What Makes Physicalist Magick a Philosophy?
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Developing a personal philosophy requires a blend of mental habits, tools, and ongoing practices. Whether it's your unique perspective on life, a set of ethical guidelines, or a broader view of reality, philosophy is a lifelong endeavor involving deep reflection and the integration of new ideas. Non-mystic physicalist magick offers a straightforward philosophical framework: it breaks down reality into form (structure, shape, and composition) and function (purpose, mechanics, and interconnections) to achieve desired outcomes and knowledge.
Core Principles (Axioms and Definitions)
Axiom 1: Reality as Physical Processes
Everything in existence operates through observable and measurable forms and functions. The physical realm encompasses the objective laws governing reality, including energy and all entities whether known or unknown. In this context, magick refers to the transmutation of existence, whether intentional or unintentional. It doesn't rely on supernatural elements but on empirical redesign and manipulation.
Axiom 2: Deconstruction for Understanding
Breaking down phenomena into their elemental parts (e.g., how a candle's form: wax and wick interacts with function of utility while combustion of light and aroma enchant a purpose of ambient space) helps guide one into mastery of reality.
Axiom 3: Purpose through Reinvention
Physicalist magick derives purpose from the inherent dynamics of existence itself. Even without a central, inherent meaning to reality, purpose emerges from the ceaseless interactions among its fundamental components. Matter and energy perpetually shift, evolve, and reconfigure. By grasping these mechanisms, practitioners can cultivate a profound understanding of human nature, the true essence of life, and the optimal strategies for reshaping our role within it for greater fulfillment.
Historic Philosophical Roots
To understand physicalist magick as a comprehensive philosophy, we must explore its roots in thinkers who examined the interplay between existence (what is real and tangible) and essence (deeper interactions or underlying nature). Aristotle pioneered this with hylomorphism, merging raw matter (existence) with its informing form (essence) to explain transformations, such as an acorn becoming an oak tree. Thomas Aquinas advanced the concept by distinguishing essence from existence in all things except God, anchoring it in observable reality rather than abstract ideals. Jean-Paul Sartre revolutionized it further with "existence precedes essence," arguing that humans begin as blank slates and forge meaning through lived choices.
These ideas resonate in physicalist magick, where reality is a malleable arena of form and function, open to human intervention. Magick itself has long represented the power of change, evolving from ancient rituals to contemporary practices. In ancient Egypt, heka was the cosmic force enabling reality-bending through physical acts like chanting over talismans. Greek traditions emphasized sensory spells drawn from nature's elements. Medieval scholars pursued it covertly, defying religious prohibitions. Aleister Crowley defined magick as "the science and art of causing change to occur in conformity with will," while alchemy's pursuit of transmutation foreshadowed modern chemistry. Today, it often manifests as self-improvement techniques, channeling energy for tangible shifts without invoking deities.
Jangled Jester builds on this lineage by framing physicalist magick as a philosophy of self-enchanted engineering — deconstructing form and function for empirical, science-testable modifications that prioritize reproducibility. Even if the supernatural exists, it would operate within physical laws (or "supernatural physics"), making it accessible to analysis. This approach demystifies magick, rendering it straightforward and inclusive, while respecting diverse perspectives from skeptics to believers.
Practical Applications
Physicalist magick hinges on objectively measuring existence through empirical reasoning to dissect form and function. Its primary strength lies in empowering practitioners to comprehend reality deeply enough to change it intentionally. Magick emerges as a pattern of transformation — potentially divine or not — but always exhibiting a "body" (physical presence) and interacting components. Cultivating awareness of this grants influence over one's self, narrative, and even broader systems.
The physicalist magickian functions like an engineer: obsessively analyzing subjects into parts and processes, then assuming responsibility for creating meaning inspired by magickal observations. This philosophy aligns with ideas like Albert Camus' absurdism, which confronts life's inherent meaninglessness and the apparent absence of a benevolent God amid moral contradictions in nature. Absurdism overcomes nihilism by embracing this void without despair. Physicalist magick extends this by promoting rational self-enchantment through the decomposition and reinvention of physical matter. It not only resolves existential meaninglessness philosophically but also interactively reminds practitioners daily that they are agents who assign and restructure meaning.
While physicalist magick imposes no specific ethical framework, it demands objectivity — modeling truth through blueprints of forms and functions. This garners knowledge of physical laws, cause-and-effect relationships, and interactions essential for desired changes, fostering informed, empowered action.