to subliminal conditioning and brainwashing
From mind control to the paranormal
From modern séance techniques to remote viewing and psychokinesis
From science to magick – changing the past and inter-dimensional communications
From UFOs and ultra-terrestrials to computational demonology
And the machines and drugs to make it happen
From hypnosis and NLP to electromagnetic brain stimulation
From lucid dreaming to subliminal conditioning and brainwashing
From mind control to the paranormal
From modern séance techniques to remote viewing and psychokinesis
From science to magick – changing the past and inter-dimensional communications
From UFOs and ultra-terrestrials to computational demonology
And the machines and drugs to make it happen
This
is a detailed sampler from my book “TechnoMage” - ISBN: 978-0-9567587-0-5
Chapter
1 Semantics
and Spells
Chapter
2 Science and Magick
Chapter
3 Psi and the Occult
Chapter
4 Gods and Daemons
Chapter
5 Hypnosis
Chapter
6 Mind Tools
Chapter
7 Subliminals
Chapter
8 Psi and Science
Chapter
9 The Electromagnetic Domain
Chapter
10 Machines
Chapter
11 The Great Work
Chapter
12 Fermi, Doom and Simulation
Appendices
Anchoring refers to the tendency for any one element of an experience to bring back the entire experience. An anchor is the stimulus that results in the conditioned response.
An anchor can be in any sensory format. That is, it can be a word, a sound, a piece of music, a smell, a picture, a gesture, a touch or a taste. Anchors are created all the time by the association of various stimuli to emotional states, some good and some bad. It might be the music we listened to that accompanied our first romantic kiss, or perhaps the smell of summer when we were young. Or maybe it's the sight of a flashing blue light that could trigger a series of bad memories and flashbacks to traumatic events. It's the reason TV programs have signature tunes and adverts have jingles and slogans. They are all trying to evoke a particular feeling in the shortest possible time by “pushing your buttons” as the saying goes. From our point of view we want to be able to deliberately set up anchors in both ourselves and others either openly or covertly in order to trigger preset states or responses. The trigger itself should generally satisfy the following criteria:
Chapter
6
Mind
Tools
Now
we know something of the hypnotic state and how to induce it we can
move on to examining its uses in some detail, including those uses
that are not spoken of in polite company. The key to much of what
follows are the notion of anchoring and conditioning.
Anchoring
Anchoring refers to the tendency for any one element of an experience to bring back the entire experience. An anchor is the stimulus that results in the conditioned response.
An anchor can be in any sensory format. That is, it can be a word, a sound, a piece of music, a smell, a picture, a gesture, a touch or a taste. Anchors are created all the time by the association of various stimuli to emotional states, some good and some bad. It might be the music we listened to that accompanied our first romantic kiss, or perhaps the smell of summer when we were young. Or maybe it's the sight of a flashing blue light that could trigger a series of bad memories and flashbacks to traumatic events. It's the reason TV programs have signature tunes and adverts have jingles and slogans. They are all trying to evoke a particular feeling in the shortest possible time by “pushing your buttons” as the saying goes. From our point of view we want to be able to deliberately set up anchors in both ourselves and others either openly or covertly in order to trigger preset states or responses. The trigger itself should generally satisfy the following criteria:
-
It
must be specific or the subject will not sensitize to it.
-
It
must be relatively unusual or the constant triggering will result in
desensitization.
-
When
it is being set up it must be applied intermittently, or again
desensitization will occur and render it ineffective.
-
It must be anchored to a unique, specific and prompt reaction otherwise its effect will be diluted across many responses.
-
The reinforcements of an anchor should have a break between them.
Reviewed
by Dave Lee,
one of the founders of Chaos Magick.
"In some ways, this might be the most important book on magic published for years.
...
It is also highly recommended for anyone who wants new ideas for their magical practice; my copy still bristles with post-it notes, where I've marked things I want to try out. Along with a lot of ideas that force me to think, that is the best sign of all for how good a book is. "
"In some ways, this might be the most important book on magic published for years.
...
It is also highly recommended for anyone who wants new ideas for their magical practice; my copy still bristles with post-it notes, where I've marked things I want to try out. Along with a lot of ideas that force me to think, that is the best sign of all for how good a book is. "
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