The List
-
@Shunyata said
"Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law,
@JPF said
"But destroying books ... is just unethical.
I used the Bible she gave me as kindling."Uh huh. I see.
There are pearls contained therein if one can but see through the dogma and past one's revulsion for the promulgators of the book."
Necessity is the mother of invention, friend. If you were living in an uninsulated forest shack all winter, you might have to make (not so) difficult choices as well. Besides, it was a bastardized NIV translation. I should have used it to wipe my arse.
But yes, I did contradict myself--like every other great religious teacher. And, for just twelve easy installments of $6.66, you can own, today, my book: "Contradiction: A Forgotten Wisdom." It also makes great kindling.
And don't get me started on the Bible, dude. My mother used to make me write out whole chapters of Proverbs for minor infractions: like breathing, or putting rat poison in my grandmother's coffee. It's personal.
"It's not like he burned the last copy..."
-
"It's not like he burned the last copy..."
bibles are very good for kindling, so are last supper paintings, and rugs, hand made last supper quilts with jesus christ pillows and blankets and anything on the related subject that can be set on fire
"JPF wrote:But destroying books ... is just unethical.
I used the Bible she gave me as kindling."lol, burning a bible, unethical? Naw!
once, me and my wife, along with her stepson cleaned out this house that had so much christian stuff stacked in piles we didnt know what to do with ourselves, so we set up a bon fire. We burned over 20 bibles + other countless other items on the subject, quite a big toasty bonfire as i danced in circles around the thing.
Yes bibles are good for kindling, and rolling dubies... hehe
-
Seems like burning any book would only have the effect of "burning" its importance to you (even negative importance) into your subconscious.
I've always wondered the same thing about Crowley's comment about TBOL:
"It is wise to destroy this copy... after the first reading..."
-
@Jim Eshelman said
"
@Jim Eshelman said
"I recommend you physically acquire these books. They're intended to be the foundation of a library."It seems to me that if someone is planning to devote the entirety of the rest of their lives to a singular pursuit, acquring basic startup materials shouldn't get in their way. Admittedly, it does take a while to gather some of these things.
Nonetheless... thanks for posting that link. It will surely help some folks."
Yes, I agree, there's nothing like having a real book.
I can't read anything very long online, and to print out an entire book on my printer, is clumsy,It's frustrating, though, that so many books are out of print. "Magick Without Tears" "The Vision and the Voice" and others....
-
@Alias55A said
"lol, burning a bible, unethical? Naw!
once, me and my wife, along with her stepson cleaned out this house that had so much christian stuff stacked in piles we didnt know what to do with ourselves, so we set up a bon fire. We burned over 20 bibles + other countless other items on the subject, quite a big toasty bonfire as i danced in circles around the thing.
Yes bibles are good for kindling, and rolling dubies... hehe "
A great way to welcome the New Aeon: burn Bibles! We should have a National Thelemite Bible-Burning Gathering.
I mean, c'mon, the Fundamentalists burnt the Beatles' records by the zillions. If they can burn good music, why can't we burn outdated, badly translated literature? The Dead Sea scrolls are one thing, but our American translations of the Bible are hopelessly corrupt; and they translate "Elohim" as a masculine singular, when it is really a feminine plural.
It's up to us to eliminate such sexist propoganda.
"Seems like burning any book would only have the effect of "burning" its importance to you (even negative importance) into your subconscious.
I've always wondered the same thing about Crowley's comment about TBOL:
"It is wise to destroy this copy... after the first reading...""
Anybody done this? raises hand
I don't know why they put the Tunis Comment with Liber AL. Crowley was obviously trippin' out about something. I heard that some girl killed herself after reading the book, but I'm not certain of this. At any rate, I've yet to meet a Thelemite who takes the Tunis Comment seriously.
Luckily I only burnt the photocopied take-home Liber AL they give out at the Temple. Burnt nicely, I might add.
-
" A great way to welcome the New Aeon: burn Bibles! We should have a National Thelemite Bible-Burning Gathering.
I mean, c'mon, the Fundamentalists burnt the Beatles' records by the zillions. If they can burn good music, why can't we burn outdated, badly translated literature? The Dead Sea scrolls are one thing, but our American translations of the Bible are hopelessly corrupt; and they translate "Elohim" as a masculine singular, when it is really a feminine plural.
It's up to us to eliminate such sexist propoganda.
"
Have fun, but I couldn't bring myself to burn a book, too much of a censorship message.
I do engage in a practice called "altered books" - I would alter a bible, it's more satisfying to me, though admittedly a lot more work than burning one.
-
"I couldn't bring myself to burn a book, too much of a censorship message."
I know exactly what you are talking about - BUT when I read this I was immediately stricken by how "old world" this sounded. I can't think of how much crap goes in my computer's trash bin everyday without a second thought, but just because some hack had his words published then all of a sudden the material object gathers this majesty simply because it's a book. But print that same story in a magazine and who cares if it gets set ablaze. Or make it a digital file and care even less. Books - the intellectual sacred cow?
-
Yikes!
This whole book burning talk has my skin crawling with goose bumps......I have worked for over 20 years in different libraries, public, private and acedemic. I have cleaned out at least 5 estates that I kid you not were almost floor to ceiling books. I myself have a collection of probably almost 5,000 hard copies.
I have recently been put in charge of our local library's yearly book sale. Through out the year the library recieves donations of books from patrons. We must sort and categorize, alphabetize and present the books for the annual fund raiser (last year they sold almost $10,000 worth of second hand books, and library discards).
You would be amazed at teh books that people give away. Some are rare and collectable that sell for quite a lot of money, while others go right intothe recycle bin as the spines are broken, water damaged, old outdated science texts.....Librarians are actually taught how to weed out collections and purchase books that will not become outdated.
I would like you all to know that here in the USA, most public libraries participate in what is called Inter Library Loan. Which means that all those out of print books you want to read, maybe borrowed (possibly with a fee, depending on the text) from where ever the book is held. I have read some very hard to find books that way, Many of my original AC reading came this way, as my library had him in Reference, which meant I could not take him home with me. If any one would like more information please ask, or just stop int to your local library. (yes I am plugging, but hey it is a public service announcement;) There is nothing like having the hard copy in front of you. Unfortunately, I will also let you know that esoteric and occult texts are one of the most popular books stolen/lost from libraries, unfortunalety this means many libraries will not lend them out, and keep them behind the desk. one rotten apple, so to speak can spoil the whole barrel.
I am working on a spell to bring to me rare and collectable books. I seem to have a great knack for having things fall into my path, so I figured I should work with the universe on this.
Any ideas on how to bring some Crowley texts? or others?? I do realize that death is pretty much the only way m ost people will part with certain books, as well as moving, or illness. I am not doing this to capitalize on them, meaning I am not intending to turn around and make a buck, I just dont want to see them end up in the recycle bin.I dont see burning a book as the most effective way to transmute its energy. Yes you get off on the flames, and the warmth, and the ego stroke, but I think proper recycling is much better:) Turn the crudy books back into pulp, and let them transform into toliet paper, or Kleenex:).
I for one would get more satisfaction out of knowing that I was wiping .......ok I am a lady and wont go there...but I think you get my drift. -
Well, I will put in another plug for altered books,
There was a library (I forget where) some assh*le homophone defaced all of the LGBT books, every single one in their collection. So the library, took all these defaced books, and put out a call to artists to use them for altered books. They sent out a book to each artist, who decorated it however they liked. Then the artists sent them back to the library and there was a show.
I didn't get to see the show, but I loved the concept.
I hate it when people steal or deface library books.
On the other hand, I have read that public libraries will discard books if not enough people check them out. And yes, the pulp fiction gets checked out more often than the rare classics. I read an essay by a librarian complaining how libraries will discard out of print classics because no one is checking out the books. Another friend of mine is a librarian, she often rescues books from the trash bin.
Some libraries have a little shop where they sell the discarded books.
-
@Veronica said
"Yikes!
This whole book burning talk has my skin crawling with goose bumps......"Agreed. I don't care what the book is, only that it was burned because of its content (instead of, say, being radioactive and infested with plague).
Although, come to think of it, those two scenarios are pretty much the same: In either case, someone is concerned that the contents are infectious and will spread!
Bad ideas speak for themselves just as much as good ideas. Let people decide on their own.
-
@Jim Eshelman said
"Although, come to think of it, those two scenarios are pretty much the same: In either case, someone is concerned that the contents are infectious and will spread!"
In my case I was actually rather cold.
The fact that it was a Bible was only an excuse for humor. I also burnt lots of other material deserving censorship, like George Orwell, and a Greek dictionary.
To tell the truth, this winter I was forced to burn my entire library (sans two or three Crowley books and my Tarot deck) for fuel. This allowed me to take an amused stance towards material things in general.
All this you see is only so much dust.
-
Ah, now, for fuel changes the picture! Sorry you had to do that... and a real shame about the books. But burning for physical survival is a whole 'nuther thing than burning for the preservation of intellectual prejudices.
-
@Jim Eshelman said
"Ah, now, for fuel changes the picture! Sorry you had to do that... and a real shame about the books. But burning for physical survival is a whole 'nuther thing than burning for the preservation of intellectual prejudices."
It's okay. Out with the old and in with the new!
Burning books for sport was only fun when I used to do strange drugs.
-
Where were you living that you had to burn books for fuel?
-
@Tornado93 said
"Where were you living that you had to burn books for fuel?"
I understand that perhaps California is considered the land of eternal sunshine. For the most part 'tis true, but the woods and the canyons can be full of things unheard of to most Californians: like frost, and rain, and hunger. Only those with True Grit venture into the deepest confines of the California wilderness...
Seriously: I dwell in Palo Colorado Canyon, in Big Sur. (google it) My cabin is perched (semi-precariously) under a secluded ridge, in the thick of a chilly redwood forest. When I'm not killing rats with blunt household objects, I'm usually spending up to an hour gathering and lighting firewood, which is wet more often than not. Temperatures reach the lower 40's during winter. Not life or death, sure, but the genius who built my cabin decided to use thin, floor-to-ceiling windows and little insulation. The place is heated by a single wood stove, and when it's been raining for two weeks straight that wet kindling takes forever to light.
Vacation rentals start at $300 a week. PM me for details.