Written around 1950, these essays are now, decades later, still strikingly prophetic. His introductory essays on magick and witchcraft are classics of lucidity. This volume makes available for the first time all of Parsons’ surviving essays, edited by his wife and student, Cameron, in collaboration with Frater Superior Hymenaeus Beta, the head of the O.T.O.
John Whiteside Parsons (born Marvel Whiteside Parsons and published as Jack Parsons), was an American rocket propulsion researcher at the California Institute of Technology. He was one of the principal founders of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the Aerojet Corp. He was also an occultist and one of the first Americans to take a keen interest in the writings of English author and Thelema's founder Aleister Crowley.
Was Parsons nuts? Yes. Was Parsons a proven genius? Yes. This book was strange because I took some of it to heart but completely left the rest on the page where it belonged.
The third and final sections were for me the most memorable. I found the feminist nature of the writing to be surprisingly refreshing in its poetic nature. Parsons wrote this book in 1946 before the feminist movement of the 1960's; it was if he was predicting the future. The rise of the woman warrior, her fall and subsequent getting back to her feet. He shows no real agenda or bias in his writing other than his heavy feminist leanings which makes this a great piece of work. And it is an even more interesting read if one knows of Parsons background in work and play.
I had to read this essay online since the book is out of print. How such an amazing work could be out of print and unavailable (along with all of Parsons other writings), is beyond me. The man was a genius and hopefully the tv show Strange Angel will help get his written work in published form some day soon.
A wonderful book and one of the first on the occult that I encountered.
I remember going into an esoteric bookstore and asking for a book on occult magick of some sort, really having no idea what I was talking about. The goth working there sagely, with intimidating hair, immediately walked over and pulled this book out of the shelf with such complete authority that it was like, buy this shit or go away and die. I think after that she pulled out Book Four! Oh guck! I'm wrong, it was Book Four she pulled out! By Crowley, a good but predictable choice! I found this one myself, same day, same store. Never mind.
Just when I think I am going mad, completely insane, out of my mind, I always find out about someone who has gone the next step. This is both a thing of relief and sad. Relief because I know I have been vindicated by the thought process I had channeled. Sad because I am not the only one. However, it is always nice to have a voice that can give company. Freedom is a two edged sword is a brilliant essay, one I should have picked up a long time ago. I agree with everything and can already see the extensions for the ideas discussed in it. The essay came at the right time for me, I am about to make some consequential decisions and this essay gives me confidence to carry them out.
"Nothing is of its nature, evil-- and nothing is of its nature, good. Evil is only excess; good is simply balance. All things are subject to abuse and likewise susceptible to beneficial use. Balance does not consist in denial or excess in indulgence. Balance can only be obtained by exceeding. The elemental forces in man's nature are so tremendous that they can only be balanced by an ultimate self-expression. To place limitations and restrictions on this nature is to build a wall of plaster around a sun. If we clip an eagles' wings or feed carrots to a lion we will not uplift or improve either species. The fundamental purpose of religion is to attain an identity with a power which we believe to be greater than ourselves, whose omnipotence and immortality we can share. Having achieved some sense of this identity, we then feel that we can cope with problems and attain ends with more confidence. The reliance on religion as well as the reliance on property can indicate a lack of self-reliance.
We ourselves create this 'God of Power'. It is from our own individual 'self' that his power is drawn and this self is greater than any god which it creates. Therefore to know ourselves is the highest form of wisdom and to believe in ourselves is the highest form of faith. Science which seeks to know and art which seeks to interpret are two forms of love which constitute the only availing way of worship. That these two greatest expressions of the human spirit should be subservient to religion, politics, nationalism and war is the ultimate blasphemy."
Absolutely brilliant. It’s so funny that people have painted Parsons as some sort of Libertarian (re: Tea Party) type of political occultist when much of this book would lean much more towards Socialism. Yet even trying to put him in such a box itself doesn’t work. His ideas expressed here are incredibly nuanced and complex, I think it’s best to go into this book with no expectations and just let the man speak for himself. His concepts of The Witchcult and how Babalon and Thelema would lead into this more Nature oriented paganism parallels well with what Gardner and Valiente were going for and si even if Ceremonial Magick or Rocket Science aren’t your bag, I think there is lots to gleam from this short little collection.
Do yourself a favor though, if you can find his essays online, do so cause the price(s) that this collection can go for will definitely stand in the way of lots of folks getting this valuable insight.
One should read it together with Liber 49, "Babalon Working". Was the "channeled" "penelous flame" just only a grammatical mistake, to be corrected in "Freedom is a Two Edged Sword"?
A really interesting, very progressive and in many ways prescient essay given the context in which it was written: 1940s America. Perhaps the most fascinating thing about this writing is its definition of "liberal" and how starkly it conflicts with our use of the word today.
I read this through Scribd, as an eBook. Scribd has now become a pay service for certain titles, but I think I was able to finish it because I started it before the change-over. Physical copies are a bit pricey at the moment, so I opted for the eBook. Anyway, this is a great treatise on liberal philosophy, written in the 1950s. I suspect Parsons would be shocked to see how many freedoms have eroded since that time. Maybe not, though, as he seemed to have a good handle on how the government and the press were colluding, even then. It's nice-n-short, too, coming in at 30-odd pages.
Jack Parsons was a rocket scientist, an occultist and a member of Crowley's magical order. His eloquent writings on the human condition convey passion, intelligence and deep conviction. "Freedom Is A Two-Edged Sword of which one edge is liberty and the other responsibility, on which both edges are exceedingly sharp".
Something are worth to fight and die for. True freedom lies in our divine will. We must excercise this and these are the key to win this fight.
Interesting. A quick and easy read. I read this after hearing Robert Anton Wilson talking about it and singing its praises. Didn’t offer anything that new to me but I agree with pretty much most of it.