Paradigm.
That simple term has become a notorious mallet against the knee - which often tends to trigger a quick, negative jerk reaction.
Back in the late 80s and early 90s, a movement ignited among business gurus to use that word as part of the now notorious phrase “paradigm shift.” At first, the reaction to usage of that phrase mostly was curiosity about what was meant. After a while, when it started catching on, and more and more people starting hurling it around at every opportunity (whether they did, or did not, comprehend what it meant) – when people started using the phrase to sound as if they were in the proverbial know, and/or were hip to the latest rhetorical fad – it fell out of favour with epic flames. In fact, both the word “paradigm” and the phrase “paradigm shift” still seems to be considered by some these days to be an opportunity and for heaping a smarmy, sneering, steaming load of linguistic dung on anyone who dares to use them – regardless of whether one using them offers a clear and cogent explanation for such usage.
I am going to put on my hip high wading boots here, and risk the rancid rainstorm, by flat out saying that the term “paradigm” is useful for me – and explaining the meaning that I associate with it, in addition to how it connects with Chaos Magick.
**********
For me, the words system, paradigm, model, and approach do not reference the same meaning. They are not synonyms for each other. Instead:
A paradigm is a specific type of system.
All paradigms are systems – but all systems are not paradigms.
Clarifying this a bit further:
A paradigm is the specific type of system - comprised from a combination of at least two (and can include more than two) interconnected models - that enable one both to comprehend, and to engage, events.Such comprehension includes discerning and analyzing events.
Such engagement includes instigating and manipulating events.
Note: I am using the term “manipulating” there according to a neutral way that neither necessarily means, nor necessarily implies, exercising any sort of diabolical control.Some examples for paradigms would be:
Enochian,
Kabbalah,
Biblianism (any paradigm based upon the Bible),
Koranianism (any paradigm based upon the Koran),
Taoism,
Wiccanism,
Thelema, etc…
A model also is a specific type of system. As with paradigms to systems: all models are systems – but all systems are not models. A single model is not a paradigm. Models can be, but are not necessarily, aspects of paradigms.
Some examples for models would be:
Elemental models (which provide explanations about the elements and how to use them);
Dimensional/planar/aethyral/etc… models (which provide explanations about various levels/layers/realms/etc… and how to visit, incorporate, etc… them)
Karmatic models (which provide explanations about cause and effect, how to navigate using them, what their consequences are, etc…)
Oracular models (tarot, runes, etc…)
Entity models (what entities are, what entities do, how entities can be summoned, banished, invoked, evoked, created, etc…)
Etc…
**********
Neither paradigms nor models are approaches.
An approach is how one generally acts with regard to a system. This is admittedly a thin explanation, which might make more sense in light of the following clarification.
There seem to me to be at least four basic and general approaches:
1. Designing Paradigms.One who designs paradigms is a
Paradigm Designer. Paradigm Designs endeavour to craft paradigms (and thus, compose their constituent models).
2. Applying Paradigms. One who applies paradigms is a
Paradigm Applicator. Paradigm Applicators endeavour to use paradigms both to comprehend, and to engage, events.
3. Designing and Applying Paradigms.One who endeavours both to design and to apply (a) paradigm(s) is a
Paradigm Artisan.
4. Dismissing Paradigms.One who dismisses all talk of, and generally ignores any examination, of paradigms is a
Paradigm Dismisser.
**********
What has all this got to do with Chaos Magick?I have admitted elsewhere, and I will do it again here, that when I first encountered the phrase “Chaos Magick” I was hooked by how cool it sounded.
I was sensationally titillated into an almost maniacal swoon by the notion that Chaos was like some sort of primordial, uber bad-ass stuff, power, force … whatever … that was out there lurking behind the scenes, oozing out from the taboo cracks, crevices, and disreputable corners of existence. That Chaos also was some sort of penultimate antithesis in relation to Order. The dangerous, dark goop that only either the really politically incorrect, hard-nosed, no-nonsense “tough guys” (or gals) could, and would dare to, handle. And that I could somehow, spectacularly, “tap into” Chaos and become a kind of rebel against Order, an uber bass-ass in my own right, demonstrate that hard-nose, politically incorrect, tough, daring to stick my fingers in it – raise fist fulls dripping with Nether Power to the skies, and cackle with awesome might that made the gods shiver and shake in their cloistered heavens at the advent of one with whom they would be anything but eager to reckon.
It was like getting the same sensation from reading a rip snortin’ fantasy novel, where some remarkable Wizard reaches the pinnacle of his ability and puts on a breathtaking show of having had enough of whatever foolishness is going on, then proceeds to go-to-town settling issues in a satisfyingly ultra-dramatic way. And by becoming a Chaos Mage I could do the same – but for real.
Yeah, I admit it.
Thankfully, I grew past it.
A large part of what helped me grow up was encountering the inanity of a bevy of boodlers who were ostensibly into Chaos Magick several years ago who loudly preached, and amptly demonstrated, that they were more interested in performing zany antics, punctuated with a rousing chorus of “Hail Eris!” That turned me off – and it also gave me space to continue working on my spiritual growth, and slowly reconsidering Chaos Magick from another perspective that was far less sensationalistic seeking and megalomaniacally motivated.
From quieter and more sober voices that I stumbled upon during my considerations, I realized the importance of paradigms. After many conversations over the years with others, and many contemplative meditations, I began to figure out that there were individuals calling themselves Chaotes that presented me with the seeds for cultivating quite a different perspective. There were not many of them. Indeed, in places where Chaos Magick was discussed, there might have been only one or two of them out of ten who gave me those precious seeds.
Elsewhere in this forum, I have contrasted them compared to what I have, and will continue here to call, “Traditionalists.” I will briefly quote what I wrote elsewhere in this forum for clarity:
QUOTE
Many of them (magick workers) had experienced negative reactions, for innovatively personalizing practices, from Mages that followed one of the “traditional” paths.
Several different people basically told me that they did not want to be forced to run along routes which were not leading them to where they wanted to go - and/or be whipped for striving to execute practices which were not working for them - before they would be accepted as legitimate magick workers.
Based upon that, I began realizing that many of those “Chaotes” were instigating a movement of members who are free to innovate, free to personalize – and who can give and receive constructive feedback to, and from, each other, that is not mere knee-jerk mockery, derision, warnings, and condemnation just because their explanations and practices were not perfectly parroting the Golden Dawn, Crowley, Abramelin, etc…
And I completely comprehend the need for that.
Instead of being a paradigm – Chaos Magick seems to me generally to be an approach for working magick that allows and encourages exotic explanations, explorations, experiments, innovations, etc…
Once upon a time, magick in general might have inherently meant being free to innovate, to personalize, to explore, to experiment, and to give and receive constructive help from peers. But my observations of what seems most often to happen when one dares to blaze one's own trail off one of the beaten paths - amongst what I will here call “Traditionalists” - has resulted with me comprehending why Chaos Magick came to be, and how Chaos Magick and what I will here call “Traditional Magick” differ compared to each other.
Also instead of being a paradigm – Traditional Magick seems to me also generally to be an approach for magickal work that emphasizes learning explanations provided, exploring routes already trod, experimenting and innovating only when doing so enables one more efficiently to march in line with what has been taught, etc…
And I also completely comprehend the need for that.
I do not consider one to be right and the other to be wrong, because the see the unique usefulness that both provide. In my own practice, I the two approaches as two poles at either end of a continuum of combinational gradations – and I most often weave in and out between them, sometimes being what "Chaotes" would consider as more Traditional, and sometimes being what "Traditionalists" would consider as more Chaotic.
Regardless of either which I approach I use, or how I blend the two together, I have learned that both enable me to work magick according to unique applications of determination, discipline, and discovery.
I also wrote elsewhere (with a bit more added for further clarity):
QUOTE
Seems to me that one shifts from working magick according to the Chaos Magick approach, to working magick according to the Traditional Magick approach, when one shifts from crafting (exploring, experimenting with, and explaining) an innovative paradigm, to using an already established paradigm. i.e. when one shifts from being a Paradigm Designer to being a Paradigm Applicator (of someone else’s paradigm).
That seems to me to be the case, because I have noticed that once people start walking along a path, then they tend to be told how to march, how not to march, and perhaps tend to be pressured to march by those who also are walking the same path. They also tend do the same to others.
And that seems to me to be the essence of the Traditional Magick approach.
But when people craft, design, etc… their respective paradigms – when they blaze their own paths – then they seem to me to have shifted from the Traditional Magick approach, to the Chaos Magick approach.
That seems to me to be the case, because I have noticed that once people start crafting, designing, and blazing they stop harkening, heeding, and harassing others about how to march and how not to march – and they start concentrating on getting busy putting together their respective pragmatic pathways.
And that seems to me to be the essence of the Chaos Magick approach.
To put a bit more of a polish on that here in this post – and to connect it in light of what I posted earlier in this new thread regarding paradigms:
At this point, as I comprehend and consider Chaos Magick as an approach for working magick, it seems to me that a Chaote is one who is a
Paradigm Artisan: one who endeavors to design a paradigm, and to apply that paradigm designed, for comprehending and magickally engaging events.
**********
Now, I am fully aware that this is
NOT how everyone who is interested in Chaos Magick, and/or who call themselves Chaotes, never mind onlookers, consider all of this. I also do not expect others to adopt my perspective of this here.
When all is done being said, this just represents my perspective to date regarding Chaos Magick.
Growth is still happening as new, and useful, insights become clear to me.