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Magical Efficacy, Selfhood and the Imaginal
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In addition to this mastery of symbolic correspondences, members are taught
to visualize geometric shapes for Hexagram and Pentagram rituals thought
to call upon elemental and planetary influences that can be invoked or
banished depending upon the desired change of state. Such states involve
qualitative elemental variations of Earth, Air, Fire, Water, along with
the planetary influences of Mercury, Venus, Mars, Saturn, Jupiter, The
Sun and Moon.

Figure 3: Godform of Horus
Alongside this, members learn to visualize god forms drawn from the Egyptian,
and Greek, pantheons, along with Kabalistic Angelogy. These Images are
vividly held in the imagination when calling upon the force and power
associated with their divine archetypes. The vibration of mantra like
god names is thought to then charge these images in the minds of practitioners
during ritual.
One Member explains the process of “putting on a God form”,
stating:
In it we imagine the form of our bodies transformed into that of the
Deity. With this transformation one assumes the character and attributes
of the Deity. When I practice my trade of typography I often put on the
god form of Thoth or Hermes. It makes my work faster and of higher quality.
In addition this individual felt that putting on such god forms help enrich
and expand his personal agency and efficacy in daily life, saying:
Through taking on the god form of RHK in the mode of the Father Tantras
I regularly deal with the stress and uncertainty of life. With His form
on I perceive the world through His viewpoint and share in His appreciation
of all of the senses. This deepens my appreciation of the moment and strengthens
my confidence in the face of anxiety
This person engaged in intentful acts of active imagination in order to
effect change in his personally felt sense of efficacy in work and life.
Variations on this practice are as numerous as the symbolic correspondences
concerned.
For example, a Ceremonial Magician seeking to develop assertiveness might
visualize himself as the Greek God Ares, god of war, while vibrating and
intoning the sound “Elohim Gibor” associated with the sphere
Geveruh, or severity. By aligning oneself with both the visual and sonic
dimensions of the symbolic correspondences, the practicing magicians seeks
to embody the archetype thought associated with his desired intent.
The statement “By names and images are all powers awoken and reawaken”
is a key statement in Golden Dawn ritual liturgy, and speaks to the idea
that magical efficacy resides in the ability to visualize images, and
empower these images through resonant vibrating of “words of power”
focused through acts of willed intent during ritual.
To quote the lodges leader and Hierophant again:
Names and images' are essences of those powers we wish present in
magick. By entertaining them in our psyches, and since those essences
are symbols that participate in the power that they symbolize, those powers
are also felt and thus become present. Will without imagination is aimless,
Imagination without will is anemic. Imagination is the lens through which
will is directed.
In these examples, the magician’s intentful visualization draws
upon specifically defined symbol sets in the attempt to enrich personal
agency and efficacy via the medium of the active imagination. It is clear
in the examples above that the magician engages the imagination with intentful
acts of personal definition through visualization in the practice of ceremonial
magick.
THE HALL AND THE NEOPHYTE RITUAL

Figure 4: Hall of the Neophyte
All of these elements are collectively brought together in the group process
of the various “Grade Rituals.” Each grade has its own ritual
structure, with members assigned officer positions, and taught to hold
various god forms drawn from the Egyptian Pantheon.
The foundational ritual for the Golden Dawn is known as Neophyte ceremony
and is the anchor of the order. This ritual is also the one used most
commonly in acts of practical magic.
In this ritual, lodge members take various roles, or offices for six months,
chosen biannually at the spring and Fall Equinox. Officers attempt to
memorize the scripts, and master embodiment of the various god forms as
they take their various stations in the hall.
A key element of the ritual involves the rich visual declaration of the
officers. They announce themselves with expressive authority to the lodge
while holding their self-defined images internally. For example at the
beginning of the neophyte ceremony the Hegemon announces herself with
rich visual definition:
My station is between the Two Pillars of Hermes and Solomon and my
face is towards the cubical Altar of the Universe. My duty is to watch
over the Gateway of the Hidden Knowledge for I am the reconciler between
Light and Darkness. I watch over the preparation of the Aspirant and assist
in his reception, and I lead him in the Path that conducts from Darkness
to Light. The White Color of my Robe is the color of Purity, my ensign
of office is a Feather-crowned scepter to symbolize balance which guides
and regulates life, and my Office symbolizes those higher aspirations
of the soul which should guide its action.
The Hiereus offers a darker image, representing the powers of contraction,
and the setting of the sun:
My station is on the Throne of the West and is a symbol of the increase
of Darkness and the decrease of Light and I am the Master of Darkness.
I keep the Gateway of the West and watch over the reception of the Aspirant
and over the Supporting Officers in the doing of their work. My black
Robe is an image of the Darkness that was upon the Face of the Waters.
I carry the Sword of Judgment and the Banner of the Evening Twilight,
which is the Banner of the West, and I am called Fortitude.
Along with the other officers, the hall itself is a rich visual, auditory,
and olfactory sensorium. With the black and white pillars, the cubicle
altar with the rose, salt, bread, and flame, the banners of east and west,
and the smell of incense, a sacred liminal space is created for this play
of the active imagination. In this space, the dais and temple officers
in their multicolored robes baring ornate, colorful scepters and wearing
symbolic lamens exist in a sacred sanctum. The lodge hall is a microcosm
of the universe wherein individuals, adorned, and imagining themselves
as gods, play out a sacred drama via the active imagination.
PANTHEACON
This February this ritual was performed at Pantheocon in
a special ceremony for the Neopagan community. Using the ritual of the
neophyte, the lodge consecrated and “charged” 200 silver dollar
coins as Talismans, and distributed them freely to community members to
support them in times of economic Hardship. The ritual was well attended
by over 100 Persons, and was well appreciated judging by comments following
the performance.
Though we have not tracked people’s success or failures with their
prosperity talismans, one member shared an amusing anecdote stating that
she used her one-dollar talisman to buy a lottery ticket that won her
$20 dollars. Not a bad rate of return…
This anecdote aside, members ascribe a sense of felt personal efficacy
and meaning in the practices of the Golden Dawn, and gain a sense of value
and authenticity from it in their daily lives.
MAGICKAL EFFICACY AND THE IMAGINAL
So whence does the sense of personal efficacy members ascribe
to the practice of ceremonial magick derive? Numerous folk theories abound.
Some lodge members conversant in consciousness studies speak of ritual
entrainment and visualization practices helping to induce synchronicities
that change the conditions of their lives.
Some look to Neurolinguistic programming’s notions of anchors, and
frames as way to discuss how magickal ritual and symbolism helps magicians
redefine their relationship to reality. Others pull from Rupert Sheldrake’s
notion of Morphogenic Fields, believing that magickal practice helps bend
and morph the habit-laden nature of information in space-time. Still,
others draw from lay understandings of Quantum Physics, particular the
work of Herbert Walker, who in his Paper, the Complete Quantum Mechanical
Anthropologist, gives a legitimization to esoteric practices by drawing
on Bells Theorem, and the notion that focused ritual helps reduced the
Signal to Noise ratio of the minds influence on reality.
Though these theories attempt to explain magick’s impact on the
external world, or perception of the world, they say little about the
felt sense of personal efficacy and agency as experienced by the magician
in the practice of ceremonial magick.
One ceremonial magician had this to say about his practice:
I think a lot of what magicians do is train themselves to accept certain
symbolic languages and then root around for answers in the various strata
of their psyches (and, therefore, of the universe itself) and interpret
what transpires through those symbols. We send and receive semaphore
with other planes of being, while, say—the shaman--actually sends
his spirit-self there.
Though this contrast of the mediating power of visual symbols in magic,
with the assumed more “direct” path of shamanism, belies a
misunderstanding of how heavily mediated shamanic practice is, the statement
nonetheless points to the intentful use of the active imagination via
symbolism as a key element in magick’s stated goal: “Bringing
about change in conformity with will.”
THE ACTIVE IMAGINATION IN DEPTH PSYCHOLOGY AND BEYOND
From Freud’s use of active fantasy, to Jung’s
emphasis on the active imagination, depth psychology has looked upon the
usage of the imagination as key element in psychodynamic processes and
the development of psychic wholeness.
Post Jungian Psychologist James Hillman expresses the importance of the
imagination in this regard writing,
Man is created as an image, and by means of his image.
Therefore, he appears first of all to the imagination so that
Perception of personality is first of all an imaginative act…
Since imagination forms us into our images, to perceive
A person, in essence we must look into his imagination
And see what fantasy is creating his reality (Hillman, 1989: 168).
For Hillman, the imagination is the means by which self-identity is built
up and maintained over time. The images we hold of ourselves shape and
frame the totality of our personhood.
To limit this understanding of the imagination to the intraphysic and
intrapersonal would be to reduce the meaning of the imagination in this
context however. Islamic Scholar of Sufism Henri, Corbin, who coined the
term imaginal, felt that the realm of the imagination served as an intermediary
interface, or bridge between the human world and the world of divine archetypes.
Following his Sufis mentors, he reified this realm as a domain of importance
on par, if not greater then physical “day world” of everyday
waking reality. For Corbin, this “Mundus Imaginalis” or world
of the Imaginal was an ontologically real domain of central importance
to the human condition. (Corbin 1971; Corbin, Bloom, and Manheim 1998)
Outside of the entertainment industry’s more recent attempts to
actively colonize the imagination, Western thought has largely denigrated
the imagination since the Enlightenment, and pushed it to the periphery
in the face of the specter of nomothetic positivism and the disembodied
descartian error (Tarnas 1993).
Anthropology has unfortunately followed suite. Aside from discussions
of the Imagination’s role in political elite’s attempt to
shape national identity consciousness (Anderson 1991), mainstream anthropology
has largely ignored the central aspect of the imagination in culture,
and its role in people’s selfhood.
For Corbin, the impact of the Imaginal in our development is directly
related to the importance we placed on it in reality. He writes,
Everything will depend on the degree of the reality we impute to this
imagined universe and by that same token, on the real power we impute
to the Imagination that imagines it; both terms depend in turn on the
idea that we form of creation and the creative at (Corbin 1972: 180)
We might be wise to consider our own attitudes towards the imagination,
and the degree to which the values of our overly rationalistic culture
make us devalue this domain as “just the imagination.”
IMAGINAL AND DREAMS
It would seem, then, that a close relationship might exist between acts
of active imagination in ritual magick, and the practice of lucid dreaming.
Carlos Castaneda’s creative imagining of the Yacqui Sorcerer Don
Juan’s teaching on lucid dream is a great example of fictive power’s
ability to produce change via tapping the power of the imaginal (Noel
1997). Numerous people have looked to the Castaneda books as guidelines
for their own processes of self-development, and this is a tribute to
Castaneda’s sorcerer like ability to induce change in others through
the power of his own imagination.
In the recently released movie Waking Life, lucid dreaming takes on an
almost magical quality directly tied to personal evolution. Though this
notion is directly understood in facets of Tibetan Buddhism (Tenzin Wangyal
1998), many ceremonial magicians present their own personal spin on it:
There is clearly a connection between some states of consciousness
that have heretofore been called magickal and lucid dreaming. In
fact, it is now believed by some brain scientists that so-called "astral-projection"
is a state of lucid dreaming in which the dreamer is aware not only
of his dreaming but of the entire contents of his waking life, just as
they would be if awake. That doesn't explain the information gathering
aspect, however. I think it points to the fact that the brain channels
consciousness but does not in any way produce it. With effort (or
injury, organicity, drugs, illness) the brain can channel consciousness
differently--perhaps Huxley's "cerebral reducing valve" can
be opened for a wider flow . . .
Through path workings, astral projection, and other methods, ceremonial
magicians seek to actively master this domain of their own consciousness.
Process psychologist Arnold Mindell’s notion of the dream body provides
an interesting parallel here to the concept of the Imaginal.
The dreambody is a term for total, multi-channeld personality…
If you amplify a dream symbol, the process that results is the
Real you…The dreambody is the part of you that is trying
To grow and develop in this life.” (Mindell 1993:46)
By mastering this dreambody, the ceremonial magician is tapping the full
spectrum of possibilities inherit in their multifaceted personhood by
intentfully manipulating symbols in the twilight space of their ritualized
lucid dream like state of consciousness.
Like the Shaman, the Ceremonial Magician seeks to tap and master the realm
of the Imaginal, or the Dream body, in order to intentfully cultivate
a sense of selfhood and agency outside the frames of everyday consensus,
or mundane reality, and ultimately to master that relationship in a way
that fully expresses the magician’s felt sense of personal purpose
and expressive possibility. Efficacy in ceremonial magick is the mastery
of the dreamlike space of the imaginal realm through the active and intentful
use of the imagination.
CONCLUSION
Anthropology, heir to the enlightenment’s overemphasis on instrumental
reason and cognitive literalism, has been as guilty as the other social
sciences in its contempt for the imagination. To correct this we might
do the world at large a service in our ethnographic work by heading the
statement:
Whatever the reasons we adopt a belief or a set of beliefs; they implant
an operational framework of mental energies within the mind. Every belief
is stored as a guideline according to which you relate to all of reality."
(Vance 1990:114)
Among other things, the current state of the world, speaks to a dearth
of Imaginative alternatives. War and its blockheaded literalism is a death
of the imaginal and its play of possibilities. The imaginal is the mythopoetic
realm of fantasy textured with the richness of metaphor. In the face of
the War machine’s blockheaded modernist rationality, what Allen
Ginsburg called Moloch in his Poem Howl, some choose to march in protest
with placards, and others vision alternatives with their dream journals.
These need not be mutually exclusive. Remember the voice on the edge of
twilight, for she speaks of the mystery, and the possibility of another
world.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Anderson, Benedict (1991) Imagined Communities: Reflections on the
Origin and Spread of Nationalism. New York: Verso.
Carrithers, Michael, Collins, Steven, Lukes, Stevin, eds. (1985) The
Category of the Person. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Corbin, Henry (1971) The Man of Light in Iranian Sufisim: New Lebanon,
NY: Omega Publishing. (1972) Mundus Imaginalis or the imaginary
and the imaginal. Spring: 1-19.
Corbin, Henri, Bloom, Harold, & Manheim, Ralph, (1998) Alone With
The Alone: Creative Imagination In The Sufism of Ibn Arabi. Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press.
Hilman, James (1989) A Blue Fire. New York: Harper Perenial.
Holland, Dorothy, Skinner, Debra, Lachicotte Jr., William, Cain, Carole,
(1998) Identity and Agency in Cultural Worlds, Cambridge, MA: Harvard
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Jackson, Michael (1998) Minima Ethnographica: Intersubjectivity and
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Noel, Daniel C.(1997) The Soul of Shamanism: Western Fantasies, Imaginal
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Tarnas, Richard (1993) The Passion of the Western Mind: Understanding
The Ideas That Have Shaped Our Worldview. New York: Ballantine Books.
Vance, Bruce (1990) Mindscape: Exploring The Reality of Thought Forms.
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Walker, Evan H. (1974) The Complete Quantum Mechanical Anthropologist.
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Wangyal, Tenzin (1998) The Tibetan Yoga of Sleep and Dreams. Boulder,
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