I would add...
- Experiment
- Be open to failure, and learn from it
- Reject Dogma
- Accept that your theories may be (and probably ARE) wrong
Chaos Magick is a type of Freeform Magick, and Carroll seems to see it as being part of the ancient lineage going back to the first shamanic magical practice. Maybe a good way of thinking of Chaos Magick is that it is more important that something works, and less important
how and why it works. If you spend more time thinking about the philosophy of magick than you spend actually doing magick then you are probably not a chaote (IMG:
style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif) Carroll developed a theory linking magick to chaos theory and this model works for
him, but other chaotes are free to accept it or dismiss it as they wish. If you find yourself clinging to one model then it is time for a paradigm shift so that you can look at things from a new angle.
This is probably where Chaos Magick diverges from other forms of magick. A chaote is not tied down to a single viewpoint, to a set of god forms and rituals, everything is fair game. This is not to say that chaos magick is 'better' than other forms of magick, or any less serious an area of study (though Chaotes often have project a less serious image to the world). Just because you are invoking the Thundercats rather than the ancient Greek Gods does not mean you can be slap-dash...the
7 P's rule still applies (Piss Poor Planning Produces Piss Poor Performance).