Showing posts with label Æon of Ma’at. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Æon of Ma’at. Show all posts

Friday 12 May 2023

Another.




The emotion of Love is an act of 
personal identification with an 
external Other, when the awareness of that person is 
so overwhelming that any 
illusion of separation between 
The Two collapses

There is a reason why 
the biblical term for 
physical Love was 
To Know’ someone. 

As such it is distinctly different from the isolating Individualism so dominant in the rest of the century. What it is not, however, is 
an easily extendable organisational principle 
that can readily be applied 
to Society as a whole. 

Christianity had done its best 
to promote Love during the 
previous two centuries. 
The Church ordered 
its followers to Love, 
through commandments 
such as ‘Love Thy Neighbour’, 
as if this was reasonable 
or possible

But ordering people to Love 
was about as realistic 
as ordering people 
not to Love. 

Love just doesn’t work that way, 
and it doesn’t inspire confidence 
in The Church that it 
seemed to think it did

It is noticeable that the more individualistic strains of American Christianity, which bucked the global trend of declining congregations, put less emphasis on that faith’s original teachings about Love and Social Justice. 

The love culture of the hippies was brought low by the egofuelling cocaine culture of the 1970s and 80s. Attempts at describing a non-individualistic perspective were dismissed for being drug-induced, and therefore false. The hippies’ stumbling attempts to describe their new awareness had been too vague and insubstantial to survive these attacks and they were written off as embarrassing failures by the punks. Yet slowly, over the decades that followed, many of their ideas seeped into the cultural mainstream. 

One way to understand the Twentieth Century’s embrace of Individualism is to raise a child 
and wait until he or she 
becomes a teenager. 

A younger child accepts their place in The Family hierarchy, but as soon as they become a teenager their attention shrinks from the wider group and focuses on themselves. Every incident or conversation becomes filtered through the ever-present analysis of ‘What about Me?’ Even the most loving 
and caring child will exhibit thoughtlessness and self-obsession. The concerns of others become minor factors in their thinking, 
and attempts to highlight this 
are dismissed by the 
catch-all argument, 
It’s not fair.’

There is a neurological basis for this 
change. Neuroscientists report that adolescents are more self-aware and self-reflective than 
prepubescent children. 

Aleister Crowley may have been on to something when he declared that The Patriarchal Age was ending and that The ‘Third Æon’ 
we were entering would 
be The Age of 
The Crowned and 
Conquering Child.