Knowledge of the Unseen
Excerpt from the poem "The Black Maria" by Aracelis Girmay
Announcing a new project for the show in which I'll be working through the Iliad with a focus on its themes of anger and justice.
How has the modern practice of scientific forecasting taken over the ancient role of priests and other experts who interpreted signs and provided warnings? I start off talking about the ongoing Coronavirus pandemic, which was clearly foreseen by many experts who offered urgent warnings to policymakers. I then look at the theme of “knowledge or beliefs about the future” in a selection of stories in the Hebrew Bible, arguing that these stories are often about taking advice from the right authorities. I conclude with the argument that people who consider themselves religious or spiritual today are responsible for following the advice of scientific experts such as climate scientists and for being the most enthusiastic about supporting their recommendations.
I'm joined by Antony Cummins, author of many books on medieval Japanese ninja and samurai warriors. We talk about who the samurai were and what their relationship was with the art of ninjutsu. I ask many questions about ninja magic — the kinds of esoteric practices they did that gave them a reputation for having supernatural powers. We also talk about Antony's recent project of reviving the Natori-Ryu samurai school of war, with the blessings of the Natori family in Japan.
Trust is a critical issue in the practice of intelligence. In this episode I start off discussing three situations where this is explicit: in the contexts of security clearance, asset recruitment, and intelligence liaison. In the second half of the episode I change gears and offer a meditative reflection on metaphorical affinities between the intelligence community and the “Illuminati” or enlightened beings. In the concluding segment I return to the issue of trust and its role in enlightenment and its presence in so-called Illuminati symbolism.
Searching for the hidden God. Alex reads three texts — the Book of Jonah, the Book of Job, and the Book of Esther — to show how subtle themes run through biblical texts and address some of humans' deepest questions while often appearing on the surface to offer very little beyond pious platitudes. Where is God when children suffer, when genocides happen, when bad people are rewarded for being predators and honest people lose out because they're following the rules? How can there even be a good God when this world is so corrupt and full of pain and injustice?
Corey Dansereau, a doctoral student in Modern Thought and Literature at Stanford, returns to talk with me from a philosophical perspective about “mind control” and what it means to control or be under control. We also talk a bit about conspiracy theories of the “deep state” — a secret, shadowy group allegedly controlling the world outside public view and outside democratic accountability. We zero in on the idea of an “esoteric deep state” — a shadow government that may or may not be incarnated in human bodies, a spiritual governing body that could overlap with the visible human government.
In this episode I'm joined by Mark Stout, a former intelligence officer with the CIA and State Department who is now a historian of intelligence and Director of programs in Global Security and Intelligence at Johns Hopkins University. Mark talks about US intelligence in World War I, which he's currently finishing a book about. Our conversation also touches on the beginnings of the security clearance process, domestic surveillance of Prussian/German-American citizens during the war, and early attitudes among US State Department officials that intelligence activity was ungentlemanly and unbecoming of diplomats. Mark's overview of US intelligence in WWI provides an interesting introduction to an understudied subject.
Gregg Jones, CEO of Strategic Applications, LLC and Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Center for Security Studies at Georgetown University, joins me to talk about the practice of crisis management — preparing for what Gregg likes to call the Bad Day. We talk about the Will to Fight and possible ways to increase confidence in one's ability to survive. I'm especially interested in emotions like anxiety and panic, and the feeling of being overwhelmed by destructive force, and am curious if there are ways to prepare for those emotions and minimize their negative effects. How a combination of planning and preparation can make a difference in successfully surviving the Bad Day.
Juan Ramirez from Aiwass Temple #8 joins me to talk about Aleister Crowley, Secret Societies, and the purposes of secrecy in initiatory orders like Freemasonry, the Temple of Thelema, and the Golden Dawn. While it's always possible Crowley engaged in espionage activities, it's implausible that his interest in occultism was just a cover story. How secrecy in occultism has historically often been for protection. Why the rituals of secret societies are secret but they don't really have value if you read them in books or on the internet. Knowledge, power, and responsibility. (Note: the views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the participants and do not reflect the opinions or views of any organization or its members.)
Satan and the great monsters of ancient mythology; the relationship between nightmares and conflicts experienced in waking consciousness; the visual iconography of hell as a place of imprisonment and torture; catastrophic traumas such as the Holocaust and surviving the bombing of Hiroshima as experiences of hell on earth; how the mind does and doesn't create reality; the root causes of mass violence and the need for authentic understanding to break the cycle
The blurry line between medieval magic and espionage. Alex presents a kabbalistic cipher from the medieval Zohar and discusses the possibility of its relation with other contemporaneous ciphers such as Trithemius's Steganographia
Alex returns with a new episode about the mystical aspects of espionage in the Hebrew Bible and world history, as well as an update about the future of the show
In which we discuss the theurgic and practical aspects of Plato's Symposium. Must we renounce physical expressions of love to achieve the higher philosophical love of pure Beauty? The role of the prophetess Diotima as the initiating guru of Socrates and as an icon, perhaps of Wisdom. Alcibiades and his wild, intoxicated erotic desire for the old man. The banquet itself as praise of god.
In this episode we start off talking about Alexander's undergraduate thesis "Greek Allegory: Mystery and Meaning from Theagenes to Philo of Alexandria." This inspires a meditative and often playful conversation about rationalism, creativity, the mundus imaginalis, communication, frustration, and the ineffable.
We discuss Isabel's paper on the Chora, "Signifying Absence: Destabilizing the Reception of Plato's Khôra." With our normal digressions into Sarte, Buddhism, Jewish mysticism, we eventually agree with Isabel's rejection of analytic philosophers who have characterized the Chora as 'matter' or 'space' and endorse a more Derridean understanding of it as something radically beyond conceptualization.
Greg, Isabel, and Alex talk about Greg's paper "The Chora of the Timaeus and Iamblichean Theology." What did it mean for the Neoplatonists for a human to embody the Divine? Similarities between Plato's Chora and Buddhist concepts of "shunyata" or emptiness as the matrix or mother of being. A memorable moment in Jean Paul Sartre's Nausea. Socrates as a Prophet of Islam. Philosophy as initiation.
This week I announce changes in the format and content of the show -- including Isabel joining as a co-host, and switching from a short weekly show to a longer monthly show. I also look back on a theme I've been developing over the first four months of Machine Elf Radio, which is an undercurrent about UFO's, angels, prophecy, and the song in every heart.
Greg Shaw from Stonehill College continues the conversation with Isabel and myself about spiritual ascent in Plato's Timaeus and what that would look like to someone wishing to undertake it today. Isabel also told us about a poem by a 17th century Latin American poet named Sor Juana, who in her "First Dream" described a sort of shamanic Night Journey with strong parallels to Plato.
Gregory Shaw from Stonehill College and my friend and fellow Classicist Isabel Farias join me this week to discuss the concept of the chora in Plato's Timaeus. Isabel wrote her thesis at Barnard about the Timaeus. Greg authored a paper about the concept titled "The Chora in the Timaeus and Iamblichean Theurgy." In the abstract to this paper, he offered the following brief description of what the concept is: "The chôra described in the Timaeus (52b) is said to be the receptacle through which the world comes into existence. In some mysterious way she is the mother and nurse that allows the Forms to become manifest. Despite being essential to the work of the Demiurge, the chôra is unknowable, Plato says, except through an illegitimate kind of reasoning, more like dreaming than thinking."
This week I speak with fellow Harvard Divinity School student Kelly-Chava about themes of motherhood, birth, and death related to bodies of water in the Torah. We talk a bit about belief in reincarnation in Jewish mysticism, and we discuss the role of Jews and non-Jews in history and the meaning of Jewish chosenness.
The Talmud is the center of Judaism but few people outside the religion ever have a chance to encounter it. In this episode my friend Rina and I engage in chavrusa (partnered study) on an episode from the Talmud about Rabbi Yochanan and Reish Lakish, to give listeners a taste of how subtle and beautiful the Talmud can be.
The conclusion of my interview with Greg Shaw of Stonehill College about Platonism as a contemporary spiritual path. We talk about how people who are interested in this might move forward with it, and I make plans to start working on this show with him and a couple other magnificent guests with Plato's Timaeus in a few weeks. By request, I give a very short intro to my own spiritual autobiography, which I intend to talk more about next week.
This week Greg Shaw talks with me about Platonism as a spiritual path. As a younger Classicist-in-training I got the impression that there are academics who take Plato seriously as a spiritual guide. So Greg tells me about Platonism and how we can engage with Plato as a guide in our personal spiritual practice.
My brilliant friend Corey talks with me about affinities between the alien abduction phenomenon and the ancient Greek myth of the abduction of Persephone, which was an important element in the initiation into the Eleusinian Mysteries. We also talk about the role psychedelics could have played in this ancient initiation, abduction and shamanism, and the spiritual Night Journey of the Prophet Muhammad as interconnected phenomena.
A Jungian Dream Initiation with Greg Shaw
There are 10 songs in the Hebrew Bible (the Christian Old Testament) traditionally identified by the Rabbis. I give an overview of them in this episode and explore the relationship between music and prophecy. Songs in the Hebrew Bible usually are associated with praise of God, and generally commemorate major victories. The Song at the Sea is the exemplar of this tradition, as are the Psalms (although only a few Psalms are included in the traditional list of biblical songs). David, the archetype of the Jewish Messiah, receives the Spirit of God from a group of musical prophets. There thus seems to be a clear connection in the Hebrew Bible between singing and prophecy.
NYC street artist @bludog10003 chats with me about if the world already ended and most people didn't notice yet -- along with fake news, derealization, social media and the death of journalism, near death experiences (are we all having one together right now?) and whether anything is really real.
Sex, Torah, Blessings, and general fun conversation with Rabbi Getzel Davis of Harvard Hillel
A friend shares his experiences taking ayahuasca in Brasil
Thomas Shelton of Fort Worth Masonic Lodge #148 talks about his experiences combating racism and discrimination in Texas Freemasonry
In this episode I talk about the philosophy of and techniques for becoming conscious in dreams
In the premiere episode, I talk about Carl Jung's ideas about UFOs and his theory of dream interpretation