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The Caretaker
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THE DIVINE PYMANDER: v1.2

BACKGROUND

https://www.curezone.org/upload/PDF/tatuoscuro666/Hermetica_G_R_S_Mead.pdf

https://archive.org/stream/pdfy-jcWLRBnyXg-DUcMH/The%20Corpus%20Hermeticum_djvu.txt

https://sacred-texts.com/gno/th2/index.htm

HIS FIRST BOOK

THE POEMANDER

THE THIRD BOOK THE HOLY SERMON, fragmented

THE FOURTH BOOK, The Cup, or Monad

THE FIFTH BOOK - That god is not manifest and yet most manifest

THE SIXTH BOOK - That in god alone is Good.

THE SEVENTH BOOK - His Secret Sermon in the Mount of REgeneration, and the Profession of Silence

THE SECRET SONG

THE EIGHTH BOOK - The greatest evil in man is the not knowing god.

THE NINTH BOOK - A universal Sermon to Asclepius

THE TENTH BOOK - The Mind to Hermes

THE ELEVENTH BOOK - Of the Common Mind

THE TWELFTH BOOK - His Crater or Monas

THE THIRTEENTH BOOK - OF Sense and Understanding

THE FOURTEENTH BOOK - Of Operation and Sense

THE FIFTEENTH BOOK - Of Truth to His Son Tat

THE SIXTEENTH BOOK - That None of the Things that Are can Perish

THE SEVENTEENTH BOOK - To Asclepius, to be Truly Wise

What is the Divine Pymander, why should you care?

Well, its a mystical text from around 100 AD that informed huge swathes of western esoteric tradition.

How so?

Well, it defined much of how magic is talked about, defines it goals.

Is that good?

Kinda? There are good parts and bad parts.

What are the good parts?

A focus on knowledge and understanding, not necessarily a scholarly tradition, but a meditative one

That is good. What are the bad parts?

Well, how it treats the body. It frames the body as something to be transcended, something evil.

Oh thats bad, people should make peace with their body.

Indeed!

REVIEW START:

What is the Divine Pymander of Hermes Trismegistus, and why should you care?

The year is 100AD and it’s a great year for soup. Emperor Trajan just became consul of a Roman Empire that is Romeing as hard as it will ever Rome. The Egyptians have been Rome’d, Judea has been Rome’d, most of Europe has been Rome’d. The Mediterranean sea is essentially a Roman lake teeming with Roman trade ships. Roman chefs have access to a mind-boggling range of ingredients. The soups they were able to create were strange, experimental, and delicious for those with a sophisticated enough palette to appreciate them.

Religion worked the same way.

The Divine Pymander by Hermes Trismegistus is a foundational text of Hermetica, a religio-philosophical school of thought attributed to the legendary Hermes Trismegistus, a syncretic combination of the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian god Thoth, whose name means “Thrice Great.” The Hemetics pull ideas from Platonism, Stoicism, classical Egyptian magical thought, and a dash of pre-rabbinical Judaism. The result is a body of esoteric work that is scholarly, meditative, and interested in understanding both the natural world and the nature of the mind.

At this point a reasonable person would be asking “But who cares? Why is any of this important?” The fact of the matter is that the Hermetic school defined much of the language of magic. The way that Hermes talks about magic, the terms he uses, the points he makes, still affect how magic is discussed today.

The Pymander is framed as a dialogue between Hermes and his three students: Asclepius, Tat, and Ammon. For the time, this format would have conferred a certain scholarly gravitas associated with the likes of Plato and Aristotle. The Pymander is second to none when it comes to well-structured occult texts. The first lines describe a man minding his own business, pondering the world, when suddenly his thoughts are elevated to a divine state, as Hermes speaks directly to him. This is framed as something that can happen to anyone, as if Hermes elevated this person's consciousness while they were waiting in line at a grocery store. Nowadays, occult texts save the overt magical events for the end of the text, once they know the reader is on board. The Pymander shows us a communication with divinity under relatively normal circumstances. The effect is strange yet gripping, the reader wants to learn more.

Within the first few pages, the reader is given a goal: “[To such] my presence doth become an aid, and straightway they gain gnosis of all things.” For those that don’t know, “Gnosis” is a greek word that translates as “knowledge” or “awareness” and refers to a sort of direct knowledge of spiritual truth. Now, divine knowledge is all well and good, but what’s it good for? Riddle me this O Hermes, can gnosis get me a boyfriend? Will it give me a better credit score? What are the stakes here? Hermes elaborates: “make of Ignorance the sharer of your board; get ye from out the light of Darkness, and take your part in Deathlessness, forsake Destruction!” There we have it. Gain divine knowledge, get immortality. Simple as pie, but as I am sure we are all aware, God makes for one hell of a complicated pie. How does one know god? Where would one even start? Can god make a pie so complicated that even he cannot comprehend it?

Well, maybe! We can’t ask God directly, but we can study the pie in the hopes that we may understand the baker. This is where Hermes describes some qualities of the pie in the form of a list of axioms. These are descriptions of the laws of the physical world. Simple rules like “Every essence is immortal. Every essence is unchangeable. Everything that is, is double.” These would read today like “An object at rest remains at rest, and an object in motion remains in motion.” If God designed the world like a clockmaker designs a clock, Hermes is asking us to look at the blueprints in an attempt to understand God’s divine thought process.

This is where we are introduced to two key concepts in the Pymander: The hermetic conception of morality, and the hermetic conception of the body.

Before we begin discussion of Hermetic moral philosophy, It is important to understand that within the Hermetic worldview there is actually a hierarchy of gods. This is a massive Gnostic rabbit hole, but for the sake of simplicity I am going to confine the discussion to the terms the Pymander uses. If the world is a vast clock, God drew up the blueprints, but a second, lesser god called The Workman built the clock, and maintains the clock when it needs fine tuning. Hermes also exists at some nonspecific point in this hierarchy, given the title of “Mind Shepherd.”

God is the source of all good, but God is not the world. Thus goodness is diffused through the world like milk into coffee; present in all things, but concentrated in some and dilute in others. In this metaphor, God made coffee, and then poured some of himself into it. The coffee, being separate from God, is inherently evil. Man is made of coffee, and thus inherently evil without the presence of god. Hermes roots all of this in a discussion of the platonic elements, so to make a long story short:

Earth / The Body / People = Separate from God / Sinful / Evil

Fire / The Soul = Linked to God / Divine / Good

This brings us to the crux of the text: The mind. Like many of the natural philosophers of his day, Trismegistus is obsessed with the mind. Where does it live in the body? How does it work? Why is it that only humans seem to have one?

Trismegistus starts at the bottom: With the platonic elements. Where the body is earthy and the soul is fiery, the mind is both watery and airy. The word this translation uses is “moist” but it could easily be translated as foggy, misty, or stormy. Trismegestus conceptualizes the mind as a sort of barrier or insulator between the earth and the soul, a layer of protection that keeps the soul from snuffing out on the body, and the body from being cooked to ash by the soul. Poetic, but also important for the moral philosophy of hermetica. “The strife of piety is to know god and injure no man, and in this way it becomes the mind.” The mind is the thing making all of the choices. It finds itself sandwiched between the base instincts of the body and the moral desires of the soul. Rather than attempt to reconcile the two, Trismegistus asks that we reject the desires of the body entirely, focusing all choice upon satiating the soul. If god is the ultimate good, the only good choice in any circumstance must involve god.

But where is God anyway? We’ve been hearing quite a bit about this god character, but he doesn’t seem to do much within hermetica besides hang around in the background. Where’s all the fun stuff? God hasn’t turned a single person into salt. The fourth chapter of the book details God sending an angel down with a vessel of water. “As many then as understood the Herald’s tidings and doused themselves in Mind, became partakers in the Gnosis.” While this is a beautiful metaphor, it is kneecapped somewhat by the following line. For it is here thatAnd here we see the serpent in the orchard of every good wizard, the hair in the magical hamburger, the fed in the book club of arcane history: Arrogance. Trismegistus describes those who immersed themselves in the vessel to be “Perfect Men” drawing a clear value distinction between those who partook in gnosis, and those who did not. You either bathed in the special angel water and you’re cool, or you didn’t, and you’re lame.

But where do we go from here? We know the mind is important, but how does it work? This is a question that scientists still wrestle with today, but Trismegistus makes solid headway given the information he has access to.

However! Before we do that, we have to talk about Chakras. Ever heard someone talking about their third eye? Ajna is the sixth primary chakra in the Hindu tradition. It is located on the brow and deals with the subconscious mind, intuition, communication,and an individual's direct link to Brahman. Now, western magic doesn’t tend to deal with a direct link to Brahman, but the idea of the “Third Eye” is quite common. In fact, the way that westerners describe the Third Eye doesn’t seem to match up with the actual definition of the third eye at all.

What westerners are actually describing is a concept from the Pymander that Trismegistus calls the “Eyes of the Mind” or the “Mind Sight” depending on the translation. The human mind’s ability to imagine things and make them real is similar to how God imagined the world and constructed it. Western magic considers imagination to be divine, and deeply magical.

Trismegistus expands on the idea of imagination and divinity with a discussion of thought and sense, summarizing his conception of the mind with “If the mind is divine, and god is divine, and god can do whatever he wants, the mind can do whatever it wants.”  As we all know: Anything is possible if you use your imagination.

10 is the Aeonology shit that deals with the nature of will and freedom

11 is where shit gets interesting, its the whole discussion on the nature of the mind

12 is the whole bit thats like “why did god give men a mind, because it pleased him lol”

13 is sense and understanding and the mind

14-15 is the thing about truth and god and the nature of change

16 deals with death so does 8

17 is the big closer

Throughout all of this, Trismegistus seems to forget that the body was of godly design. To ponder the nature of the world is a right and proper thing to do, no matter what one's religious beliefs may be, but to


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